A candidate for the doctorate in biomedical engineering or applied biology may be required to register for this course in every term after the students course work has been completed and until the dissertation has been accepted.
A candidate for the doctorate may be required to register for this course every term after the students coursework has been completed and until the dissertation has been accepted.
The course is intended for PhD students who are engaged in relevant scholarly activities that are not associated with the required course sequence. Such activities must accrue more than 20 hours/week.
Provides students the opportunity to present draft dissertation proposals and draft dissertation chapters.
Prerequisites: the instructors permission. Guided individual research.
This course will focus on reading and discussing papers from the urban food security literature. The readings will be focused thematically around fundamentals of urban food security and (1) climate shocks to urban food security, (2) economic shocks to urban food security, (3) COVID-19 as it affects food security, including its effects on food security in NYC. The geographic focus of the course will be broad, including papers focused on low and middle income countries as well as those focusing on New York City. Instructors will provide possible readings, but students are encouraged to suggest relevant papers and are expected to lead all or part of one discussion. The class will meet once a week for 75 minutes.
Seismology Seminar: Topics in Global and Regional Seismology , Earth structure at global and regional scales; earthquake source analysis; seismotectonics; current topics in the geophysical literature.
Seismology Seminar: Topics in Global and Regional Seismology , Earth structure at global and regional scales; earthquake source analysis; seismotectonics; current topics in the geophysical literature.
Monday seminars are open to the public and take place in Schermerhorn Hall, Room 200B on Mondays from 12:10-1:30pm. The seminar series semester schedule can be found
here
.
All anthropology graduate students are required to attend. Reports of ongoing research are presented by staff members, students, and special guests.
Prerequisite: completion of all M.Phil. requirements. Ph.D. candidates may be required to register for this course every term during the preparation of the dissertation.
History Doctoral students who are for TAs for a course must enroll in this independent study seminar. The DGS is always listed as instructor.
Members of the staff, graduate students, and outside speakers present current research.