Fall 2024
Course listings are subject to change. Please check back regularly for updates and email global.academics@nyu.edu if you have any questions.
- For Abu Dhabi students, please see the Abu Dhabi course equivalencies on this page. Please note this is only applicable to NYU Abu Dhabi degree students.
- For Shanghai students, please see the Shanghai course equivalencies on this page. Please note this is only applicable to NYU Shanghai degree students.
Courses by Department
Navigate to a Specific Department
- Language Courses
- Anthropology
- Art and Art Professions
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- Business
- College Core Curriculum
- Comparative Literature
- European and Mediterranean Studies
- Experiential Learning for Credit
- Film and Television
- Gallatin School of Individualized Study
- History
- Journalism
- Media, Culture, and Communication
- Music and Performing Arts
- Photography
- Politics
- Religious Studies
- Russian and Slavic Studies
- Sociology
- Tisch School of the Arts Special Programs
- Online Courses
Elementary Czech I - RUSSN-UA 9201 - 4 Credits
Students work on pronunciation, grammar, and vocabulary enrichment. Emphasis is placed on developing and enhancing listening, comprehension and oral skills. Additional hours are offered to improve pronunciation. Written and oral examinations required.
Elementary Czech II - RUSSN-UA 9202 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9201 or Elementary Czech I or by placement exam.
Continuation of Elementary Czech I course.
Intermediate Czech I - RUSSN-UA 9203 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9202 or Elementary Czech II or by placement exam.
Using communicative methodology this course introduces more complex features of the language and focuses on building reading and writing skills while continuing to develop conversational ability.
Intermediate Czech II - RUSSN-UA 9204 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9203 or Intermediate Czech I or by placement exam.
Continuation of Intermediate Czech I.
Intermediate Czech II - Sample Syllabus
Elementary German I - GERM-UA 9001 - 4 Credits
In Elementary German I students will learn the basics of the language. The course is focused on conversational skills; by learning a simplified structure of German grammar in a clear and concise format, students will be encouraged to use the new language as often as possible. The first steps into the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, writing) will be accompanied by an introduction to contemporary life and culture in German-speaking countries. At the end of the course students should be able to handle some essential structures of the (real-life functional) language and achieve a rough idea about the way how the German language works.
Elementary German II - GERM-UA 9002 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: GERM-UA 9001 or Elementary German I or by placement exam.
In Elementary German II students will continue to learn the basics of the language. Although the course introduces more complex grammatical concepts and is intended to enrich lexical knowledge, it focuses on the development of conversational ability. Students will grow more confident and more proficient while using various conversational strategies accompanied by a learning by doing attitude. Written assignments will support writing skills, which gradually are getting more important during the course. By acquiring these competencies and by understanding some aspects of contemporary German life and culture students should achieve an initial knowledge of the language.
Intermediate German I - GERM-UA 9003 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: GERM-UA 9202/GERM-UA 9010 (Elementary German II/Intensive Elementary German) or by placement exam.
Intermediate German I is intended to develop communication, writing, and argumentation skills beyond the basic level. Students learn more advanced features of the language and read longer and more-complex texts. Grammar of the basic level is reviewed and practiced as appropriate. The course focuses on building reading and writing skills while continuing to improve conversational abilities. Students will grow more confident and more proficient while discussing and presenting various general topics of modern life. On the basis of assorted passages and articles from various books, magazines, and newspapers students train to comprehend and to speak about present-day problems and issues of German-speaking countries. Film clips, literary excerpts, and fieldtrips enhance the cultural dimension of this course.
Intermediate German II - GERM-UA 9004 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: GERM-UA 9003 or Intermediate German I or by placement exam.
Intermediate German II is intended to develop communication, writing, and argumentation skills beyond the basic level. Students learn more advanced features of the language and read longer and more-complex texts. Grammar of the basic level is reviewed and practiced as appropriate. The course focuses on building reading and writing skills while continuing to improve conversational abilities. Students will grow more confident and more proficient while discussing and presenting various general topics of modern life. On the basis of assorted passages and articles from various books, magazines, and newspapers students train to comprehend and to speak about present-day problems and issues of German-speaking countries. Film clips, literary excerpts, and fieldtrips enhance the cultural dimension of this course.
Advanced German Tutorial - GERM-UA 9091 - 4 Credits
Advanced German Tutorial is intended to develop communication, writing, and argumentation abilities at a high level. Students examine, discuss, and value texts of various genres, then write essays related to these areas. The course includes a selected review of advanced grammar, idioms, and structures necessary for the effective written (and oral) expression of systematic concepts. Therefore it is focused on the diversification in the fields of syntax, style, and phraseology. Other features of the course are presentations, guided writing, and written analysis. On the basis of assorted passages and articles from the internet, various books, and selected magazines students train to comprehend and to analyze present-day issues of German-speaking countries. However, the main objective of the course is to improve and to consolidate students’ command of spoken German (Format of the course: Lectures).
Elementary Polish I - RUSSN - UA 9211 - 4 Credits
Using communicative methodology, this course introduces students to essential linguistic and social conventions of spoken Polish, with an emphasis on establishing conversational skills.
Elementary Polish II - RUSSN - UA 9212 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9211 or Elementary Polish I or by placement exam.
Continuation of Elementary Polish I.
Elementary Polish II - Sample Syllabus Coming Soon
Intermediate Polish I - RUSSN-UA 9213 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9212 or Elementary Polish II or by placement exam.
Using communicative methodology this course introduces more complex features of the language and focuses on building reading and writing skills while continuing to develop conversational ability.
Intermediate Polish I - Sample Syllabus coming soon
Intermediate Polish II - RUSSN-UA 9214 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9213 or Intermediate Polish I or by placement exam.
Continuation of Intermediate Polish I.
Elementary Russian I - RUSSN-UA 9001 - 4 Credits
The course combines the traditional grammatical approach with a communicational, interactive method. Since the size of the classes is usually small we can put a great emphasis on oral drills and getting the pronunciation right from the beginning. This course is tailored for students who have never taken Russian but some linguistic awareness about Slavic languages is welcome. Students will be introduced to the grammatical complexity of the Russian language and will have the opportunity to master enough Russian to cope with everyday situations in Russian. The students will do considerable amount of grammar and vocabulary exercises in the Workbook as part of the home assignments.
Elementary Russian II - RUSSN-UA 9002 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9001 or Elementary Russian I or by placement exam.
Continuation of Elementary Russian I.
Intermediate Russian I - RUSSN-UA 9003 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9002 or Elementary Russian II or by placement exam.
The course combines the traditional grammatical approach with a communicational, interactive method. Since the size of the classes is usually small we can put a great emphasis on oral drills and improving speaking in Russian on various subjects. Students will be given short topics to talk about at the beginning of every lesson and most written essays will have to be presented orally in class. The class also focuses on improving your writing skills and broadening your vocabulary. That is why the students are expected to keep a diary in Russian and write several compositions during the course. The students will also read several Russian short stories which will be discussed in class. We will review familiar grammar and study some advanced grammatical structures. The students will do considerable amount of grammar and vocabulary exercises in the Workbook as part of the home assignments. Several short lectures on various aspects of Russian culture and history will be given during the course and we will watch two Russian films that would be followed by the discussions.
Intermediate Russian II - RUSSN-UA 9004 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9003 or Intermediate Russian I or by placement exam.
Vocabulary building, idiomatic expressions, and drills in spoken Russian.
Advanced Russian I - RUSSN-UA 9107 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9004 or Intermediate Russian II or by placement exam.
The course combines the traditional grammatical approach with a communicational, interactive method. Since the size of the classes is usually small we can put a great emphasis on improving speaking in Russian on various subjects. Students will be given short topics to talk about at the beginning of every lesson and most written essays will have to be presented orally in class.
The class also focuses on improving your writing skills. That is why the students are expected to keep a diary in Russian and write several compositions during the course. The students will also read several Russian short stories in original which will be discussed in class. We will review familiar grammar and study some advanced grammatical structures. The greater emphasis is also put on and broadening your vocabulary and the students will do considerable amount of vocabulary exercises as part of the home assignments. Several short lectures on various aspects of Russian culture and history will be given during the course and we will watch two Russian films that would be followed by the discussions.
Advanced Russian I - Sample Syllabus Coming Soon
Advanced Russian II - RUSSN-UA 9108 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: RUSSN-UA 9107 or Advanced Russian I or by placement exam.
Continuation of Advanced Russian I
Contemporary Issues in Law: Law and Human Rights in Central Europe - SOC-UA 9413 or ANTH-UA 9074 - 4 Credits
This course explores the development of the rule of law and human rights issues in post-communist Central Europe. We will also refer to transitional systems outside the post-communist region. Although dealing with Central European region, we will often talk about American situation as well.
First, we will face a short introduction into the history of the Central European region and its culture of human rights, and try to delineate this region. Next, we will examine the historical, national and international context of making constitutionalism and the rule of law in Central Europe. We will try to understand what human rights actually mean. We will face the debates that occurred when emerging democracies dealt with the former communist regimes. On several case studies, we will explain several basic attitudes towards the former communist regimes, its apparatchiks, its agents, and collaborators (lustration laws and dealing with the communist crimes). We will compare these approaches with those found elsewhere (South Africa, Latin America). Furthermore, we will examine contemporary human rights debates surrounding abortion, freedom of speech, social rights, the relation between religion and the state, the discrimination against minorities, gay rights, gender discrimination, affirmative action etc. We will also analyze the Western legal transplants in Central Europe and the post-communist application of basic rights. Finally, we will deal with the European Union and the legal dimension of the European Enlargement of 2004.
Contemporary Issues in Law: Law and Human Rights in Central Europe - Sample syllabus
From “Gypsies” to “Roma”: Ethnic Politics in a Global Prague - ANTH-UA 9200 - 4 Credits
The course will introduce students to the development of Romany politics and culture from a persecuted minority through to the emergence of Romany organizations with an emphasis on Central and Eastern Europe. The aim is to challenge any essentializing view on Roma as either a people outside or/and without society or as perennial victims of oppression. Two main approaches have dominated the teaching of Romany issues: a culturalist/ethnic approach, which stresses Romany cultures, and an economistic approach, which stresses ´poverty.´ This course will challenge mono-causal and a-historic explanations for the social situation of Roma and will stimulate students to think about Roma in a critical holistic way that brings into consideration the societies they live in. Building on a diverse selection of empirical material, ranging from ethnographic, historical and sociological case studies to artistic representations of Roma, the course will present the Roma “as good to think” for our comprehension of current social issues. The course is divided into three interconnected thematic blocks – 1. Identity, community and culture, 2. Power, the State and social stratification, 3. History, memory and politics of representation – which will allow to cover much of the current debates on the plight of European Roma as well as a grasp of social theories on marginality.
Photography I for Non-Majors - ART-UE 9301 - 4 Credits
Note: This course requires a camera which takes film (i.e. not digital): a 35 mm single lens reflex camera that can be either manually or semi automatically adjusted with a light meter built-in. The lens could be fixed focal 35mm or 50mm, or standard zoom (range from 35mm to around 80mm, for instance). Flash is optional.
Students are required to bring their own camera. It is possible to buy a second hand camera in Prague; the approximate cost is $100.
The course is focused on photography as an art and photography as a means of communication. It includes aspects of history and the theory of photography and practical photographic education of classic analog/wet darkroom process — i.e. black and white photographic image making and printing. The goal is to develop a new way of seeing through the viewfinder of the camera and to hone critical thinking about photography. This course aims to teach students to experience the photographic works of art and reflect on that experience. Importance is laid on students’ understanding of the photographic image as a means of expressing an individual artistic attitude towards the world.
History of Czech Architecture - ARTH-UA 9660 - 4 Credits
Students in the NYU Art History Dept: This course counts for Urban Design credit.
Prague is a unique city, in which all architectural styles combine: from the pre-Romanesque, to Romanesque and Gothic, Renaissance, Baroque and Classicist styles, to the modern ones that include Historicism, Art Nouveau, the original Cubism in architecture, Art Deco, Constructivism and Functionalism, even the post-war Stalinist architecture, and contemporary trends. The city did not undergo extensive renewals such as occurred in other European metropolises, and thus fragments of various epochs have been left standing here side by side, and partially, there is also the medieval urban layout to be seen. Architects and master builders from many European countries worked here and local architects and artists were also influenced by foreign models. The city is in fact an ideal textbook of architecture from the Middle Ages to the present day. The course should take the students through this development chronologically, in lectures accompanied by projections of pictures and short films, but also in visits to typical buildings, including their interiors. The main emphasis will be put on the period of the 19th and 20th centuries, in which the lecturer specializes. Architecture is linked to other fields, such as fine arts, urban planning, national heritage care, industrial design, and others. Teaching will thus also focus on these. During the course, each of the students will present an independent study of one chosen building: they will analyze the building, place it within a broader context of European architecture and supply it with their own illustrations. They will defend the work. At the end of the term they will sit for a test. There is compulsory and recommended specialist literature in English available for them, and they are expected to supplement the information gained at lectures and excursions by self-study. By the end of the term the student should have acquired some knowledge of the complex development of Central-European architecture, of the most significant figures, and be fairly well informed in related fields.
Czech Art and Architecture - ARTH-UA 9662 - 4 Credits
Students in the NYU Art History Dept: This course counts for Art History elective credit.
This course presents a survey of art and architecture in Prague and its environs - from the Middle Ages to the present - placed within the context of the main periods and movements of Western art history. The course will be rooted in a discussion of the city of Prague, and students are encouraged through excursions and assignments to become acquainted with the city's architecture, monuments and urban design. Students will learn to analyse formal aspects of art and architectural styles (from Romanesque to modern) and will also be encouraged to investigate their sources and theoretical foundations. Emphasis will be given to the historical and cultural context of art styles and movements. We will also look at art patronage in some key periods of Czech history to see how this reflects political, cultural and ideological change. Classroom lectures will be combined with regular excursions to examine works of art and architecture at first hand. These will include architectural walking tours and visits to temporary exhibitions as well as the city's major art galleries.
Stern Registration Priority and Stern Course Limit
Registration priority for Stern (Business) courses will be given to NYU Stern students. Other students will be able to register as space remains available. Please pay close attention to course notes displayed in Albert.
NYU Stern Students: It is strongly suggested that Stern students take no more than two business courses while abroad.
Introduction to Marketing - MKTG-UB 9001 - 4 Credits
This course evaluates marketing as a system for the satisfaction of human wants and a catalyst of business activity. It presents a comprehensive framework that includes a) researching and analyzing customers, company, competition, and the marketing environment, b) identifying and targeting attractive segments with strategic positioning, and c) making product, pricing, communication, and distribution decisions. Cases and examples are utilized to develop problem-solving abilities.
Organizational Communication and its Social Context - SOIM-UB 9065 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: Requires sophomore and above standing
Curriculum. Business and its Publics examines the relationships between corporations and society, particularly the social issues that arise from business operations. This course focuses on how companies communicate with multiple audiences: their various stakeholders. Students will learn business communication principles and have multiple opportunities to apply them to specific oral and written assignments, with the objective of enhancing your ability to write, present, and speak as a business professional. Practical applications will include 1) creating persuasive presentations and documents; 2) practicing team leadership and communication; and 3) effective management of time, tasks and deliverables.
Organizational Communication and its Social Context - Sample syllabus
Information Technology in Business and Society - TECH-UB 9001 - 4 Credits
Prerequisite: Must be a sophomore or above standing to enroll.
Information Technology (IT) has radically changed the internal operations of organizations and the structure of the markets in which they compete. As a result, the toolkit of the business professional must include an understanding of the fundamentals of IT and its impact on other functional areas, such as strategic management, finance, accounting, marketing, and operations. This course is intended to provide this base set of knowledge and skills.
Information Technology in Business and Society - Sample Syllabus
Social Media & Digital Marketing - TECH-UB 9038 - 3 Credits
This course examines the major trends in digital marketing using tools from business analytics and data science. While there will be sufficient attention given to top level strategy used by companies adopting digital marketing, the focus of the course is also on business analytics: how to make firms more intelligent in how they conduct business in the digital age. Measurement plays a big role in this space. The course is complemented by cutting-edge projects and various business consulting assignments that the Professor has been involved in with various companies over the last few years.
Social Media & Digital Marketing - Sample Syllabus
Registration Priority for CORE and CORE Equivalents
Registration priority for CORE courses will be given to NYU CAS students. Other students will be able to register as space remains available. Please pay close attention to course notes displayed in Albert.
Students outside of CAS can find a list of pre-approved CORE equivalents below. Please note this list only includes Cultures & Contexts, Expressive Culture, and Text & Ideas, and may not be exhaustive. Consult your advisor for additional information on staying on track with your CORE requirements while studying away.
Cultures & Contexts Equivalents (approved by Steinhardt and SPS)
- ANTH-UA9200 Roma in Central Eastern Europe: Ethnographic & Historical Overview of a People without a State
- RUSSN-UA 9261 Russia and East-Central Europe
Cultures & Contexts Equivalents (approved by Stern)
- ANTH-UA9200 Roma in Central Eastern Europe: Ethnographic & Historical Overview of a People without a State
- RELST-UA9360 Religion, Culture and Politics in Eastern and Central Europe
- RUSSN-UA 9261 Russia and East-Central Europe
Expressive Culture Equivalents (approved by Steinhardt and SPS)
- ARTH-UA9660 Special Topics History of Czech Architecture
- ARTH-UA9662 Czech Art & Architecture
- COLIT-UA9136/SASEM-UG9401 Kafka and His Contexts
- IFMTV-UT1040 Seminar on Czech Cinema and Culture
- SASEM-UG9403 Central European Film
Text and Ideas Equivalents (approved by Steinhardt and SPS)
- HBRJD-UA9103 Modern Jewish History
Life Science: Brain and Behavior - CORE-UA 9306 - 4 Credits
The relationship of the brain to behavior, beginning with the basic elements that make up the nervous system and how electrical and chemical signals in the brain work to effect behavior. Using this foundation, we examine how the brain learns and how it creates new behaviors, together with the brain mechanisms that are involved in sensory experience, movement, hunger and thirst, sexual behaviors, the experience of emotions, perception and cognition, memory and the brain's plasticity. Other key topics include whether certain behavioral disorders like schizophrenia and bipolar disorder can be accounted for by changes in the function of the brain, and how drugs can alter behavior and brain function.
Life Science: Brain and Behavior - Sample Syllabus
Expressive Culture: Music in Prague Field Study - CORE-UA 9731 - 4 Credits
Students in the NYU CAS Music Department: This course counts for Major credit.
This is a chance to immerse yourself in the musical culture of Prague. You will attend five music performances together with the class and two on your own. Each of the concerts will be in a different style, and performed in a different sort of venue. Each concert will be preceded by a lecture/listening session, often involving the actual performers; you will also be assigned a reading excerpt relevant to the music you will hear. The concerts, scheduled about once every two weeks on evenings between Mondays and Thursdays, will be supplemented by architecture walks and film showings, which will usually take place during class time.
In addition, you will undertake a “Personal Connection Project”, in groups of two or three, in which you will choose a local genre, performer or composer to research. The research will include reading relevant contextual material, attendance at a live concert or rehearsal, and an interview with a performer. You will share your project with the class in an oral presentation, which will take place at the end of the semester. after which you will submit your conclusions in a final paper, in lieu of a final exam.
Expressive Culture: Music in Prague Field Study - Sample Syllabus
Texts and Ideas: Visible and Invisible Cities - CORE-UA 9400 - 4 Credits
Registration priority for CORE courses will be given to NYU College of Arts and Sciences (CAS) students. Other students will be able to register as space remains available. Please pay close attention to course notes displayed in Albert.
The experience of living in a city is one vital thread that connects us with our ancient, medieval, and early modern ancestors, and that continues to provide a unifying element in millions of our contemporaries’ disparate lives across the globe. Urban life is a constant environment and stimulus, whether you find yourself in Madrid, New York, Florence, Accra, or Shanghai. Our aim is to supply conceptual frameworks and historical contexts for this experience by exploring the ways that human communities have been theorized and imagined throughout history.
The primary texts encompass utopian writings and works of political theory, but also texts describing and analyzing real-world communities as well as visual and cartographic representations of cities and urban space. The course will ideally make thorough use of the city of Madrid both as a resource (archives and museums, eg) and an object of analysis.
Kafka and his Contexts - COLIT-UA 9136 and SASEM-UG 9401 - 4 Credits
The course is focused on exploring Franz Kafka’s work – stories, novels, diaries and letters – in the context of fin de siècle Prague and the birth of modernism. We will take a closer look at the cultural and social context of Central Europe (literature and the arts, but also the Modernist architecture of Adolf Loos, Simmel’s sociology of the metropolitan life, Freud’s analysis of the unconscious, Brentano’s psychology, the resonance of Nietzsche’s philosophy, or the emergence of new media like phonograph and silent film) in the first two decades of the 20th century. In addition, we will discuss the adaptations of Kafka’s work and its impact on later art, fiction and film (Borges, Welles, Kundera, Roth, Švankmajer). The topics discussed through Kafka’s writings and other related works include: man and metropolis, family, estrangement, authorship, time, writing and media, travelling, territories and identities, languages, animals, art and pain. We will be especially interested in how these phenomena transform when represented in and through the medium of literary fiction.
European Security after the Cold War - EURO-UA 9157 - 4 Credits
This course will try to put European security into the context of today’s world: from the collapse of communism and dissolution of the Warsaw Pact through the years of wars in the former Yugoslavia, the wars on former Soviet territory, and to the stateless threat of terrorism today. But study limited to Europe would be pointless; the Old Continent is no longer the prime player on the planet. Therefore a series of related topics and areas will also be discussed: U.S. military might (especially compared to the European armed forces); the situation in adjacent regions (North Africa, Middle East, Russia and Ukraine) and its implication for Europe; and the new types of terrorism.
Modern Dissent in Central Europe: The Art of Defeat - EURO-UA 9301 and SASEM-UG 9400 - 4 Credits
Individual or minority revolt against for the time being prevailing majority position, religious interpretation or political rule is an important but often forgotten part of history. Modern Political Dissent class covers this phenomena combining findings from several fields like psychological response to extreme situations, modern history, political and communication theory, art and culture in opposition against perceived injustice and case studies and analyses of important examples of modern political dissent. From interpretation of holocaust or torture survival ordeal and Stockholm syndrome students are led to analyze the context – both psychological and historical – in order to search for possible remedies. Conditions that made totalitarian ideologies so widely acceptable are studied within the context of thought reform and cult manipulations. Works of Robert J.Lifton, Stanley Milgrams and Phillip Zimbardo are used to explain importance of individual responsibility versus obedience to authority. Role modeling and differentiation in communicating minority or dissent values to majority society give a possibility to adjust complex strategies for change.
Modern Dissent in Central Europe: The Art of Defeat - Sample syllabus
Experiential Learning for Credit
Experiential Learning Seminar - NODEP-UA 9982 or INDIV-UG 9400 - 4 Credits
Enrollment by permission only. Application required.
The seminar portion of the course explores many different aspects of your internship site. The goal is to finish the semester with an in-depth understanding of the company or organization, including its approach, its policies, and the context in which it operates. We will also discuss more generally the state of the contemporary workplace and ourselves as workers. Finally, you will use the seminar to reflect critically and analytically on the internship experience and as a way to refine your own personal and professional goals.
For additional opportunities see: 35mm Visual Storytelling at FAMU - Prague
Food Studies
Food, Culture and Globalization - FOOD-UE 9190 - 2 Credits
This course investigates current transformations in the food systems and cultures of Prague under conditions of globalization. A people’s diet is dependent on their geography, although no people on earth eat everything edible in their environment, and they seek distant stimulants that their locales cannot support. Through lectures, readings, field trips students will master established facts and concepts about contemporary urban food cultures and produce new knowledge of the same.
Food, Culture and Globalization - Syllabus coming soon
Experiential Learning Seminar - NODEP-UA 9982 or INDIV-UG 9400 - 4 Credits
Enrollment by permission only. Application required.
The seminar portion of the course explores many different aspects of your internship site. The goal is to finish the semester with an in-depth understanding of the company or organization, including its approach, its policies, and the context in which it operates. We will also discuss more generally the state of the contemporary workplace and ourselves as workers. Finally, you will use the seminar to reflect critically and analytically on the internship experience and as a way to refine your own personal and professional goals.
Modern Dissent in Central Europe: The Art of Defeat - EURO-UA 9301 and SASEM-UG 9400 - 4 Credits
Individual or minority revolt against for the time being prevailing majority position, religious interpretation or political rule is an important but often forgotten part of history. Modern Political Dissent class covers this phenomena combining findings from several fields like psychological response to extreme situations, modern history, political and communication theory, art and culture in opposition against perceived injustice and case studies and analyses of important examples of modern political dissent. From interpretation of holocaust or torture survival ordeal and Stockholm syndrome students are led to analyze the context – both psychological and historical – in order to search for possible remedies. Conditions that made totalitarian ideologies so widely acceptable are studied within the context of thought reform and cult manipulations. Works of Robert J.Lifton, Stanley Milgrams and Phillip Zimbardo are used to explain importance of individual responsibility versus obedience to authority. Role modeling and differentiation in communicating minority or dissent values to majority society give a possibility to adjust complex strategies for change.
Modern Dissent in Central Europe: The Art of Defeat - Sample syllabus
Kafka and his Contexts - COLIT-UA 9136 and SASEM-UG 9401 - 4 Credits
The course is focused on exploring Franz Kafka’s work – stories, novels, diaries and letters – in the context of fin de siècle Prague and the birth of modernism. We will take a closer look at the cultural and social context of Central Europe (literature and the arts, but also the Modernist architecture of Adolf Loos, Simmel’s sociology of the metropolitan life, Freud’s analysis of the unconscious, Brentano’s psychology, the resonance of Nietzsche’s philosophy, or the emergence of new media like phonograph and silent film) in the first two decades of the 20th century. In addition, we will discuss the adaptations of Kafka’s work and its impact on later art, fiction and film (Borges, Welles, Kundera, Roth, Švankmajer). The topics discussed through Kafka’s writings and other related works include: man and metropolis, family, estrangement, authorship, time, writing and media, travelling, territories and identities, languages, animals, art and pain. We will be especially interested in how these phenomena transform when represented in and through the medium of literary fiction.
Central European Film - SASEM-UG 9403- 4 Credits
This interdisciplinary seminar is designed to discuss and question the identity of specific nations in European space, which has always been a fascinating crossroad of ideas and ideologies as well as the birthplace of wars and totalitarian systems. The course will cover masterpieces of Russian, Hungarian, German, Polish and Czech cinematography, focusing on several crucial periods of history, in particular WWII and its aftermath, showing moral dilemmas of individuals and nations under the Nazi regime as well as revealing the bitter truth of the Stalinist years.Students will be exposed to brilliant and often controversial works of film art focusing on moral dilemmas of individuals under the stressful times of history. Participants of this course will thus map the European space through the means of film trying to analyze the individual approach to historical events while getting a general picture of Europe in its crucial periods of history - and last but not least learn to appreciate European film art.
History in the Headlines - HIST-UA 9070 - 2 Credits
What do you know about the Czech Republic and Central Europe, and what do you really need to know? And why is a capital city known for its beautiful architecture also famous for fantastic stories about people turning into giant bugs? Conquered by the Nazis and then assimilated into the Soviet bloc, the Czech lands have a complicated relationship with the past (communism), new alliances in the present (the US), and anxieties about the future (migration and the EU), all while preserving a special kind of relaxed irony as a defining cultural feature. This course will teach you about your host country’s role in the world and why you made the right choices to come here.
History of Nationalism in Central and Eastern Europe - HIST-UA 9176 - 4 Credits
The goal of this course is to introduce the students into nationalism studies and into a plethora of historical and present roots of national identities and manifestations of nationalism in Central and Eastern Europe. The course will examine how selected aspects of national histories have been used (and misused) in 19., 20. and 21. century to support/justify national political programs and leaders; specifically, how a romantic picture of national history influenced the development of national identity and what role its interpretation has had in political struggles and programs of Central and East European nations. The course focuses on forces that triggered many eruptions of ethnic hatred and atrocities in Central and Eastern Europe including Holocaust, post World War II expulsion of Germans, civil war in former Yugoslavia, and most recently the nationalist aspects of conflict between Ukraine and Russia.
The course will focus on Ukraine and Russia, Poland, Hungary, former Czechoslovakia, present-day Czech Republic and Slovakia, on former Yugoslavia and on independent states on its territory, and it will motivate the students to formulate a positive and cooperative prospect for the region's future.
History of Nationalism in Central and Eastern Europe - Sample syllabus
International Reporting (Elective Topics) - JOUR-UA 9204 - 4 Credits
This course will focus on foreign reporting in US and British newspapers and journals, looking at the history of foreign reporting, the different kinds of media in which it appears, the topics it covers and the skills necessary to perform it. Students will read and discuss contemporary reporting and famous reportage from the past, listen to foreign correspondents and write their own stories. By the end of the course students should have a good understanding of foreign reporting and will be well equipped with some of the practical skills necessary to follow it as a career.
Global Media Seminar: East-Central Europe - JOUR-UA 9505 and MCC-UE 9453 - 4 Credits
This course aims to bring together diverse issues and perspectives in the rapidly evolving and changing area of international/global communication. Through a historical perspective, a framework will be established for the appreciation of the development of the immense scope, disparity, and complexity of this rapidly evolving field. Students will be encouraged to critically assess shifts in national, regional, and international media patterns of production, distribution, and consumption over time, leading to a critical analysis of the tumultuous contemporary global communication environment. Essential concepts of international communication will be examined, including trends in national and global media consolidation, cultural implications of globalization, international broadcasting, information flows, international communication law and regulation, and trends in communication and information technologies. The focus of the course will be international, with attention being paid both to Western-based multimedia conglomerates, as well as to the increasing global prominence of media corporations based in other regions, contributing to the reversal of international media flows and challenging the global hegemony of the Western media producers. Particular emphasis will be on the Czech Republic, as an empirical example of a national media system affected by global media flows.
Video Game Economies - MCC-UE 9008 - 4 Credits
This course examines the emergence of video games as site of contemporary cultural production and practice. It pays special attention the symbolic and aesthetic dimensions of video games, including their various narratives forms and sub-genres, and concentrates on their interactive dimensions. The course provides insight into the emerging trends in the interface between humans and media technologies. The course also situates video games within the business practices of the entertainment industries.
Advertising and Consumer Society - MCC-UE 9015 - 4 Credits
The course will include an introduction of the influential sociological theory of consumerism by Zygmunt Bauman. Other theories (see the syllabus bellow) will be presented as well. After the presentation of the mentioned theories, we will concentrate on their application to the Central European environment, which will be discussed in the context of globalization. The main aim is to show the relationship between the advertisement and the society in the current phase of society’s development, which can be characterized as a mutual discussion, but a discussion of unequal partners.
In this context we will discuss the impact of current mechanisms of consumer society, which through the advertisement influences issues like i.e.: gender, politics, art, national identity, ethnic relations and democracy. We will also discuss chosen types of advertisement messages, how they influence the viewer and which ethical problems arise from such an influence.
Social Media Practicum- MCC-UE 9032 - 4 Credits
This course will examine “social media” from a cultural perspective, with a focus on how media technologies figure in practices of everyday life and in the construction of social relationships and identities. This course is based closely on one offered in New York by Professor Laura Portwood-Stacer, but we will examine many of the issues in the context of Central and Eastern Europe and compare the “Western” experience of social media with the situation in the post communist world.
Although many of our readings will deal with Social Network Sites (SNSs), we will attempt to form an expansive definition of what constitutes “social media.” We will also work from an expansive definition of “technology,” considering the term in a cultural sense to include various practices and tools used to communicate in everyday life. The course will also look closely at the impact of social media on journalism and activism, including a dissection of the recent debates on the power of social media to transform these fields.
Global Media Seminar: East-Central Europe - JOUR-UA 9505 and MCC-UE 9453 - 4 Credits
This course aims to bring together diverse issues and perspectives in the rapidly evolving and changing area of international/global communication. Through a historical perspective, a framework will be established for the appreciation of the development of the immense scope, disparity, and complexity of this rapidly evolving field. Students will be encouraged to critically assess shifts in national, regional, and international media patterns of production, distribution, and consumption over time, leading to a critical analysis of the tumultuous contemporary global communication environment. Essential concepts of international communication will be examined, including trends in national and global media consolidation, cultural implications of globalization, international broadcasting, information flows, international communication law and regulation, and trends in communication and information technologies. The focus of the course will be international, with attention being paid both to Western-based multimedia conglomerates, as well as to the increasing global prominence of media corporations based in other regions, contributing to the reversal of international media flows and challenging the global hegemony of the Western media producers. Particular emphasis will be on the Czech Republic, as an empirical example of a national media system affected by global media flows.
Courses open to All Students that meet listed pre-requisites
Aural Comprehension in Music III - MPATC-UE 9008 - 1 Credit
Prerequisite: MPATC-UE 7, Aural Comprehension II, or success in placement exam
Corequisite: MPATC-UE 9037, Music Theory III
Aural Comprehension III is a one-credit course, building on the foundations you have created in AC I and II. The two weekly class sessions will be devoted to group work in sight-singing and dictation: melodic, rhythmic and harmonic -- and in listening to longer segments of work to sharpen your perception of musical form. You will be expected to keep up a regular practice of these skills outside of class. In addition, we will arrange tutorials (at least three per semester) for individual work and assessment.
The musical materials of AC III will be taken mostly from 19th-century sources, reinforcing your work in Music Theory and Music History III. We will also work with more chromatic music of the 18th century, as well as jazz, popular music and relevant world cultures.
Aural Comprehension in Music III - Sample Syllabus Coming Soon
Music Theory III - MPATC-UE 9037 - 2 Credits
Prerequisite: Music Theory I and Music Theory II, or success in placement exam
Corequisite: MPATC-UE 9008, Aural Comprehension in Music III
In this course students will follow up with their harmony studies. We will go through harmonic instances of advanced chromaticism of the late 19. century and up to the very edge of tonality. Emphasis will be put on assignments and exercises in order to develop good creative and analytical skills in harmony. Concurrently we will examine the main formal principles of tonal music and apply our knowledge in analysis of selected compositions. We will use various analytical approaches and test them on a large scale of historical musical material. Every student will be due to realize at least one analysis of assigned composition during the semester.
Keyboard Skills III - MPAPE-UE 9074 - 1 Credit
This course is required for Piano Performance majors, Music Education major with piano as their major instrument, and other music majors with extensive piano experience. The main focus is the development of sight-reading, transposition, and score reading skills. Special attention is given to Czech folk songs and Czech composers.
Music History III: Nineteenth Century Music - MPATC-UE 9077 - 2 Credits
Prerequisite: MPATC-UE 36 Music Theory II or success in placement exam.
An exploration of 19th Century musical styles, chiefly romanticism, through the works of composers from 1790-1880.
Desired Outcomes:
- Students will be able to recognize, describe, and discuss features of romantic style.
- Students will demonstrate an understanding of the origins of romanticism including the
differences from Classical style as manifest in musical practice. - Students will be able to recognize, identify, and discuss works typical of the romantic period
including symphony, symphonic poem, concerto, opera, lied (song), and solo/chamber works
including the sonata and string quartet.
Music History III: Nineteenth Century Music - Sample syllabus
Course open to All Music Majors & other students with permission.
Non-Steinhardt music majors should email karolina.jirelova@nyu.edu to request permission to enroll.
Sound Design - MPATE-UE 9010 - 3 Credits
This class is an introduction to the concepts & applications of sound design and audio production for video: web, television & film. Techniques used in the post-production industry will be introduced including role of the sound designer and supervising sound editor in charge of dialogue, sound effects and music editing. Seminar style lectures will also be included where concepts and artistic approaches are discussed.
Ensembles
Ensembles open to Music majors and other students by placement audition. Non-Steinhardt music majors should email karolina.jirelova@nyu.edu to request permission to enroll.
Chamber Ensembles - MPATC-UE 9080 - 1 Credit
Open to Music majors and other students by placement audition. Non-Steinhardt music majors should email karolina.jirelova@nyu.edu to request permission to enroll.
Chamber Ensembles - Sample Syllabus
Jazz Ensembles - MPAJZ-UE 9089 - 1 Credit
Open to Music majors and other students by placement audition. Non-Steinhardt music majors should email karolina.jirelova@nyu.edu to request permission to enroll.
Study and performance of standard dance band literature, experimental jazz compositions, and student arrangements.
Jazz Ensembles - Sample Syllabus
Private Lessons
By Permission only. Private lessons are available only to Steinhardt Music and Performing Arts Professions (MPAP) performance majors (instrumental performance, vocal performance, theory and composition, and music education) for whom lessons are required every semester. Students may register for only one private lesson per semester.
PRIVATE LESSONS: 2 credits (30 minute lesson/week); 3 credits (60 minute lesson/week)
Private Music Composition Instruction - MPATC-UE 9021 - 3 Credits
By Permission only. Private lessons are available only to Steinhardt Music and Performing Arts Professions (MPAP) performance majors (instrumental performance, vocal performance, theory and composition, and music education) for whom lessons are required every semester. Students may register for only one private lesson per semester.
PRIVATE LESSONS: 2 credits (30 minute lesson/week); 3 credits (60 minute lesson/week)
Private Music Composition Instruction - Sample
Private Instruction on Piano -MPAPE-UE 9045 - 3 Credits
By Permission only. Private lessons are available only to Steinhardt Music and Performing Arts Professions (MPAP) performance majors (instrumental performance, vocal performance, theory and composition, and music education) for whom lessons are required every semester. Students may register for only one private lesson per semester.
PRIVATE LESSONS: 2 credits (30 minute lesson/week); 3 credits (60 minute lesson/week)
Private Instruction on Wind Instruments - MPAWW-UE 9111 - 3 Credits
By Permission only. Private lessons are available only to Steinhardt Music and Performing Arts Professions (MPAP) performance majors (instrumental performance, vocal performance, theory and composition, and music education) for whom lessons are required every semester. Students may register for only one private lesson per semester.
PRIVATE LESSONS: 2 credits (30 minute lesson/week); 3 credits (60 minute lesson/week)
Private Instruction on Percussion Instruments - MPAPS-UE 9111 - 3 Credits
By Permission only. Private lessons are available only to Steinhardt Music and Performing Arts Professions (MPAP) performance majors (instrumental performance, vocal performance, theory and composition, and music education) for whom lessons are required every semester. Students may register for only one private lesson per semester.
PRIVATE LESSONS: 2 credits (30 minute lesson/week); 3 credits (60 minute lesson/week)
Private Instruction on Percussion Instruments - Sample Syllabus
Private Instruction on String Instruments - MPASS-UE 9111 - 2 - 3 Credits
By Permission only. Private lessons are available only to Steinhardt Music and Performing Arts Professions (MPAP) performance majors (instrumental performance, vocal performance, theory and composition, and music education) for whom lessons are required every semester. Students may register for only one private lesson per semester.
PRIVATE LESSONS: 2 credits (30 minute lesson/week); 3 credits (60 minute lesson/week)
Vocal Training (Private Lesson) - MPAVP-UE 9111 - 3 Credits
By Permission only. Private lessons are available only to Steinhardt Music and Performing Arts Professions (MPAP) performance majors (instrumental performance, vocal performance, theory and composition, and music education) for whom lessons are required every semester. Students may register for only one private lesson per semester.
PRIVATE LESSONS: 2 credits (30 minute lesson/week); 3 credits (60 minute lesson/week)
Private Instruction on Brass Instruments - MPABR-UE 9111 - 3 Credits
By Permission only. Private lessons are available only to Steinhardt performance majors for whom lessons are required every semester. Students may register for only one private lesson per semester.
PRIVATE LESSONS: 2 credits (30 minute lesson/week); 3 credits (60 minute lesson/week)
See Art and Art Professions above.
European-American Relations in the 21st Century - POL-UA 9598 - 4 Credits
This course explores the recent history and the current state of political, economic and cultural relations between the United States and Europe. Ever since the end of the World War II, the cooperative relationship between these two parts of the world, often described as "The West", has been a bedrock of international stability, security and prosperity. After the end of the Cold War, this relationship has undergone changes, along with the whole system of international relations. Recently, on both sides of the Atlantic, the talk has been about a crisis of the Euro-American relationship. We will examine the validity of these claims, the causes of the current disagreements and possible ways of overcoming them. Throughout, we will emphasize the overwhelming nature of common values and interests on both sides of the Atlantic as well as the risks stemming from a potential rift for both Europe and America. We will examine the compatibility of current European and U.S. policies with respect to third countries or regions, such as Russia, the Middle East, China, and other parts of the Globe. We will also analyze the specific role played in this relationship by countries of Central and Eastern Europe as relative newcomers to democracy, to the Atlantic Alliance and to European Union.
European-American Relations in the 21st Century - Sample syllabus
Germany and East Central Europe (1871-2000) - HIST-UA 9514 or POL-UA 9515 - 4 Credits
This course will focus on the history of the culturally rich region of “Mitteleuropa” through analysis of the parallel evolution of Germany and the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia and Hungary. Mitteleuropa as a region produced such important figures as Franz Kafka, Gustav Mahler, Sigmund Freud, Theodor Herzl and Milan Kundera; historical personalities whose influence internationally is indisputable. We’ll delve into the history of the region and on the central role played by German politics and culture from the end of the 19th century, through the turbulent 20th century to the present day. Emphasis will be on the evolution of the concept of nationalism as well as on Germany’s foreign policy in the “concert of nations”, especially towards its Eastern neighbors. The aim is to achieve an understanding of the complex evolution of national entities and their interaction between the birth of the modern German state and the integration of the Visegrád countries in NATO and the European Union.
Germany and East Central Europe (1871-2000) - Sample syllabus
Religion, Culture and Politics in Eastern and Central Europe - RELST-UA 9360 or ANTH-UA 9073 - 4 Credits
Religion is without doubt one of the most important elements that shaped the history and contemporary face of Central Europe. Religion played an important role in the political and cultural development of this part of the world. The history of the mutual interaction between religion and politics is evident in the cultural richness of this part of the world, particularly in Bohemia and Prague.
This course explores various religious phenomena that formed political ideas and cultural values of this region indifferent historical periods. We examine particularly those religious characteristics and figures that remarkably influenced the world's history and enriched human thinking. First, we study the Christianization of Central European society and the prominent role of religion in the political and cultural transformation of the medieval period. Then we follow the religious reformation process and development of the relationship between Judeo-Christian tradition and the secular world in the early modern period. Finally, we explore the policies of communist regimes in the spheres of religion and culture and study the struggle of Christian churches against communist totalitarianism. The transformation of Catholicism in the 1960s is also examined together with the role of religion in post-communist society.
Excursions to significant historical and religious sights are an important part of the course.
Religion, Culture and Politics in Eastern and Central Europe - Sample syllabus
Russia and East-Central Europe - RUSSN-UA 9261 - 4 Credits
The current anti-Western turn in the Russian politics and the much-publicized violent Russian reaction to the European aspirations of Ukraine provides a useful context for exploration of the profound diversity of the Eastern half of the European continent which until recently has been often perceived in the West as a monolith called "Eastern Europe". This course aims at helping students to understand the distinctiveness and uniqueness of Russia's cultural, social and political traditions vis-à-vis not only Western Europe, but also vis-à-vis the countries of East-Central Europe which until recently constituted a part of the Soviet sphere of influence locked behind the Iron Curtain. By attending to the complexities of the dynamics of the centuries-long interaction between the "Russian civilization" (Russkiy mir) and the diverse nations and cultures of East-Central Europe students will be encouraged to appreciate the social, political and economic significance of seemingly subtle differences between the historical experiences, identity narratives, and value systems of various peoples, who tend to retain their particular cultural patterns of thought and social behavior despite geographical proximity and growing interconnectedness brought about by globalization. While the course is primarily addressed to students of Russian and Slavic Studies, of European history, and of European politics, its focus on the explanatory power of particular cultural outlooks of peoples and nations which provide the context for individual and group decision-making makes this course suitable also for students of other social and cultural sciences. Without adequate understanding and appreciation of both commonality and diversity of human experience we are risking profound misreading of the intentions and expectations of the others, and this in turn is likely to lead to mismanagement of international affairs despite our best intentions to make our globalizing world livable and hospitable to all.
Contemporary Issues in Law: Law and Human Rights in Central Europe - SOC-UA 9413 or ANTH-UA 9074 - 4 Credits
This course explores the development of the rule of law and human rights issues in post-communist Central Europe. We will also refer to transitional systems outside the post-communist region. Although dealing with Central European region, we will often talk about American situation as well.
First, we will face a short introduction into the history of the Central European region and its culture of human rights, and try to delineate this region. Next, we will examine the historical, national and international context of making constitutionalism and the rule of law in Central Europe. We will try to understand what human rights actually mean. We will face the debates that occurred when emerging democracies dealt with the former communist regimes. On several case studies, we will explain several basic attitudes towards the former communist regimes, its apparatchiks, its agents, and collaborators (lustration laws and dealing with the communist crimes). We will compare these approaches with those found elsewhere (South Africa, Latin America). Furthermore, we will examine contemporary human rights debates surrounding abortion, freedom of speech, social rights, the relation between religion and the state, the discrimination against minorities, gay rights, gender discrimination, affirmative action etc. We will also analyze the Western legal transplants in Central Europe and the post-communist application of basic rights. Finally, we will deal with the European Union and the legal dimension of the European Enlargement of 2004.
Contemporary Issues in Law: Law and Human Rights in Central Europe - Sample syllabus
Collective Identity in a Totalitarian Regime - SOC-UA 9970 - 4 Credits
This course examines the totalitarian oppression from the point of view of ordinary citizens in communist Czechoslovakia. It focuses on the construction of collective mentality through everyday official/public and unofficial/private activities, including mass parades, ceremonies and performances, work relations, children’s education, housing schemes or collective vacationing. The goal of the seminar is to demonstrate the consequences of life in an oppressive regime: suppression of fundamental forms of civic interaction, such as independent public communication, and distortion of moral and behavioral norms. At the end of the semester, students will be able to evaluate the main theoretical concepts and historical events of totalitarianism against the background of specific activities, problems and aspirations of the people directly affected by life in a totalitarian system, the citizens of communist Czechoslovakia.
Collective Identity in a Totalitarian Regime - Sample syllabus
Tisch School of the Arts Special Programs
35mm Visual Storytelling at FAMU - Prague
The Courses below are open only to students admitted to the Tisch 35mm Visual Storytelling at FAMU-Prague program. For more information regarding this program please visit the program webpage: Tisch School of the Arts 35mm Visual Storytelling at FAMU-Prague.
Students on this program are registered for a full 18 points from the curriculum below, which reflects a combination of Tisch courses and NYU Prague courses.
Seminar in Czech Cinema and Culture - IFMTV-UT 1040 - 4 Credits
The goal of the course is to give students picture of main streams in development of Czech filmmaking from its origins to present times. The phenomena will be explained in the international context regarding the influences and original innovations in style and in national economical and political relations. The major interest will represent new tendencies from “velvet revolution” of 1989 till contemporary situation. Lectures will be supplied by screening of characteristic excerpts from films, eventually of entire movies.
Screenwriting and Analysis - IDWPG-UT 1058 - 4 Credits
This course primarily prepares students for the production of their short narrative films. It explores feature-length and short films from a dramaturgical perspective to demonstrate diverse narrative techniques, dramatic structures, and genre forms as well as examines the craft of screenwriting. Aside from weekly lectures on script analysis, students prepare regular assignments. The course culminates with a production-ready short screenplay and final test in feature film analysis.
This course is offered by FAMU.
Screenwriting and Analysis - Sample Syllabus coming soon
Intermediate Production: 35mm Cinematography - IFMTV-UT 1202 - 6 Credits
Focusing on the techniques and aesthetics of 35mm cinematography, students are trained for hands-on camera operating, exterior and studio lighting design, exponometry, and color correction, as well as mise-en-scène and the fundamentals of cinematic language. Through this course students will engage in 16mm exercises and 35mm exercises. This course is coordinated with Directing Traditions for the production of individual, 35mm narrative film projects and includes lectures, workshops, consultations, and on-the-set supervision.
This course is offered by FAMU.
Intermediate Production: 35mm Cinematography - Sample Syllabus
Directing Traditions: Theories and Workshops - IFMTV-UT 1201 - 4 Credits
Students receive hands-on training in 16mm and 35mm filmmaking both as director and as director of photography on two separate (interior and exterior) individual projects. Using Intermediate Production as a conduit, this course includes workshops and theoretical seminars in screenwriting, directing, and editing and a weekly series of master classes. Rushes are screened with intensive faculty critique sessions, and students finish with a final off-line group edit. Each student completes a 35mm film with non-synchronous sound that may be submitted to various film festivals.
This course is offered by FAMU.
Directing Traditions: Theories and Workshops - Sample Syllabus
Online/Remote-Taught Courses available to Study Away Students
Students may compliment their local course load by enrolling in an online or remote-taught course. Some of NYU's online courses can be found using the Instruction Mode filter in the Albert Course Search. Please keep in mind that you must be enrolled in at least 12 credits of courses at your study away site (remote-taught/online courses do not count towards the 12 credit minimum requirement). Note, online/remote taught courses are not scheduled on the same session as the courses offered by the study away site, add/drop dates and other academic deadlines will vary. Please refer to Albert course notes for more details. Online/remote taught course commitments should not interfere with student attendance in local classes and required program activities (including orientation).