| source Johns Hopkins University (X) |
level Graduate (X) |
department General Engineering (17) Near Eastern Studies (15) Humanities Center (14) Civil Engineering (13) Public Policy (13) History of Science and Technology (12) German (10) Italian (10) Earth and Planetary Science (9) Classics (7) History of Art (6) Information Security Institute (5) Africana Studies (4) Language Teaching Center (2) Professional Communication Program (2) Biophysics (1) Computer Science (1) East Asian Studies (1) Electrical and Computer Engineering (1) French (1) Interdepartmental (1) Jewish Studies (1) Latin American Studies (1) Mechanical Engineering (1) Neuroscience (1) Political Science (1) Psychological (1) Women, Gender, and Sexuality (1) |
A reading seminar focusing on significant and/or recent studies in the social history of South Africa. Cross listed with Africana Studies.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Not Available
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Not Available
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Graduate students only This course will focus on black political thoughtâs engagements with and relevance to nationalism, feminism and diasporic identification as a means of highlighting the ways in which black political thought has both paralleled and distinguished itself from dominant themes, concerns and investigations of Western political and social theory in the 20th century. This aspect of the course will trace black political thoughtâs relation to Marxism, Cultural Studies, Surrealism, Liberalism and other critical methodologies and perspectives. (AP) Cross list with Africana Studies
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 560.320 Steel Structures or comparable introductory steel design course. This course examines advanced design of structural steel buildings using the load and resistance factor design approach. Topics include plastic analysis of indeterminate structures, design of plate girders, and design of composite beams. Herman. Co-listed with 565.620.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Seminar series of speakers on various aspects of civil engineering. Different speakers are invited each semester. Full time civil engineering graduate students must enroll in the seminar course every semester unless excused by the Department.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
This 1.5 hour course will address various themes related to modeling complex systems through critical evaluation of technical articles, open discussion, faculty presentations, and computational workshops. Teams of 3-5 faculty will develop monthly units based on different themes, examples of which may include: optimization and uncertainty modeling in science and engineering, particle-based modeling, experimental and field measurements in multi-scale models, linking atomistic- to continuum-scale models, challenges in climate and ocean modeling, homogenization and upscaling of small-scale data. This course is a requirement for MCS IGERT trainees, but it is open to all graduate students.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
The course builds on the knowledge gained in classes on structural mechanics and solid mechanics, extending the concepts of those classes in two directions, (1) the inclusion of uncertainty in problems in mechanics and (2) consideration of mechanics phenomena which occur at small scales.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
This course provides advanced theories and experimental techniques in structural engineering. Topics include dynamic scaling, instrumentation, data acquisition, signal processing, system identification, and experimental methods for structures. The class consists of lecture and laboratory sessions. Prerequisites: Structural Dynamics (560.752) or equivalent. Nakata
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Sec. 01 â Staff Sec. 02 â Dalrymple Sec. 08 â Schafer Sec. 09 â Anandarajah Sec. 10 â Graham Sec. 11 â Igusa Sec. 14 â Shen Sec. 15 - Guest Sec. 16 - Nakata Sec. 17 - Herman
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Sec. 01 â Staff Sec. 02 â Dalrymple Sec. 08 â Schafer Sec. 09 â Anandarajah Sec. 10 â Graham Sec. 11 â Igusa Sec. 14 â Shen Sec. 15 - Guest Sec. 16 - Nakata Sec. 17 - Herman
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Sec. 01 â Staff Sec. 02 â Dalrymple Sec. 08 â Schafer Sec. 09 â Anandarajah Sec. 10 â Graham Sec. 11 â Igusa Sec. 14 â Shen Sec. 15 - Guest Sec. 16 - Nakata Sec. 17 - Herman
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Sec. 01 â Staff Sec. 02 â Dalrymple Sec. 08 â Schafer Sec. 09 â Anandarajah Sec. 10 â Graham Sec. 11 â Igusa Sec. 14 â Shen Sec. 15 - Guest Sec. 16 - Nakata Sec. 17 - Herman
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Sec. 01 â Staff Sec. 02 â Dalrymple Sec. 08 â Schafer Sec. 09 â Anandarajah Sec. 10 â Graham Sec. 11 â Igusa Sec. 14 â Shen Sec. 15 - Guest Sec. 16 - Nakata Sec. 17 - Herman
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Sec. 01 â Staff Sec. 02 â Dalrymple Sec. 08 â Schafer Sec. 09 â Anandarajah Sec. 10 â Graham Sec. 11 â Igusa Sec. 14 â Shen Sec. 15 - Guest Sec. 16 - Nakata Sec. 17 - Herman
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Sec. 01 â Staff Sec. 02 â Dalrymple Sec. 08 â Schafer Sec. 09 â Anandarajah Sec. 10 â Graham Sec. 11 â Igusa Sec. 14 â Shen Sec. 15 - Guest Sec. 16 - Nakata Sec. 17 - Herman
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Sec. 01 â Staff Sec. 02 â Dalrymple Sec. 08 â Schafer Sec. 09 â Anandarajah Sec. 10 â Graham Sec. 11 â Igusa Sec. 14 â Shen Sec. 15 - Guest Sec. 16 - Nakata Sec. 17 - Herman
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Grading will be S/U. This biweekly seminar will cover a broad range of current research topics in human language technology, including automatic speech recognition, natural language processing and machine translation. The Tuesday seminars will feature distinguished invited speakers, while the Friday seminars will be given by participating students. A minimum of 75% attendance and active participation will be required to earn a passing grade. Co-listed with 600.604
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Permission required. Graduate student only. Student and invited speakers present current biophysics topics.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Prereq: 510.611 An introduction to solid state physics for advanced undergraduates and graduate students in physical science and engineering. The concepts and applications of solid state principles in modern electronic, optical, and structural materials are discussed.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
We shall read Greek literary and philosophical texts dealing with the figure of Odysseus, to see how he was regarded as a moral type.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
This seminar examines the âdistinctively Romanâ genre of verse satire and associated problems of form, content, and occasion. Substantial readings in Latin from the genreâs major authors: Lucilius, Horace, Persius, and Juvenal.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
Overview of sources, collections, bibliography. Examination of important political, literary, social inscriptions. Reading primary evidence, Pompeian graffiti, new material from Vindolanda, and hands-on work with classical coins.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
(Same course as 040.306) This reading seminar is intended to train graduate students in direct and critical work on primary sources. This semesterâs focus will be on the Homeric epics and Aristophanes.
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
This reading seminar is intended to train graduate students in direct and critical work on primary sources. This semesterâs reading will focus on Apuleiusâ Metamorphoses. (Same course as 040.307)
Score: 9.132225 Details | Listing | Web page
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