Prerequisites: the director of graduate studies' permission if taking more than 3 points of study with any one faculty member.
Individual writing on a topic agreed upon by the supervising faculty member.
Prerequisites: the director of graduate studies' permission if taking more than 3 points of study with any one faculty member.
Individual writing on a topic agreed upon by the supervising faculty member.
Prerequisites: the director of graduate studies' permission if taking more than 3 points of study with any one faculty member.
Individual writing on a topic agreed upon by the supervising faculty member.
Prerequisites: the director of graduate studies' permission if taking more than 3 points of study with any one faculty member.
Individual writing on a topic agreed upon by the supervising faculty member.
One of three yearlong workshops that are required of all LAIC Ph.D. students, the Lecture Series (SPAN GR9045 & SPAN GR9046) will require that students participate actively in the guest lectures and workshops that the department sponsors throughout the academic year. Students must attend each lecture and will fulfill various roles throughout the year: they will introduce guest speakers, coordinate panels, serve as discussants, or moderate debates following lectures and presentations. This series will train students to assume different professional roles. The workshop component of the Lecture Series, also required of all students in the program, will be led by the series coordinator along with the relevant event’s organizer, who will engage every first-year student as a collaborator in a particular role.
This is a Law School course. For more detailed course information, please go to the
Law School Curriculum Guide
at:
http://www.law.columbia.edu/courses/search
This is a Law School course. For more detailed course information, please go to the
Law School Curriculum Guide
at:
http://www.law.columbia.edu/courses/search
Candidates for the M.S. degree may conduct an investigation of some problem in biomedical engineering culminating in a thesis describing the results of their work. No more than 6 points in this course may be counted for graduate credit, and this credit is contingent upon the submission of an acceptable thesis.