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Accounting |
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ACCT 500 - General Accounting Principles and Concepts Three hours. 3 Credits
This course captures the essential aspects of financial accounting. It focuses on accounting procedures for assets, liabilities and stockholders’ equity and the preparation of the income statement, balance sheet and the statement of cash flows.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None
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ACCT 551 - Fund Accounting Three hours. 3 Credits
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ACCT 552 - Financial Accounting Theory and Practice Three hours. 3 Credits
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ACCT 600 - Accounting for Decision Making Three hours. 3 Credits
This course focuses on introductory financial and managerial accounting topics explored from the perspective of managers doing business in global markets. The objective of the course it to provide students with the technical accounting skills needed to advance in the public and private sectors.
Prerequisite(s) Department HOLD for non-Business Masters students. Seek override from Graves School Masters Office (at GSBM 435; 443-885-3396; gravesmasters@morgan.edu) for non-Business Masters students. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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ACCT 603 - Financial Statement Analysis Three hours. 3 Credits
This course develops an understanding of the balance sheet, income statement and statement of cash flows and how these statements are used by financial professionals.
Prerequisite(s) ACCT 600 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ACCT 606 - Advanced Auditing Three hours. 3 Credits
This course covers auditing standards, objectives and procedures; audit documentation and auditors’ reports; Sarbanes-Oxley requirements, and standards for reviews, compilations and other assurance services.
Prerequisite(s) ACCT 600 , ACCT 631 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ACCT 607 - Introduction to Forensic Accounting Three hours. 3 Credits
This course provides an understanding of fraud using various platforms and existing theories on types of fraud. FInancial statement fraud and other fraudulent behaviors are covered. The relationship between fraud prevention and good corporate governance is discussed.
Prerequisite(s) ACCT 606 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ACCT 608 - Management Information Systems in Accounting Three hours. 3 Credits
This course develops an understanding and appreciation for the design, analysis, development, and implementation of computer-based accounting information systems with an emphasis on control and management issues of this accounting function.
Prerequisite(s) ACCT 600 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ACCT 610 - Business Taxation Three hours. 3 Credits
This course covers income taxation of businesses by national tax authorities with emphasis on U.S. Federal practices. Tax research using current technology will be emphasized.
Prerequisite(s) ACCT 600 and ACCT 320. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ACCT 631 - Financial Accounting and Reporting Three hours. 3 Credits
This is a course on intermediate financial accounting concepts. Accounting and reporting issues related to the various elements of financial statements (i.e. assets, liabilities, equity, revenues and expenses) are covered with emphasis on financial statement presentation and disclosure.
Prerequisite(s) ACCT 600 . Co-Requisite(s) None
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ACCT 699 - Accounting Theory (Capstone) Three hours. 3 Credits
This course investigates the theories upon which accounting measurement and valuation are based. It is designed to help the student integrate the material studied in the accounting core courses. The impact of accounting research on business and accounting practice will also be covered. This course must be taken in the semester of graduation.
Prerequisite(s) ACCT 600 and ACCT 603 and ACCT 631 or its equivalent; ACCT 606 or ACCT 607 and FIN 620 ; Enrollment in the MS-Accounting program. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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ACCT 705 - Introduction to Accounting Three hours. 3 Credits
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ACCT 800 - Financial Accounting Seminar Three hours. 3 Credits
The purpose of the seminar is to familiarize students with the broad spectrum of empirical research in accounting. The emphasis is on the market based accounting research. Students are expected to gain fundamental skills in developing research ideas and conducting empirical research in financial accounting.
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ACCT 801 - Managerial Accounting Seminar Three hours. 3 Credits
This course provides an in-depth exposure to current research issues relating to managerial accounting and decision-making in the areas of cost accumulation and product costing, planning and control.
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ACCT 802 - Taxation Seminar Three hours. 3 Credits
Examines federal income taxation of sole proprietors, partnerships, corporations, fiduciaries, and individuals with an emphasis on tax consequences of business and investment decisions. Enhances ability to identify, analyze, and provide potential approaches via review of existing relevant literature while examining accepted and innovative modes of research methodology.
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ACCT 803 - Auditing Seminar Three hours. 3 Credits
This course focuses on providing an in depth analysis of current auditing issues. Auditing is approached as a decision-making risk based discipline. An in depth analysis of different decision and judgment models are examined in an auditing context.
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ACCT 804 - Accounting Information Systems Seminar Three hours. 3 Credits
Examines contemporary issues in accounting information systems, including alternative processing methods, system evaluation and selection, and computer-based audit and security. Enhances ability to identify, analyze, and provide potential solutions to persistent and current accounting information systems issues. Focus includes theoretical and practical approaches via review of existing relevant literature while examining accepted and innovative modes of research methodology.
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ACCT 805 - Accounting Research Seminar I Three hours. 3 Credits
This is a foundation level accounting seminar that provides an overview of methodology used in accounting research. Topics include the research process, principles of research design, implementation and evaluation of accounting research. Literature in areas such as accounting experiments, financial market research and agency problem research is reviewed and discussed with a focus on the methodology used.
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ACCT 806 - Seminar in Selected Accounting Topics Three hours. 3 Credits
This seminar focuses on research issues in auditing, accounting information systems, accounting education, fund accounting, taxation and other areas of accounting research not covered by other accounting seminars.
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ACCT 807 - Empirical Research in Capital Markets Three hours. 3 Credits
This course provides an in-depth examination of accounting and finance related capital markets research. The seminar focuses on current research issues and methods
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ACCT 876 - Research Implementation Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is designed to have students undertake a full-fledged research process under the guidance of a faculty member to identify a topic of research interest and develop a publishable research paper over the course of the semester.
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Adult Education |
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ADED 531 - Instructional Strategies in Adult Education Three hours. 3 Credits
This course treats approaches to learning that have proved effective for adults. It will include the examination and construction of instructional materials for use in adult education programs and will give attention to standardized evaluative instruments used for adult placement.
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ADED 532 - Administration and Program Planning in Adult Education Three hours. 3 Credits
Considering the principles of administration for adult education programs, the emphasis is placed on leadership styles, organizational structures, and management procedures.
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ADED 533 - Counseling Adults Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is a treatment of problems commonly encountered in dealing with adult learners and of techniques for their solution. Basic counseling and guidance processes employed in adult education are studied.
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ADED 595 - Seminar in Adult Basic Education for Urban Teachers Three hours. 3 Credits
The primary concern of this course is the development of relevant perceptions for educating urban adult students. Teachers will be provided the opportunity to become aware of the typical daily experiences of an inner-city adult through field trips, walking tours, and visits to homes and Adult Basic Education centers. Attempts will be made to discover new ways of educating the inner-city adult to manipulate his/her experiences advantageously. These perceptions and experiences will be utilized in the development of educational programs for the illiterate and semi-illiterate adult.
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Advanced Studies Leadership - Curriculum |
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ASLC 601 - Curriculum Theory and Development Three hours. 3 Credits
This course presents social, psychological and political foundations of the curriculum; it examines curriculum issues, theories, trends and practices followed in planning and developing the curriculum. Recent developments in curriculum such as the Afro-centric curriculum, bilingual education, and various approaches to multicultural education are examined.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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ASLC 602 - Curriculum, Instruction and Assessment in Higher Education Three hours. 3 Credits
This course, specially intended for those who plan to be curriculum developers and academic affairs specialists in higher education, will devote significant attention to academic and curricular planning, selecting and utilizing instructional strategies. It will also provide an overview of the assessment of student learning outcomes in higher education Students will be required to develop either a proposal for a new curriculum or the critique of an existing curriculum in a higher education institution.
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Advanced Studies Leadership - Dynamics |
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ASLD 601 - Group Dynamics Three hours. 3 Credits
This course presents methods of organizing and operating groups to deal with the management of educational change. This course presents techniques of effective communication, group interaction, planning and implementation for solving educational problems in large and small groups. Students will develop skills and apply them to problems in educational settings.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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Advanced Studies Leadership - Finance |
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ASLF 601 - Educational Economics and Finances Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is designed to help students understand education finance in a capitalistic society course will capture how public schools are financed and topics such as revenues, expenditures, costs, affordability and economic theories.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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Advanced Studies Leadership - Jurisprudence |
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Advanced Studies Leadership - Learning |
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ASLL 601 - Learning Theory Three hours. 3 Credits
This course introduces participants to the fundamentals of human cognition and learning. It encourages participants to explore the implications of theories of learning for the enhancement of classroom teaching and learning.
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ASLT 632 - Instructional Systems Analysis for Mathematics and Science Education Three hours. 3 Credits
This course employs the concepts of Instructional Systems Analysis to integrate educational technology into mathematics and science classrooms. The course explores electronic instructional media that are appropriate for the delivery of mathematics and science instruction.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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Advanced Studies Leadership - Politics & Policy |
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ASLP 600 - Introduction to Doctoral Studies in Education Three hours. 3 Credits
Upon completing the course the learners will: Understand the essay form, and its importance to academic writing Explore skills essential for academic writing including chapter, part, paragraph, and sentence construction; use of quotes; the purpose and function of APA; how to avoid plagiarism; MSWord tricks and techniques.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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ASLP 601 - Politics of Education Three hours. 3 Credits
This course will introduce students to the role of politics in the American education system. Students will examine the role of power in the education system. This power comes in the form of culture, the economy, race, gender, and globalization.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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ASLP 602 - Philosophy of Education Three hours. 3 Credits
This course explores the major philosophical and historical paradigms in education in Western culture, including idealism, process philosophy, pragmatism, and Marxism. We will read major texts to analyze and discuss the value, meaning, and future of Western.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ASLP 691 - Special Topics in Education I Three hours. 3 Credits
Special Topic seminars may enhance the students’ professional knowledge, enrich the students’ dissertations, or both. Topics vary depending on faculty expertise and student interest. Since ASLP course numbers are used by other programs, seek advisement before registering.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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ASLP 700 - Methods of Inquiry in Higher Education Three hours. 3 Credits
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ASLP 791 - Special Topics in Education II Three hours. 3 Credits
Special Topic seminars may enhance the students’ professional knowledge, enrich the students’ dissertations, or both. Topics vary depending on faculty expertise and student interest. Since ASLP course numbers are used by other programs, seek advisement before registering.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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ASLP 891 - Special Topics in Education III Three hours. 3 Credits
Special Topic seminars may enhance the students’ professional knowledge, enrich the students’ dissertations, or both. Topics vary depending on faculty expertise and student interest. Since ASLP course numbers are used by other programs, seek advisement before registering.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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ASLP 993 - Doctoral Pre-Candidacy Three hours. 3 Credits
This course conveys full-time status to a doctoral student as a full-time student engaged in study prior to the achievement of doctoral candidacy. Students studying for comprehensive examinations or preparing for a proposal defense enroll in this course. This course is a non-curricular course and cannot be used as a program credit requirement. The student registers for 3 credit hours and the registration reports the full-time status of 9 graduate credit hours.
Prerequisite(s) ASLP 600 and RDHE 702 and RDHE 703 and RDHE 704 and RDHE 731 and RDHE 736 and RDHE 727 and RDHE 744 and RDHE 722 and EDSR 719 and EDSR 819 and EDSR 622 and EDSR 624 and EDSR 818 and RDHE 889 and RDHE 885 and ASLP 891 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL/SPRING
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Advanced Studies Leadership - Sociology |
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ASLS 601 - Contemporary Issues in Urban Education Three hours. 3 Credits
This course presents an overview of major social policy issues in contemporary urban education. Emphasis is placed on such topics as educational standards, diversity, access, student success, technology, learning centered colleges, institutional effectiveness, and governance and administration.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ASLS 602 - Education and Society Three hours. 3 Credits
This course will introduce students to the American education system. It will examine education as an institution, with social and structural factors that contribute to educational disparities. Furthermore, educational issues surrounding race, class, gender, and higher education will be discussed.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ASLS 660 - Urban Systems Analysis Three hours. 3 Credits
Emphasis is placed on the interactive effect between systems. Various types of systems and their impact on the urban environment will be assessed.
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Architecture |
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ARCH 501 - Transitions in Architecture: Theory and Research Three hours. 3 Credits
This hybrid gateway course introduces the philosophy behind architectural design. Students interactively study topics selected from the history of architecture, theory, context, urbanism, and concepts of design. Students are prepared for advanced design and research projects in the following semesters.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 502 - Graphics Workshop Three hours. 3 Credits
Graphics Workshop if an interdisciplinary course taken jointly by students within the School of Architecture and Planning. The purpose of this course is to develop students’ skills and techniques in visual communications, thus allowing them to select and apply the most appropriate means of graphically presenting problems and/or solutions. Students are also exposed to techniques and skills that aid in perceiving the built environment in three dimensions– a necessary ingredient for design creativity.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 503 - Visualization 2: Building Information Modeling Three hours. 3 Credits
This course focuses on the skills and information needed to create a Building Information Model (BIM) in service to the architectural design process. In particular, this course will introduce to students the use of Autodesk’s Revit application. Special emphasis will be placed on practical applications in architectural design, design development, and document production.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 502 Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 504 - Visualization 3: Digital Rendering and Parametric Design Three hours. 3 Credits
This course will introduce students to digital rendering and parametric and numerical methods in the production of architectural drawings and instructions. Emphasis will be placed on the process and the exploitation of ordering principles. Students will explore in depth how, through architectural design, to convey subjective experience and will be assessed on their ability to communicate visual ideas at varying scales of experience. Students will also explore exemplary parametric design precedents and comprehensive system planning, as well as the architects whose work is characteristic of both.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 502 Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ARCH 510 - Architectural Design Studio I Eight hours. 6 Credits
The architecture students are introduced to design foundation. The intention of the course is to teach students basics of design process based on an understanding of the form and structure. Emphasis will be on developing design criteria through the analysis of conditions, needs, aspirations and resources of the environment.
Prerequisite(s) Admission to program. Co-Requisite(s) None
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ARCH 511 - Built Environment History I Three hours. 3 Credits
An introduction to the historic foundations of built form, including settlement patterns and indigenous building types. Beginning with Egyptian architecture and continuing to the philosophical start of the Renaissance, and concluding in 1750, this course is a foundation in the history and theory of architecture, that develops an understanding of the close relationship between social forces and the forms of architecture.
Prerequisite(s) Admission to program. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ARCH 512 - Graphics Workshop Three hours. 3 Credits
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ARCH 513 - Technology I (Statics and Strength of Materials) Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is devoted to the development and application of the principles of static mechanics and strength of materials as they relate to the analysis of building structures.
Prerequisite(s) physics and mathematics through college algebra are required. Admission to program.
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ARCH 520 - Architectural Design Studio II Eight hours. 6 Credits
The architecture students are introduced to a familiar environmental package of the home and adjacent landscape. The intention of the course is to teach students to design residences and communities based on an understanding of the form and structures of urban home and community proto-types. Emphasis will be placed on developing design criteria through the analysis of conditions, needs, aspirations and resources of the resident’s-environment. Attention Will be given to the role of the residential neighborhoods in the city by understanding the elements that produce the satisfying urban home and residential community.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 510 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ARCH 521 - Built Environment History II Three hours. 3 Credits
Building on the concepts of ARCH 511 - Built Environment History I this course is an introduction to architectural and urban design history from 1750 to contemporary times, with an emphasis on world architecture and the significance of multicultural architectural traditions. The development of specific built form topologies is studied, including patron residential, religious, civic structures, and urban space. Emphasis will be placed on two specific areas. The first is to identify significant architects, their theories and buildings; the second is to look at how cities evolved, adapting to new uses and styles of habitation.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 511 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 522 - Architectural Technology II (Building Systems-Structures) Three hours. 3 Credits
The purposes of this course are (1) to develop the student’s skills and techniques in the design of basic elements of various wood and steel structural systems; (2) to expand their understanding of the principles and characteristics of various structural materials; and (3) to enhance his/her ability to resolve structural problems of cost, durability, space, legal restrictions, time and aesthetics.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 513 .
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ARCH 523 - Architectural Technology III (Environmental Controls) Three hours. 3 Credits
The purposes of this course are to expand the students’ understanding of the nature and characteristics of various environmental systems as well as to develop their ability to make choices between systems that best resolve the problems of cost, social accommodation, operating efficiency, durability, scheduling, safety, and aesthetics.
Prerequisite(s) Admission to program Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ARCH 525 - Structures 1 Three hours. 3 Credits
This course introduces students to the qualities and mechanics of materials used in the construction industry and to fundamental concepts of architectural engineering based on forces in equilibrium. Topics include concentrated loads, distributed loads, moments,
professional codes, and material behavior. The course is tailored for students in the Master of Architecture program.
Prerequisite(s) College-level Algebra, Trigonometry, and Physics (Mechanics) Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 526 - Structures 2 Three hours. 3 Credits
This course will introduce students to steel, wood, and concrete structural systems and their application in buildings design in the United States. This course’s emphasis will be upon identifying appropriate the structural system according to required span, architectural configuration, and other parameters such as cost, fire-resistance, and soil bearing.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 525 Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 530 - Architectural Design Studio III Eight hours. 6 Credits
As a continuing study of an urban neighborhood, students will be introduced to commercial and/or institutional forms and their contexts. Students will explore various issues related to the programming, planning and designing of various types of commercial and institutional establishments. Emphasis will be placed on the requirements, analyzing various environmental concerns, planning considerations and jointly developing design solutions that address architectural and landscape architectural requirements. The course will be organized into a sequence of design problems.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 520 Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 531 - Built Environment History Ill Three hours. 3 Credits
This course covers the philosophy of modem architecture since 1910, the building styles and works by masters of modern architecture after World War II, and introduces the graduate student to divergent architectural theories that began with post-modem architecture. Emphasis is placed on individual research projects and presentations by students on a particular theory of architecture or by a particular architect during the contemporary era.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 521 .
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ARCH 532 - Architectural Technology IV (Building Systems-Structures) Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is a continuation of Architectural Technology Ill and is designed to (1) develop students’ skills and techniques in the, design of basic elements of various concrete structural systems; (2) expand their understanding of the principles and characteristics of various structural materials; and (3) enhance their ability to resolve structural problems of cost, durability, space, legal restrictions, time and aesthetics.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 522 .
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ARCH 533 - Architectural Technology V (Building Materials) Three hours. 3 Credits
In this course, students learn to evaluate selected sets of building materials. Additionally, students will be required to apply their analytical skills to the selections of materials for a selected project. Emphasis will be given to the relationship between design and construction. Although the analytical process to be taught can be universally applied in material selections, the focus will be on those materials and techniques commonly used in the Central Atlantic Region of the United States. The principles of specification writing and existing CSI standards are introduced and applied on specific assignments.
Prerequisite(s) Admission to the program Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ARCH 540 - Architectural Design Studio IV Eight hours. 6 Credits
The intent of this studio is to explore design approaches to multi-use public facilities. Assignments and design problems will require the students to use their experiences in data collection and analysis in developing design approaches for multi-use facilities. Problem statements will be developed in concert with current needs of selected municipalities. Specific emphasis will be placed on having the students develop extensive sets of presentation documents outlining structural, environmental and spatial character of the built form(s) they create.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 530 and ARCH 533 or permission from Program Director. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ARCH 541 - The Integrated Intelligent Detail Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is structured for students to learn about architectural details and building systems, and to be able to design details, that reflect new developments in design and construction, such as integrated project delivery and sustainability. The course will focus on an overview of how the major components of a building fit together, the rationales behind their construction, and the methods of graphically describing these concepts, including Building Information Modeling (BIM).
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 530 or permission of the Program Director. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ARCH 545 - Comprehensive Design Studio Eight hours. 6 Credits
This design studio course strengthens the student in comprehensive design skills. The educational focus of this architectural design studio is to deepen the student’s preparation for the Comprehensive Design Review (CDR), which is a departmental review of student progress towards the professional degree in architecture at the graduate level.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered SPRING
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ARCH 550 - Architectural Design Studio V Eight hours. 6 Credits
This studio addresses comprehensive design competency, including the integration of structures, materials, and sustainability in the design of a complex building, dealing with larger-scale development in the Baltimore metropolitan region. It is the intention that the site and the context of the problem force the designer to consider mixed, residential and commercial uses. The quality and standard of physical design synthesis will play major role in determining the ultimate viability for future development.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 523 and ARCH 533 and ARCH 540 and ARCH 541 and URBD 511 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 561 - Architectural Practices, Law and Management Three hours. 3 Credits
The objective of this course is to explore the roles, relationships, and legal responsibilities of an architect. The architect’s professional interaction with consultants, owners, contractors and the various governmental authorities that regulate the building industry will be discussed. The fundamentals of professional practice and ethics, as well as various management tools will also be explored.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 550 or permission of the Program Director. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 562 - Construction Cost Estimating and Analysis Three hours. 3 Credits
This course presents emerging estimating and cost control measures in the construction industry. Topics include conceptual and definitive estimating, cost developing, cost analysis methods, project delivery implications, international work implications, and computer applications and modeling.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 602 - American Architecture Periods, Styles and Movements This course examines American architecture from the late 18th, 19th and 20th century, not as an insular phenomenon, but as part of a transnational history of architectural periods, styles and movements. While the course focuses on buildings and architectural projects constructed within the national boundaries of the United States of America between 1776 and the present, this focus necessarily also involves a wider historical and geographical scope, including the North Atlantic region as a cultural sphere; the architecture of colonizing powers; international codes of classical and modernist architecture emanating from Europe; and the architecture of regions eventually conquered by the United States.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 521 or permission of the Program Director. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 603 - Historic Preservation Materials & Technology Three hours. 3 Credits
This course examines common historical and contemporary building materials and technologies with the intention of understanding their basic properties, the ways they have been transformed into building elements, assemblies and systems, typical causes for their changes over time, and protocols for their conservation. The principal product of the class is a comprehensive and detailed building investigation, known as a Historic Structure Report, on an historic structure.
Prerequisite(s) Permission of the instructor or the Program Director. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 604 - Historic Preservation Documentation Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is an advanced seminar/studio, designed to train students in the Historic American Building Survey (HABS) techniques through supervised reading, fieldwork, and writing. Course work introduces students to the skills needed to conduct research, photograph and document both in written and graphic form. Emphasizing efficiency and accuracy in its consideration of sources, methods and techniques, discussion helps students develop reasonable research questions and carefully evaluate evidence. To test the approaches and sample the sources introduced during the semester, students in the seminar participate in a research project to document a particular historic structure or group of historic structures.
Prerequisite(s) Permission of the instructor or the Program Director. Co-Requisite(s) ENST 601 Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 631 - Architecture and the Printed Page Three hours. 3 Credits
This course will introduce students to the seminal theoretical treatises by well-known architects. With the opportunity to examine original printed editions, students will experience the content and character of architectural writings from the time of Alberti through today.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 521 . permission of the instructor, or the Program Director. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 651 - A Survey of Imaginary Buildings Online hours. 3 Credits
This course will explore those aspects of architecture appeal to what is typically called “the imagination.” Students will be provided a framework for identifying past history and current trends towards the conception of imaginary buildings and towards increasingly creative design.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 521 , permission of the instructor, or the Program Director. Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 652 - Art and the Built Environment Online hours. 3 Credits
This course will consider relationships between art and the built environment during the twentieth century and in contemporary times. Study of the work and working methods of a selected group of artists will uncover areas of overlap among art, architecture, and landscape architecture. Topics will include color, structure, transparency, perception, environmental conservation, public art, land art, and the urban condition.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 521 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 738 - Seminar in Architecture Special Topics I Two or Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is designed to examine, in greater depth, particular subject areas of the built environment, for example: integrated project delivery, advanced history and theory topics, site specific architecture and urban design, technical wall systems, advanced structural topics, sustainable design.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 740 - Seminar in Architecture Special Topics II Two or Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is designed to examine, in greater depth, particular subject areas of the built environment, for example: integrated project delivery, advanced history and theory topics, site specific architecture and urban design, technical wall systems, advanced structural topics, sustainable design.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 741 - Seminar in Architecture Special Topics III Two or Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is designed to examine, in greater depth, particular subject areas of the built environment, for example: integrated project delivery, advanced history and theory topics, site specific architecture and urban design, technical wall systems, advanced structural topics, sustainable design.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 742 - Seminar in Architecture Special Topics IV Two or Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is designed to examine, in greater depth, particular subject areas of the built environment, for example: integrated project delivery, advanced history and theory topics, site specific architecture and urban design, technical wall systems, advanced structural topics, sustainable design.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 743 - Seminar in Architecture Special Topics V Two or Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is designed to examine, in greater depth, particular subject areas of the built environment, for example: integrated project delivery, advanced history and theory topics, site specific architecture and urban design, technical wall systems, advanced structural topics, sustainable design.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL OR SPRING
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ARCH 771 - Terminal Project Seminar Three hours. 3 Credits
This hybrid seminar will include discussions and research of trends in contemporary professional design. The primary intent of this effort is to further develop the student’s research and writing skills, for preparation for a topical final design studio, or for a terminal design project.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 540 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 772 - Architectural Design Studio VI Eight hours. 6 Credits
This studio involves the conception, development and design of a comprehensive terminal design project programmed in ARCH 771, or, as an option, follows an advanced topical design project, collaboratively developed among students and faculty.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 550 . Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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ARCH 797 - Thesis Guidance Three hours. 9 Credits
This course enables a student to develop and execute an approved scholarly research agenda in consultation with the student’s thesis chairperson and committee. Students register for this course continuously to maintain enrollment until the student has completed the thesis. This course is a non-curricular course and is not considered as part of the overall program credit requirement. However, this course maintains the student status as a matriculated, full-time student (student registers for 3 credit hours each semester, but is acknowledged as having a 9 credit hour load).
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Contact Hours Three
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ARCH 799 - Thesis Defense Three hours. 9 Credits
This course allows students the opportunity to defend their thesis for approval by the student’s thesis chairperson and committee after the thesis has been completed. After gaining approval of the thesis chairperson and committee, the thesis is submitted to the School of Graduate Studies for final processing and approval. This course is a curricular course and may be considered as 3 credit hours of the overall program credit requirement. This course maintains the student status as a matriculated, full-time student (student is registered for 3 credit hours, but is acknowledged as having a 9 credit hour load).
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Contact Hours Three
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CMGT 601 - Principles of Construction Management I Three hours. 3 Credits
Theory and practice of construction management including interpretation of construction drawings, specifications and understanding of materials and methods, contracts, quantity take-off and estimating for a construction project.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None
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CMGT 602 - Principles of Construction Management II Three hours. 3 Credits
This course covers the basic principles of planning, scheduling, organizing, staffing, directing, and managing construction projects.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None
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CMGT 625 - Contracts and Legal Issues in Construction Forty Five hours. 3 Credits
This course will introduce rules and regulations governing the construction industry practices and activities, understanding the principles of contract law, including contractor’s license law, state lien laws, workers compensation, proving costs and damages, and claims related to schedule, delays and acceleration.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None
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CMGT 630 - Construction Risk Management Three hours. 3 Credits
Managing risk of construction projects via categorization, assessment techniques, minimization strategies and contingency planning for construction projects small to large in scale of construction.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None
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CMGT 631 - Construction Cost Estimating and Analysis Forty Five hours. 3 Credits
Incorporates emerging estimating and cost control measures in the construction industry. Conceptual and definitive estimating, cost developing, cost analysis methods, project delivery implications and computer applications are covered in this course.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None
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CMGT 633 - Construction Planning and Scheduling Three hours. 3 Credits
Application of project planning and scheduling techniques such as network analysis and CPM including advanced topics such as project control and stochastic modeling with the use of contemporary computerized software is covered.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None
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CMGT 640 - Construction Management Research Three hours. 3 Credits
This course offers an overview of the process of conducting a Directed Field Work (CMGT 794) or Thesis (CMGT 799). It discusses resources available to graduate students and provides a list of research topics that are of interest to CMGT faculty. The course will also provide guidance to students on writing project report of thesis
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None
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CMGT 642 - Special Topics in Construction Three hours. 3 Credits
Special topic courses will be developed to address emerging issues or industry-specific demand. The specific titles and content of each seminar, along with the course syllabus, will change to reflect the emerging topic areas of interest which can only be determined at the time of offering.
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None
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CMGT 794 - Directed Fieldwork Three hours. 3 Credits
This course is a formal investigation into a construction industry problem. The directed fieldwork is an applied research project that is more extensive than an independent study and less extensive than a thesis. The course culminates in a detailed project report and oral presentation. Pre-requisites: CMGT 640- Construction Management Research.
Prerequisite(s) CMGT 640 Co-Requisite(s) None
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CMGT 799 - Thesis Defense Three hours. 9 Credits
The thesis topic will usually be in an area of interesst discovered by the student in early stages of the Construction program or work experience. Students may enroll for a maximum of 4 hours per semester for thesis credit. These students should have formed a progect committee of two or more faculty members who would advise and ultimately approve the thesis. The student is expected to submit a substantial body of research work and to defend the research work.
Prerequisite(s) CMGT 640 Co-Requisite(s) None Contact Hours Three
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LAAR 505 - Plants One hours. 1 Credits
Prerequisite(s) None Co-Requisite(s) None Offered FALL
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LAAR 506 - Plants II One hours. 1 Credits
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LAAR 507 - Plants III One hours. 1 Credits
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LAAR 532 - Technology II Three hours. 3 Credits
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LAAR 794 - Studio VI Master’s Project Three hours. 3 Credits
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URBD 511 - Urban Design Three hours. 3 Credits
This course provides several platforms for exploring aspects of urban design. This course attempts to recognize and embrace that our understanding of the city we have created may be incomplete, and it is therefore more important to approach the study and design of urban environments from a number of different directions at once. In addition to the traditional seminar format of readings, lectures, discussions, and assignments, students will use the urban environments around us actively, as laboratories, to further their understanding of the course material with direct observation, analysis, and interaction with Baltimore and other cities.
Prerequisite(s) ARCH 530 and ARCH 540 Co-Requisite(s) None Offered None
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ART 509 - African American Art Three hours. 3 Credits
The student will examine the forces affecting the African American in order to understand the black artist’s motivation and modes. The work of out-standing artists will be considered and attention will be given to the contemporary search for Black aesthetic.
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