semestre - Tecnológico de Monterrey

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SEMESTRE
Programa de Excelencia Internacional PEI
semestral del Tecnológico de Monterrey en The
University of California at Berkeley
Berkeley, California
THE BERKELEY INTERNATIONAL STUDY PROGRAM
PEI SEMESTRAL
Agosto 2016 – Diciembre 2016
El Programa Internacional de Excelencia semestral en UC Berkeley denominado
Berkeley International Study Program (BISP) tiene como objetivo ofrecer a los alumnos
de alto desempeño del Tecnológico de Monterrey un ambiente multicultural que apoye su
enriquecimiento integral y su desarrollo personal brindándoles la oportunidad de estudiar
durante un semestre en una de las mejores universidades a nivel mundial.
Este programa se ofrece a los alumnos de todas las carreras de todos los campus del
Tecnológico de Monterrey que cumplan con los requisitos que establece esta convocatoria.
Las materias a cursar no serán de especialidad para todas las carreras sino materias que
complementen la visión global de los estudiantes en diferentes temas mediante la
experiencia única de estudiar en UC Berkeley. Los alumnos deberán contar con flexibilidad
en las materias a cursar preferentemente y se recomienda ampliamente contar con tópicos
disponibles para acreditación.
Datos Generales del Programa
Lugar: Berkeley, California, USA
Fecha del programa: agosto a diciembre de 2016
Costos estimados: por anunciarse los definitivos




Cuota de solicitud para inscripción: $375 dlls
Cuota internacional: $200 dlls
Seguro médico: $650 dlls
Colegiatura (13 créditos equivalente a 4 materias) : $9490 dlls
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El precio de la colegiatura está calculado en base a materias de 3 créditos. Para
materias de 4 créditos es importante considerar $730 dlls adicionales que
corresponde al precio por cada unidad extra.
Las clases con una sección adicional de laboratorio costarán $100.00 dlls
adicionales.

Alojamiento y comidas :
$7500 dólares aproximadamente
Los costos de trámite y obtención de visa son adicionales.
Elegibilidad:
Para participar como candidatos a este programa, los alumnos deberán haber sido
seleccionados en el Programa de Excelencia Internacional y satisfacer los siguientes
criterios:

Ser alumno regular de alguna carrera a nivel profesional

Haber acreditado al momento de ser postulado (febrero 2016), al menos 6 materias de su
programa de estudios.

Tener promedio acumulado igual o superior a 85 al momento de ser postulado al programa.

Contar como mínimo con un puntaje 570 en papel ó 230 puntos en la versión del examen
en computadora. No se requiere comprobante pero el puntaje mínimo deberá estar
registrado internamente en el Tecnológico de Monterrey. UC Berkeley llevará a cabo una
entrevista adicional para medir el nivel de inglés e intereses académicos.

No estar condicionado disciplinariamente.

Ser postulado por invitación directa del (de la) director(a) de carrera previa revisión tentativa
de la oferta académica.
Aspectos académicos:
Todos los estudiantes deberán de inscribir la siguiente materia: Sociology 198: Strategies
for Cross-Cultural Communication (1 crédito pass/no pass) Esta materia es requisito del
programa en UC Berkeley pero no tendrá acreditación en el Tec debido a que se otorga
un solo crédito y no se obtiene calificación (pass/no pass).
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El total de materias a cursar en UC Berkeley serán 4 más la materia de comunicación
intercultural obligatoria.
Los alumnos acreditarán 6 materias de acuerdo a las políticas de acreditación para
Estados Unidos en donde la carga completa son 12 créditos equivalente a 4 materias.
Los cursos se seleccionarán solamente de determinados departamentos en UC Berkeley
participantes en este programa (revisar anexo 1 son departamentos no listado de
clases). Cabe resaltar que los diferentes departamentos ofrecen un gran número de
cursos especializados y temas relevantes como el ambiente, la globalización, ética,
sociedad, desarrollo, derechos humanos, aspectos regionales en diferentes partes del
mundo entre otros.
Los participantes del programa deberán contar con flexibilidad en cuanto a las materias a
acreditar debido a que el programa garantiza la inscripción a 4 cursos según la oferta de
los departamentos participantes pero no garantiza la inscripción a cursos determinados en
el área de estudios específico. Se recomienda que los estudiantes cuenten con 4 tópicos
disponibles.
Alumnos de las siguientes carreras podrán cursar algunas materias relacionadas
directamente con su área específica de estudios. Sin embargo, igualmente necesitan
flexibilidad para acreditación pues no se garantiza la inscripción a un curso determinado:
Economía, derecho, psicología, letras hispánicas, comunicación (con interés en cine y
medios) e ingeniero físico (checar restricciones en el anexo 1)
Se recomienda revisar cada uno de los cursos ofrecidos en cada departamento
debido a que algunos departamentos ofrecen cursos multidisciplinarios. Por ejemplo los
departamentos de sociología, filosofía, estudios legales, geografía entre otros etc. ofrecen
cursos relacionados a los temas mencionados anteriormente.
Para las carreras de ingeniería y de tecnologías de información hay un gran número de
materas ofrecidas por los departamentos de matemáticas, física y ciencias
computacionales, los cuales se pudieran combinar con otras materias ofrecidas por otros
departamentos. Se recomienda no descartar la revisión de las materias ofrecidas en cada
departamento. Por ejemplo el departamento de sociología ofrece cursos de comunidades
virtuales, de innovación y emprendedor entre otros.
Se anexa un listado de los cursos ofrecidos en agosto del 2015 (revisar anexo 2) como
referencia. El listado incluye las posibilidades de ser inscrito en cuanto a disponibilidad.
Se anexa igualmente un listado de cursos que de antemano se sabe que no están
abiertos a alumnos de este programa y es importante considerarlo. (revisar anexo 3)
Dirección de Internacionalización
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Con el fin de consultar contenidos se recomienda checar “Fall 2015” en la siguiente liga:
schedule.berkeley.edu.
Especificar el departamento correspondiente, “course classification” y nombre del curso.
1-99 (lower division)
Ofrecidas normalmente para alumnos de 1ro y 2ndo año en UC Berkeley
100-199 (upper division)
Ofrecidas normalmente para alumnos de 3ro y 4ndo año en UC Berkeley
Los cursos que se ofrecerán en agosto 2016 se publicarán próximamente.
El programa está abierto a todas las carreras, previa revisión de posibilidad de
acreditación del Director (a) de carrera.
PROCESO PARA PARTICIPAR
Se ha previsto que el procedimiento considere las etapas siguientes:
El director de carrera:
a) Identifica a los alumnos que cumplan con el perfil. La identificación se basará en el
conocimiento que se tiene del alumno y en el análisis de su historia académica.
b) Identifica la institución académica que pudiera interesar/convenir al alumno para cursar el
semestre.
c) Le pide al alumno que aplique a la oportunidad en el sistema de programas e
internacionales y le firma la CARTA DE POSTULACIÓN (adjunta a esta convocatoria),
misma que tendrá que subir al Sistema PI. La firma tiene que ser autógrafa y no
digital. Sin la carta de postulación del Director de carrera, el estudiante NO será
considerado candidato del programa, aunque se postule en la oportunidad.
d) El sistema para postular estará disponible del 10 al 27 de febrero del 2016. El sistema
se cerrará automáticamente a las 23:59 hrs. No se aceptarán postulaciones tardías.
***Les solicitamos atentamente no firmar la carta a alumnos que no hayan ratificado su
interés y posibilidad de participar. Agradecemos vayan seleccionando a sus candidatos,
para que cuando se abra el sistema el proceso sea más eficiente.
e) El sistema no dejará postular a un alumno que cuente ya con un programa asignado en el
mismo periodo o que no cumpla con los requisitos del programa.
Dirección de Internacionalización
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El proceso de selección de los candidatos será centralizado y sus resultados serán
inapelables.
Una vez que el comité del Programa de Excelencia Internacional realice la selección de
candidatos se enviará un aviso a los alumnos seleccionados y no seleccionados.
En el caso de que los alumnos tuviesen considerables dificultades económicas que les
impidieran cubrir el costo total del programa, podrán aplicar a la convocatoria de apoyos
económicos parciales.
En ningún caso el apoyo otorgado será total. La información de dicha convocatoria se
encuentra en la siguiente página: http://sitios.itesm.mx/vi/peiapoyos.html
Los fondos son limitados y no cubren la totalidad del costo. Les pedimos que solamente
soliciten este apoyo para los alumnos que ya cuentan con beca de apoyo económico y con
gran necesidad. Se invita a los campus, directores de carrera y alumnos a buscar otras
alternativas financieras.
*El comité se reserva el derecho de solicitar al candidato que abandone el programa por faltas
disciplinarias durante el proceso de admisión, registro y participación. Es responsabilidad del
Director de Carrera NO postular alumnos condicionados disciplinariamente.
El alumno:
f)
Identifica la oportunidad de excelencia que corresponda a su perfil e intereses en conjunto
con su director de carrera.
g) Le pide a su director de carrera le firme la CARTA DE POSTULACIÓN (adjunta a esta
convocatoria), misma que tendrá que subir al Sistema PI (1). Sin la carta de postulación del
Director de carrera, el estudiante NO será considerado candidato del programa, aunque
se postule en la oportunidad.
h) El sistema para postular estará disponible del 10 al 27 de febrero del 2016. El sistema
se cerrará automáticamente a las 23:59 hrs. No se aceptarán postulaciones tardías.
i)
El sistema no dejará postular a un alumno que cuente ya con un programa asignado en el
mismo periodo o que no cumpla con los requisitos del programa. El alumno NO puede
aplicar a dos opciones de internacionalización en el mismo periodo.
La ruta a través de https://mitec.itesm.mx/ es la siguiente:
Servicios > Programas Internacionales > Estudia en el extranjero > PI Estudia en el extranjero
Dirección de Internacionalización
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Manual: https://vimeopro.com/centroatencionusuarios/programas-internacionales-alumnos/video/103013730
(1)La carta se tendrá que subir al momento de realizar su postulación en el sistema PI. El espacio para subirla
es donde se agregan los documentos de idiomas:
El proceso de selección de los candidatos será centralizado y sus resultados serán inapelables. Una
vez que el comité del PEI realice la selección de candidatos se enviará un aviso a los alumnos
seleccionado y no seleccionados.
Es muy importante que analicen los contenidos de las materias y los costos antes de realizar
las postulaciones. Cada año cambia la oferta de materias pero hay muchas que
permanecen constantes año tras año.
Dirección de Internacionalización
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UC Berkeley:
Lleva a cabo una sesión de entrevista con cada candidato para la selección final
reservándose el derecho de solicitar a los finalistas cualquier información adicional,
*La entrevista se realiza vía Skype en los días y horarios definidos por UC Berkeley. Se
estima que sea durante el mes de Abril a más tardar.
UC Berkeley tendrá la última palabra en la decisión y admisión de los alumnos al programa
y comunicará al Tecnológico de Monterrey la lista final de alumnos admitidos al programa.
ADMISIÓN
a)
El comité del Tecnológico de Monterrey:
Notificará a los alumnos y a los directores de carrera a los departamentos de programas
internacionales la lista definitiva de los alumnos seleccionados por UC Berkeley.
b)
Los alumnos admitidos:
Confirmarán su participación en el programa firmando el documento de lineamientos del
programa y el esquema de pagos. Las fechas límite para ellos serán comunicadas
oportunamente.
Cualquier duda favor de comunicarse con Leticia Zamarripa leticia.zamarripa@itesm.mx, o
al correo piehonores@servicios.itesm.mx.
¡Gracias!
Dirección de Internacionalización
BERKELEY INTERNATIONAL STUDY PROGRAM
IN LETTERS & SCIENCE (BISP-LS)
List of Participating Departments (and course abbreviations):
Students must take a minimum of 12 units from the participating departments listed below.
Social Sciences Departments:
African American Studies (AFRICAMST)
Anthropology (ANTHRO)
Asian American Studies (ASAMST)
Buddhist Studies (BUDDSTD)
Chicano/Latino Studies (CHICANO)
Cognitive Science ☆ (COG SCI)
Demography (DEMOG)
Economics ☆  △ (ECON)
Environmental Economics ☆ ^ △ (ENVECON)
Ethnic Studies (ETH STD)
Gender and Women’s Studies (GWS)
Geography (GEOG)
History (HISTORY)
Legal Studies (LEGALST)
Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, & Transgender St (LGBT)
Linguistics (LINGUIS)
Native American Studies (NATAMST)
Political Science ☆ (POL SCI)
Psychology ☆ (PSYCH)
Sociology (SOCIOL)
Interdisciplinary Studies:
American Studies (AMERSTD)
Asian Studies (ASIANST)
Development Studies (DEV STD)
Interdisciplinary Studies (ISF)
International and Area Studies (IAS)
Latin American Studies (LATAMST)
Letters & Science (L & S)
Middle Eastern Studies (M E STUD)
Peace and Conflict Studies (PACS)
Political Economy ☆ (POLECON)
COURSE NUMBERING SYSTEM AT UC
BERKELEY
Courses are numbered as follows:
#1-99: Lower Division courses. Appropriate for
first and second year students, or for subjects
you have not taken before.
Arts & Humanities:
Art History (HISTART)
Art Practice (ART)
Celtic Studies (CELTIC)
Chinese (CHINESE)
Classics (CLASSIC)
College Writing Program (COLWRIT)
Comparative Literature (COMP LIT)
Dutch Studies (DUTCH)
East Asian Languages & Cultures (EA LANG)
English ☆ (ENGLISH)
Film & Media Studies (FILM)
French (FRENCH)
German (GERMAN)
Greek (GREEK)
Italian Studies (ITALIAN)
Japanese (JAPAN)
Korean (KOREAN)
Latin (LATIN)
Mongolian (MONGOLN)
Music ☆ ◊ (MUSIC)
Near Eastern Studies (NE STUD)
Philosophy ☆ (PHILOS)
Portuguese (PORTUG)
Rhetoric (RHETOR)
Scandinavian (SCANDIN)
Slavic Languages and Literatures (SLAVIC)
South and Southeast Asian Studies (S,SEASN)
South Asian Studies (S ASIAN)
Spanish (SPANISH)
Theater, Dance & Performance Studies ◊ (THEATER)
Tibetan (TIBETAN)
Biological and Physical Sciences:
Computer Science ☆ (COMPSCI)
Earth and Planetary Science (EPS)
Integrative Biology (INTEGBI)
Mathematics  (MATH)
Molecular and Cell Biology (MCELLBI)
Physics ☆  (PHYSICS)
Statistics ☆ (STAT)
☆ Space may be limited in these departments during the Fall and Spring semesters.
 An additional application is required from students in order to enroll in courses.
#100-199: Upper Division courses. Appropriate
for third and fourth year students, especially in
your major or area of study.
#200 and higher: Graduate courses. These
courses are reserved for UC Berkeley students
in their masters and doctoral programs. You
must have permission from the instructor and/or
department in order to enroll in a graduate
course. It is extremely rare that BISP students
will take graduate courses.
◊ Auditions may be required during the week prior to or the first week of instruction
^ Students who wish to take courses in Environmental Economics and Policy must get
permission from BISP staff.
△ Students wishing to take Economics courses must have already completed intermediate
Microeconomic theory and Macroeconomic theory at their home institution prior to
coming to UC Berkeley. Visiting students are not able to take Introductory Economics
(Econ 1, 2, or C3), Microeconomics (Econ 100A or 101A), Macroeconomics (Econ 100B or
101B), or Econometrics (Econ 140 or 141) at UC Berkeley.
Updated 12/11/15 jcc
Course Number
Title
Topic
Notes
Has Space
AFRICAN AMERICAN STUDIES
Not
Comments from the Department
Likely to
Unlikely to Available to (if there are specific prereq's, let me know
here)
BISP
Have Space Have Space
Students
Comments from BISP Office
AFRICAM R1A
Freshman Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
AFRICAM R1B
Freshman Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
AFRICAM 4A
Africa: History and Culture
X
AFRICAM 5A
African American Life and
Culture in the United States
X
AFRICAM 10A
Intermediate Swahili
AFRICAM 11A
Elementary Swahili
AFRICAM 15A
Advanced Swahili
AFRICAM 24
Freshman Seminars
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
AFRICAM 24
Freshman Seminars
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
AFRICAM 27AC
Lives of Struggle: Minorities in a
Majority Culture
AFRICAM 30A
Elementary Chichewa
AFRICAM 98BC
Berkeley Connect
AFRICAM 98BC
Berkeley Connect
X
Not available to BISP Students
AFRICAM 99
AFRICAM 100
X
X
X
"Language and Politics in Southern Africa"
X
X
Supervised Independent
Studies for Freshmen and
Sophomores
Black Intellectual Thought
Not available to BISP Students
X
AFRICAM 111
Race, Class, and Gender in the
United States
AFRICAM 116
Slavery and African American
Life Before 1865
X
AFRICAM 126
African American Women's
History
X
AFRICAM C133A
Race, Identity, and Culture in
Urban Schools
X
AFRICAM C134
Information Technology and
Society
X
AFRICAM 137
Multicultural Communities
X
AFRICAM 139.1
Selected Topics of African
American Social Organization
and Institutions
"Criminal Justice in the Community"
AFRICAM 139.2
Selected Topics of African
American Social Organization
and Institutions
"Student Activism"
AFRICAM C143C
Black Theatre Workshop
AFRICAM 144
Introduction to Cultural Studies: "Black Images"
Black Visual Culture
AFRICAM 158A
X
X
X
Also listed as Theater, Dance, and Performance St C183C
X
X
Poetry for the People: The
Writing and Teaching of Poetry
X
AFRICAM 159
Special Topics in African
American Literature
"Spoken Word"
X
AFRICAM 159
Special Topics in African
American Literature
"African American Poetry"
X
AFRICAM H195A
Senior Honors Thesis
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
AFRICAM H195B
Senior Honors Thesis
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
AFRICAM 197
Field Study in African American
Life
Not available to BISP Students
X
AFRICAM 198BC
Berkeley Connect
Not available to BISP Students
Available for those interested in Ethnic Studies and
African American Studies
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
AFRICAM 199
ANTHROPOLOGY
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
ANTHRO 2AC
Introduction to Archaeology
ANTHRO 3AC
Introduction to Social/Cultural
Anthropology (Ameri...
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
X
ANTHRO R5B
Reading and Composition in
Anthropology
ANTHRO 24
Freshman Seminar
ANTHRO 98
Directed Group Study
ANTHRO 107
Evolution of the Human Brain
ANTHRO 112
Special Topics in Biological
Anthropology
ANTHRO 121AC
American Material Culture
ANTHRO 122F
California Archaeology
ANTHRO 128M
Special Topics in
Archaeology/Method
ANTHRO 136G
Cultural Policy: Cultural
Heritage and Cultural Dip...
X
ANTHRO C136K
Who Owns the Past? Cultural
Heritage in a Digital A...
X
ANTHRO 138A
History and Theory of
Ethnographic Film
ANTHRO 140
The Anthropology of Food
ANTHRO 141
Comparative Society
ANTHRO 148
Anthropology of the
Environment
ANTHRO 150
Utopia: Art and Power in
Modern Times
ANTHRO 155
Modernity
ANTHRO 157
Anthropology of Law
ANTHRO 160AC
Forms of Folklore
ANTHRO 162
Topics in Folklore
ANTHRO 169B
Research Theory and Methods
in Socio-Cultural Anthr...
See decal.org for course listings
X
"Who Were the Neanderthals: Neanderthal Archaeology and
Human Origins"
X
X
X
"Zooarchaeology"
X
"Ethnographic Film: History and Theory"
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Note: "Multispecies Ethnography"
X
X
ANTHRO 181
Themes in the Anthropology of
the Middle East and I...
X
ANTHRO 189
Special Topics in
Social/Cultural Anthropology
Note: "Cities and Citizenship"
X
ANTHRO 189
Special Topics in
Social/Cultural Anthropology
Note: "Transnational Asia"
X
ANTHRO H195A
Senior Honors
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ANTHRO H195B
Senior Honors
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ANTHRO 196
Undergraduate Seminar
Note: "Evolution, Information, and Semiosis"
ANTHRO 196
Undergraduate Seminar
Note: "Post communism: Histories and Transformations"
ANTHRO 197
Fieldwork
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ANTHRO 198
Directed Group Study
ANTHRO 199
Supervised Independent Study
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Introduction to Visual Thinking
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
X
See decal.org for course listings
ART PRACTICE
ART 8
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
ART 12
The Language of Drawing
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ART 13
Language of Painting
X
prerequisite - introductory art course
ART 14
The Language of Sculpture
X
prerequisite - introductory art course
ART 15
The Language of Sculpture:
Ceramics
X
prerequisite - introductory art course
ART 16
Introduction to Printmaking
X
ART 21
Digital Photography: The Image
and the Hive Mind
X
ART 26
Moving Image Media Production
X
ART 98
Directed Group Study
ART 99
Supervised Independent Study
ART 102.1
Approaches to Painting
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
ART 102.2
Approaches to Painting
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
ART 117
Drawing and Composition
ART 119
Global Perspectives in
Contemporary Art
See decal.org for course listings
Not available to BISP Students
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
not available to BISP students
ART 120
Approaches to Printmaking:
Intaglio
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
ART 132
Approaches to Sculpture:
Ceramics
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
ART 133
Approaches to Sculpture:
Meaning in Material
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
ART 163
Social Practice: The Artist in
Body & Site
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
ART 164
Art and Meditation
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
ART 171
Digital Video: The Architecture
of Time
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
ART 173
Sound Art
X
check prerequisites at
http://guide.berkeley.edu/courses/art/
ART 184
Junior Seminar: Meaning and
Making
ART 185
Senior Projects/Professional
Practices
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ART H195A
Special Study for Honors
Candidates in the Practice...
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ART H195B
Special Study for Honors
Candidates in the Practice...
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ART 196
Bridging the Arts Seminar
ART 198
Directed Group Study
ART 199
Supervised Independent Study
for Advanced Undergrad...
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
See decal.org for course listings
ASIAN AMERICAN ST UDIES
ASAMST R2A
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ASAMST R2B
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ASAMST 20A
Introduction to the History of
Asians in the United States
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ASAMST 20AC
X
Asian American Communities
and Race Relations
ASAMST 97
Field Studies in Asian
American Communities
ASAMST 98
Supervised Group Study
ASAMST 99
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
X
See decal.org for course listings
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
ASAMST 122
Japanese American History
X
ASAMST 128AC
Muslims in America
ASAMST 138
Topics in Asian Popular Culture "Hallyu: Understanding the Korean Wave, Korean Pop Culture
and its Consumption"
X
ASAMST 141
Law in the Asian American
Community
X
ASAMST 143
Asian American Health
X
ASAMST 172
Asian American Literature
X
ASAMST 195
Senior Thesis
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ASAMST H195A
Senior Honors Thesis for Asian
American and Asian Diaspora
Studies Majors
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
ASAMST 197
Field Study in Asian American
Communities
ASAMST 198
Supervised Group Study
ASAMST 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
Not available to BISP Students
BUDDHIST C50
Introduction to the Study of
Buddhism
Note: Cross-listed with East Asian Languages and Cultures
C50 and South and Southeast Asian Studies C52
X
BUDDHIST C115
Japanese Buddhism
Note: Cross-listed with Japanese C115
X
BUDDHIST C120
Buddhism on the Silk Road
Note: Cross-listed with East Asian Languages and Cultures
C120
BUDDHIST C132
Pure Land Buddhism
Note: Cross-listed with East Asian Languages and Cultures
C132
BUDDHIST C141
Introductory Readings in
Japanese Buddhist Texts
Note: Cross-listed with Japanese C141
BUDDHIST 190
Topics in the Study of
Buddhism
BUDDHIST 200
Proseminar in Buddhist Studies
BUDDHIST C215
Readings in Indian Buddhist
Texts
BUDDHIST 220
Seminar in Buddhism and
Buddhist Texts
BUDDHIST STUDIES
BUDDHIST C224
See decal.org for course listings
Note: "Women in Buddhist Traditions"
X
X
X
X
Note: Cross-listed with South Asian C215
Note: "Mahaprajapati Gautami"
Readings in Tibetan Buddhist
Texts
Note: Cross-listed with Tibetan C224 and South Asian C224
X
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Buddhist Studies courses. Space is extremely
limited in graduate courses.
X
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Buddhist Studies courses. Space is extremely
limited in graduate courses.
X
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Buddhist Studies courses. Space is extremely
limited in graduate courses.
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Buddhist Studies courses. Space is extremely
limited in graduate courses.
X
CELTIC STUDIES
CELTIC 70
The World of the Celts
X
Taught in English with readings in English.
CELTIC 138
Irish Literature: 700-1800
X
Taught in English with readings in English.
CHICANO STUDIES
CHICANO R1A
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
CHICANO R1B
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
CHICANO 24
Freshman Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
CHICANO 50
Introduction to Chicano History
CHICANO 97
Field Study in Chicano Studies
X
Not available to BISP Students
CHICANO 98
Supervised Group Study
CHICANO 99
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
X
Not available to BISP Students
CHICANO 110
Latina/o Philosophy and
Religious Thought
X
CHICANO 130
Mexican and Chicano Art
History
X
X
Not available to BISP Students
See decal.org for course listings
Not available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
CHICANO 135A
Latino Narrative Film: to the
1980s
X
CHICANO 159
Mexican Immigration
X
CHICANO 163
Caribbean Migration to
Western Europe and the United
States
CHICANO 180.1
CHICANO 180.4
CHICANO 180.5
Topics in Chicano Studies
Topics in Chicano Studies
Topics in Chicano Studies
X
"The Politics of Day of the Dead in meXicana Art Practice" This course focuses on Dia de los Muertos as a meXicana
Indigenous Art Practice. Projects include working with artists and
communities at Mission Cultural Center for Latino Art SF/CA.
Course integrates art historical pedagogy with individual
and collective art practice. We will study its historical Indigenous
origins, Mexican modernist interpretations, and contemporary
transnational Native community practices to gain a deeper
understanding of the fundamental re-contextualization of the Dia
de los Muertos as a cultural and spiritual act of resistance to
assimilation and dislocation.
X
The main goal of this advanced undergraduate seminar is to offer
a broad and comprehensive understanding of Latino Decolonial
Thought. We will study a body of work of Latino and
Latina thinkers in the USA that have produced a USA-centered
Latino Decolonial Thought. However, in order to be able to
understand Latino Decolonial Thought we will also need to
discuss "What is Decolonial Thought?" So, the course will
address questions of coloniality and decoloniality in a theoretical
and world-historical perspective as well.
X
"Immigration Reform and the 2016 Presidential Campaign" - This
course will examine the early stages of the 2016 presidential
campaign in light of candidates' positions on the issue of
immigration reform. Particular attention will be focused on those
groups most concerned with the racialization of immigration
policies. Among the issues to considered: the entry of foreignborn students and professionals; legalization of the
undocumented; state vs. federal legislation on "illegals"; post9/11
visa controls; employer sanctions; judicial rulings on federal/state
immigration legislation; as well as other questions.
X
With the recent PBS Latino Americans series as our starting
point, this two-unit class will seek to augment and enhance our
understanding of the Latino experience in California through the
collection of oral histories. Students will be trained to collect oral
histories, a method that will be used to interview family members,
UC Berkeley faculty, and community leaders. Selected
videotaped interviews will become part of the Ethnic Studies
Library holdings. Additional support will come from members of
the National Latino Digital Archive Group. For more information
on the PBS Latino Americans series, go to:
http://www.pbs.org/latino-americans/en/.
CHICANO 180.6
Topics in Chicano Studies
CHICANO 195
Senior Thesis
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
CHICANO H195A
Senior Honors Thesis for
Chicano Studies Majors
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
CHICANO 197
Field Work in Chicano Studies
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
CHICANO 198
Directed Group Study
CHICANO 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
CHINESE
X
See decal.org for course listings
CHINESE 1A
Elementary Chinese
Not appropriate for BISP students from
China.
CHINESE 1X
Elementary Chinese for
Mandarin Speakers
Not appropriate for BISP students from
China.
CHINESE 1Y
Elementary Chinese for Dialect
Speakers
Not appropriate for BISP students from
China.
CHINESE 7A
Introduction to Premodern
Chinese Literature and Culture
CHINESE 10A
Intermediate Chinese
Not appropriate for BISP students from
China.
CHINESE 100A
Advanced Chinese
Not appropriate for BISP students from
China.
CHINESE 100XA
Advanced Chinese for Mandarin
Speakers
Not appropriate for BISP students from
China.
CHINESE 100YA
Advanced Chinese for Dialect
Speakers
Not appropriate for BISP students from
China.
X
Course taught in English
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
Note: Prerequisite: Chinese 100B or 100XB. If you
have not taken Chinese 100B or 100XB, to enroll
in this class you must first take the online Chinese
Language Placement Test at ealc.berkeley.edu.
Students are responsible for enrolling in the
appropriate level. They must also accurately inform
instructors about their language
proficiency level. Test results must be reported in a
course survey. Any student who enrolls in a class
below his/her level will be dropped from the class
CHINESE 102
Fourth-Year Chinese Readings:
Social Sciences and History
CHINESE 110A
Introduction to Literary Chinese
CHINESE 111
Fifth-Year Readings: Reading
and Analysis of Advanced
Chinese Texts
CHINESE 158
Reading Chinese Cities
CHINESE 172
Contemporary Chinese
Language Cinema
CHINESE 178
Traditional Chinese Drama
CHINESE H195A
Honors Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
CHINESE H195B
Honors Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
CHINESE 230
have not taken Chinese 101 or 102, to enroll in
this class you must first take the online Chinese
Language Placement Test at ealc.berkeley.edu.
Students are responsible for enrolling in the
appropriate level. They must also accurately
inform instructors about their language proficiency
level. Test results must be reported in a course
survey. Any student who enrolls in a class below
his/her level will be dropped from the class
X
Note: "The 'New Wave' and Contemporary Chinese Film
Auteurs"
X
Course taught in English
X
Seminar in Chinese Literary
History
Note: "Permutations of the 'Imagination' in the History of
Premodern Chinese Poetry"
Introduction to Greek
Civilization
In Fall 2015 the readings will include selections from Homer's
Iliad, selections from Herodotus and Thucydides, plays of
Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, and Aristophanes, works of
Plato, and short selections from other authors.
Course taught in English
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Chinese courses. Chinese 158 is a good
undergraduate alternative to this course.
(see note)
CLASSICS
CLASSICS 10A
CLASSICS 17A
Introduction to the Archaeology
of the Greek World
CLASSICS 24
Freshman Seminars
CLASSICS 29
Introduction to Greco-Roman
Magic
CLASSICS R44
Roots of Western Civilization
CLASSICS 99
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
CLASSICS 130.1
CLASSICS 130.2
Topics in Ancient Greek and
Roman Culture
Topics in Ancient Greek and
Roman Culture
X
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
In this reading- and writing-intensive class, we will explore a set
of literary works from the four traditions of the ancient
Mediterranean world-Greek, Jewish, Roman, and Christian-that
exerted the strongest influence on that later complex of cultural,
intellectual, political, and religious traditions often described by
the term "Western civilization." At the same time, we will be using
this rich and interesting group of works as material on which to
develop and practice higher-level reading and writing skills.
"Etruscan Italy" - The Etruscans were major contributors to some
of the greatest achievements of ancient Italy, namely,
architecture, engineering, and the arts. A sophisticated and
wealthy people living in central Italy between the 8th and 2nd
centuries BCE, the Etruscans leave us much of their past
through their material culture seen in their tombs, temples,
habitation sites, and more. By using an interdisciplinary approach
to examining the Etruscans (archaeology, history and art history),
this course will trace Etruscan civilization from its origins in the
Villanovan Iron Age to the 2nd century BCE when they became
Romanized
Note: "The Gods in Augustan Poetry" - Although the ancient
philosophers had long dismissed the poets' depictions of the
gods as inaccurate at best, or even blasphemous, Vergil and
Ovid, the two major epic poets of the Augustan period, gave the
gods an even more central role in their epics than Homer had
done. The gods of the Aeneid are both vivid as characters and
endowed with cosmic significance, while the gods of the
Metamorphoses have all the flaws of humanity, combined with
the power to turn their flaws into frightening threats to mankind.
X
X
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
CLASSICS 130.3
Topics in Ancient Greek and
Roman Culture
CLASSICS H195A
Honors Course in Classics
"Greco-Roman Magic" - Ideas about magic in the Greek and
Roman worlds 750 BCE through 400 CE including witches, holy
men, love spells, necromancy, spirits, and mystery religions.
Magic in high literature (Homer, Ovid, Apuleius and Lucian) as
well as practical evidence of curse tablets and the Greek Magical
Papyri. Analysis of the relationship between magic, religion, and
philosophy. Study of common threads connecting Greek &
Roman magical practices and their cultural contexts. Open only
to Classics majors. Intended majors or minors may request
enrollment form the Classics Undergraduate Advisor, Cassandra
Dunn (cassandrajj@berkeley.edu).
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
COLLEGE WRITING P ROGRAM
CLASSICS 199
Grammar and Vocabulary of
Written English
This is an optional course in academic English, vocabulary
development, usage, and editing skills for non-native
speakers of English.
COLWRIT R1A
Accelerated Reading and
Composition
Not available to BISP Students
X
COLWRIT R4B
Reading, Composition, and
Research
Not available to BISP Students
X
COLWRIT 1
X
Not available to BISP Students
Note: Prerequisite: Chinese 101 or 102. If you
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
COLWRIT 9C
ESP ACAD WRITING
COLWRIT 10A
Introduction to Public Speaking
COLWRIT 20
Communicating in Class:
Advanced Listening and Spea...
X
X
X
COLWRIT 25AC
Reading in and about U.S.
Education Institutions
COLWRIT 98.1
Directed Group Study
"CalTV DeCal"
See decal.org for course listings
X
COLWRIT 98.2
Directed Group Study
"Peace Corps DeCal"
See decal.org for course listings
COLWRIT 106
Intermediate Composition:
Argument in the Disciplin...
X
COLWRIT 131
Introduction to the Craft of
Creative Nonfiction
X
COLWRIT 132
Introduction to the Craft of Short
Fiction
X
COLWRIT 151
Introduction to Principles of
Professional Communic...
COLWRIT 198.1
Directed Group Study
"CalTV DeCal"
See decal.org for course listings
COLWRIT 198.2
Directed Group Study
"Peace Corps DeCal"
See decal.org for course listings
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
COMPLIT R1A
English Composition in
Connection with the Reading ...
COMPLIT R1B
English Composition in
Connection with the Reading ...
COMPLIT 41B
Forms of the Lyric
Studies in Lyric
http://complit.berkeley.edu/?page_id=10816
COMPLIT 100
Introduction to Comparative
Literature
"Dislocated Narratives"
http://complit.berkeley.edu/?page_id=10642
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
COMPLIT 112A
Modern Greek Language and
Modern Greek Composition
COMPLIT 153
The Renaissance
Literature and the Age of Exploration
http://complit.berkeley.edu/?page_id=10620
COMPLIT 171
Topics in Modern Greek
Literature
Thought and Literature by Greek Expatriates in 20th Century
Europe
http://complit.berkeley.edu/?page_id=10633
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
X
This course focuses on the study of Modern Greek
pronunciation, vocabulary, grammar and syntax.
There are no prerequisites.
X
X
All materials from foreign languages for this course
are presented in English translation. Greek History,
theory and criticism are in English. Films are in
English or with English subtitles.
X
COMPLIT 190.1
Senior Seminar in Comparative Proust, Woolf and the Modern Novel
Literature
http://complit.berkeley.edu/?page_id=10626
X
COMPLIT 190.2
Senior Seminar in Comparative Literature and Human Rights
Literature
http://complit.berkeley.edu/?page_id=10623
X
COMPLIT H195
Honors Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
COMPLIT 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
COMPUTER SCIENCE
Computer Science 9A is a "computing service" course.
Orientation meetings will be held during the first week of
class. See the website at inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~selfpace
for more details.
X
This is a self-paced course. This course has no
inperson lectures
Computer Science 9C is a "computing service" course.
Orientation meetings will be held during the first week of
class. See the website at inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~selfpace
for more details.
X
This is a self-paced course. This course has no
inperson lectures
Scheme and Functional
Programming for Programmers
Computer Science 9D is a "computing service" course.
Orientation meetings will be held during the first week of
class. See the website at inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~selfpace
for more details.
X
This is a self-paced course. This course has no
inperson lectures
COMPSCI 9E
Productive Use of the UNIX
Environment
Computer Science 9E is a "computing service" course.
Orientation meetings will be held during the first week of
class. See the website at inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~selfpace
for more details.
X
This is a self-paced course. This course has no
inperson lectures
COMPSCI 9F
C++ for Programmers
Computer Science 9F is a "computing service" course.
Orientation meetings will be held during the first week of
class. See the website at inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~selfpace
for more details.
X
This is a self-paced course. This course has no
inperson lectures
COMPSCI 9A
Matlab for Programmers
COMPSCI 9C
C for Programmers
COMPSCI 9D
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
COMPSCI 9G
JAVA for Programmers
Computer Science 9G is a "computing service" course.
Orientation meetings will be held during the first week of
class. See the website at inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~selfpace
for more details.
X
This is a self-paced course. This course has no
inperson lectures
COMPSCI 9H
Python for Programmers
Computer Science 9H is a "computing service" course.
Orientation meetings will be held during the first week of
class. See the website at inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~selfpace
for more details.
X
This is a self-paced course. This course has no
inperson lectures
COMPSCI 10
The Beauty and Joy of
Computing
COMPSCI 24
Freshman Seminars
COMPSCI 39T
Freshman/Sophomore Seminar "Berkeley Through the Lens"
COMPSCI 47A
Completion of Work in Computer
Science 61A
X
COMPSCI 47B
Completion of Work in Computer
Science 61B
X
COMPSCI 47C
Completion of Work in Computer
Science 61C
X
X
"CS Scholars Seminar"
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
COMPSCI 61B
The Structure and
Interpretation of Computer
Programs
The Structure and
Interpretation of Computer
Progms (Self-Paced)
Data Structures
COMPSCI 61C
Machine Structures
COMPSCI 70
Discrete Mathematics and
Probability Theory
COMPSCI 98.1
Directed Group Study
"Macintosh Student Developers for OS X"
X
COMPSCI 98.2
Directed Group Study
"GamesCrafters"
X
COMPSCI 98.3
Directed Group Study
"UC Berkeley Undergraduate Graphics Group (UCBUGG)" - To
obtain a Course Control Number to enroll in this class, please
attend the first meeting.
X
COMPSCI 98.46
Directed Group Study
"Snap! Below the Line DeCal"
X
COMPSCI 98.50
Directed Group Study
"Dynamics of the Civil Aviation Industry"
X
COMPSCI 99
Individual Study and Research
for Undergraduates
COMPSCI 61A
COMPSCI 61AS
COMPSCI C149
X
X
X
Students will be notified of their discussion and lab section
assignments on the first day of the lecture.
X
X
Introduction to Embedded
Systems
Students will be notified of their discussion and lab section
assignments on the first day of the lecture.
Components and Design
Techniques for Digital Systems
Computer Science 150 has 3 hours of lecture, 1 hour of
lecture/discussion, 1 hour of discussion, and 3 hours of lab.
COMPSCI 160
User Interface Design and
Development
Students will be notified of their discussion and lab section
assignments on the first day of the lecture.
COMPSCI 161
Computer Security
COMPSCI 162
Operating Systems and System
Programming
COMPSCI 150
This is a self-paced course. This course has no
inperson lectures
X
X
X
X
X
Note: EARLY DROP DEADLINE (END OF 2ND WEEK)
APPLIES; Students will be notified of their discussion section
assignments on the first day of the lecture.
X
COMPSCI 164
Programming Languages and
Compilers
X
COMPSCI 168
Introduction to the Internet:
Architecture and Protocols
COMPSCI 169
Software Engineering
Students will be notified of their discussion and lab section
assignments on the first day of the lecture.
COMPSCI 170
Efficient Algorithms and
Intractable Problems
Students will be notified of their discussion and lab section
assignments on the first day of the lecture.
COMPSCI 176
Algorithms for Computational
Biology
COMPSCI 186
Introduction to Database
Systems
COMPSCI 188
Introduction to Artificial
Intelligence
X
COMPSCI 189
Introduction to Machine
Learning
X
X
X
X
X
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
"Engineering Parallel Software See
http://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/~keutzer/CS194-syllabus-20150318.htm"
COMPSCI 194.15
Special Topics
COMPSCI 194.16
Special Topics
"Introduction to Data Science" - Prerequisites are Computer
Science 61A, B, and C and 70.
COMPSCI 194.26
Special Topics
"Image Manipulation and Computational Photography" - See
http://inst.eecs.berkeley.edu/~cs194-26/
COMPSCI 194.28
Special Topics
Computational Design and Fabrication
COMPSCI 194.73
Special Topics
Software Engineering for Scientific Computing
COMPSCI 195
Social Implications of Computer
Technology
COMPSCI 198.1
Directed Group Studies for
Advanced Undergraduates
"Macintosh Student Developers for OS X"
COMPSCI 198.2
Directed Group Studies for
Advanced Undergraduates
"GamesCrafters"
Directed Group Studies for
Advanced Undergraduates
"UC Berkeley Undergraduate Graphics Group (UCBUGG)" - To
obtain a Course Control Number to enroll in this class, please
attend the first meeting.
COMPSCI 198.46
Directed Group Studies for
Advanced Undergraduates
"Snap! Below the Line DeCal"
COMPSCI 198.50
Directed Group Studies for
Advanced Undergraduates
"Dynamics of the Civil Aviation Industry"
COMPSCI 199
Supervised Independent Study
COMPSCI 200+
various
COMPSCI 198.3
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Graduate courses in Computer Science are typically not
available to BISP students.
DEMOGRAPHY
X
Space is extremely limited in graduate courses.
DEMOG 110
Introduction to Population
Analysis
DEMOG C126
Social Consequences of
Population Dynamics
DEMOG 161
Population Apocalypse in Film
and Science
DEMOG 198
various
DEMOG 200
Fundamentals of Population
Thought
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
demography courses. Space is extremely limited in
graduate courses.
DEMOG 210
Demographic Methods: Rates
and Structures
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
demography courses. Space is extremely limited in
graduate courses.
DEMOG 213
DEMOG 260
X
Note: Cross-listed with Sociology C126
X
Students should register for DEMOG C126
X
See decal.org for course listings
X
Practical Computer
Applications for Demographic
Analysis
Special Topics in Demography
Seminar
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
demography courses. Space is extremely limited in
graduate courses.
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
demography courses. Space is extremely limited in
graduate courses.
Note: "Special Demography: Population, Culture, and Society"
EARTH & PLANETARY SCIENCE
EPS C20
Earthquakes in Your Backyard
EPS 50
The Planet Earth
EPS 80
Environmental Earth Sciences
EPS C82
Oceans
EPS 100A
Minerals: Their Constitution and
Origin
EPS 101
Field Geology and Digital
Mapping
EPS 108
Geodynamics
EPS 109
Computer Simulations in Earth
and Planetary Sciences
http://lsdiscovery.berkeley.edu/detail_lsd.php?identity=332
X
Note: ($26-$62 Course Materials Fee - subject to
change) - Wait list will close at the end of the
second week of classes. Students remaining on
the wait list at that time will be dropped.
X
X
Also listed as Geography C82 and Integrative Biology C82
X
Note: iClickers will be used.
X
Note: ($24-$78 Course Materials Fee - subject to
change)
X
X
X
Note: ($24-$295 Course Materials Fee - subject to
change)
Note: The discussion section will be determined
closer to the start of the fall semester.
Prerequisite: Calculus
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
EPS 117
Geomorphology
EPS 119
Geologic Field Studies
EPS 131
Geochemistry
EPS 150
Case Studies in Earth Systems
EPS C162
Planetary Astrophysics
EPS C178
Applied Geophysics
EPS C181
Atmospheric Physics and
Dynamics
EPS 200+
various
Note: ($105-$200 Course Materials Fee - subject
to change).
X
History of the Culture of Tea in
China and Japan
EA LANG 118
Sex and Gender in Premodern
Chinese Culture
EA LANG C120
Buddhism on the Silk Road
EA LANG C132
Pure Land Buddhism mental
ECONOMICS: Supple Application Required (o
Space reserved for UC Berkeley EPS graduating
seniors.
X
X
Also listed as Geography C139
X
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate Earth
& Planetary Science courses. Space is extremely
limited in graduate courses.
X
Note: Cross-listed with South and Southeast Asian Studies
C52 and Buddhist Studies C50
Revising the Classics: Chinese
and Greek Poetry in Translation
EA LANG 109
Prerequisite: Chemistry
X
EAST ASIAN LANGUA GES & CULTURES
Introduction to the Study of
EA LANG C50
Buddhism
EA LANG 108
Note: ($37-$152 Course Materials Fee - subject to
change) - If you are interested in registering for the
course, please email epsscheduling@berkeley.edu
for a Class Entry Code. Priority will go to EPS
seniors.
X
X
X
X
X
Note: Cross-listed with Buddhist Studies C120
nline: https://www.econ.berkeley.edu/content/enrollment-appl
Note: Cross-listed with Buddhist Studies C132 ication-ucextension-students). Deadline September 11th
X
X
(3rd week)
ECON 1
Introduction to Economics
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ECON C3
Introduction to Environmental
Economics and Policy
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ECON 100A
Economic Analysis--Micro
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ECON 100B
Economic Analysis--Macro
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ECON 101A
Economic Theory--Micro
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ECON 101B
Economic Theory--Macro
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ECON C102
Natural Resource Economics
Also listed as Environmental Economics and Policy C102
ECON C103
Introduction to Mathematical
Economics
Note: Cross-listed with Mathematics C103
ECON 105
History of Economic Thought
ECON C110
Game Theory in the Social
Sciences
ECON 115
The World Economy in the
Twentieth Century
ECON 119
Psychology and Economics
ECON 131
Public Economics
ECON 132
Seminar in Public Sector
Economics
ECON 136
Financial Economics
ECON 140
Economic Statistics and
Econometrics
Not available to BISP Students
ECON 141
Econometric Analysis
Not available to BISP Students
ECON C142
Applied Econometrics and
Public Policy
Also listed as Political Science C131A
Students should register for ENVECON C102.
Requires previous coursework in intermediate
microeconomic theory.
X
X
Students should register for MATH C103.
Space is extremely limited.
X
Note: Cross-listed with Political Science C135
X
X
X
Requires previous coursework in intermediate
microeconomic theory.
X
Requires previous coursework in intermediate
microeconomic theory.
X
Requires previous coursework in intermediate
microeconomic theory.
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
ECON 153
Labor Economics Seminar
ECON 155
Urban Economics
ECON 164
Economic Systems Seminar
ECON C171
Economic Development
ECON 172
Case Studies in Economic
Development
ECON C181
International Trade
ECON 182
International Monetary
Economics
ECON 191
Topics in Economic Research
ECON H195A
Senior Honors Thesis
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ECON 197
Field Studies
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ECON 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
ECON 200+
various
Graduate courses in Economics are typically not available to
BISP students.
X
ENGLISH R1A
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH R1B
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH 24
Freshman Seminars
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH 26
Introduction to the Study of
Poetry
ENGLISH 27
Introduction to the Study of
Fiction
ENGLISH 31AC
Literature of American Cultures
ENGLISH 45A.1
Literature in English: Through
Milton
ENGLISH 45A.2
Literature in English: Through
Milton
X
Note: "Capital: The Economic System of Karl Marx"
Note: Cross-listed with Environmental Economics and Policy
C151
Note: The course will familiarize students with the economics of
institutions and its relevance for development. All continents will
be covered.
ENGLISH 45B.2
ENGLISH 45C.1
ENGLISH 45C.2
ENGLISH C77
X
Note: Cross-listed with Environmental Economics and Policy
C181
Requires previous coursework in intermediate
microeconomic theory.
Requires previous coursework in intermediate
microeconomic theory.
X
X
ENGLISH
ENGLISH 45B.1
Students should register for ENVECON C151
Students must contact professor with a research
idea
Space is extremely limited in graduate courses.
X
X
X
X
X
Literature in English: The
Late17th through the Mid-19th
Century
Literature in English: The
Late17th through the Mid-19th
Century
Literature in English: The
Mid19th through the 20th
Century
Literature in English: The
Mid19th through the 20th
Century
Introduction to Environmental
Studies
X
X
X
X
X
ENGLISH 84
Sophomore Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
ENGLISH 98
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH 98BC
ENGLISH 99
Berkeley Connect
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Independent Study
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH 104
Introduction to Old English
ENGLISH C107
The English Bible As Literature
ENGLISH 115B
The English Renaissance
ENGLISH 117A
Shakespeare
ENGLISH 117S
Shakespeare
X
ENGLISH 118
Milton
X
See decal.org for course listings
X
X
X
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
ENGLISH 125B
The English Novel
X
ENGLISH 125C
The European Novel
X
ENGLISH 125D
The 20th-Century Novel
X
ENGLISH 126
British Literature: 1900-1945
ENGLISH 130A
American Literature: Before
1800
ENGLISH 130B
American Literature: 1800-1865
ENGLISH 130C
American Literature: 1865-1900
X
ENGLISH 131
American Poetry
X
ENGLISH C136
Topics in American Studies
ENGLISH 137B
Chicana/o Literature and
Culture Since 1910
ENGLISH 139
The Cultures of English
ENGLISH 141.1
Modes of Writing (Exposition,
Fiction, Verse, Etc.)
ENGLISH 141.2
Modes of Writing (Exposition,
Fiction, Verse, Etc.)
ENGLISH 143A
Short Fiction
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH 143B.1
Verse
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH 143B.2
Verse
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH 143C
Long Narrative
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH 143N
Prose Nonfiction
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENGLISH 165.1
Special Topics
Contemporary Poetry
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4719
X
ENGLISH 165.4
Special Topics
Longing and Belonging in Contemporary Writing
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4676
X
ENGLISH 165.5
Special Topics
Hardly Strictly Lyric Poems
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4677
X
ENGLISH 165.7
Special Topics
X
ENGLISH 165.8
Special Topics
X
ENGLISH 166.1
Special Topics
X
ENGLISH 166.2
Special Topics
X
ENGLISH 171
Literature and Sexual Identity
ENGLISH 175
Literature and Disability
ENGLISH 180L
Lyric Verse
ENGLISH 180R
The Romance
ENGLISH 190.1
Research Seminar
Aesthetics and Enlightenment
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4721
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors.
ENGLISH 190.2
Research Seminar
Materialism: Ancient and Modern
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4687
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
ENGLISH 190.3
Research Seminar
Henry James and Novelistic Aesthetics
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4688
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
ENGLISH 190.6
Research Seminar
Emily Dickinson
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4691
X
ENGLISH 190.7
Research Seminar
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
ENGLISH 190.8
Research Seminar
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
X
X
X
"Mark Twain and the Gilded Age"
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
ENGLISH 190.9
Research Seminar
Ideology
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4694
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
ENGLISH 190.11
Research Seminar
Poetry and Poetics in the Middle Ages
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4722
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
ENGLISH 190.13
Research Seminar
Race and Rumors of Race in American Prose
http://english.berkeley.edu/courses/4696
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
ENGLISH 190.14
Research Seminar
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
ENGLISH 190.15
Research Seminar
X
English 190 is for 3rd and 4th year English majors
ENGLISH H195A
Honors Course
ENGLISH 198
Directed Group Study
ENGLISH 198BC
ENGLISH 199
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Berkeley Connect
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Supervised Independent Study
for Advanced Undergraduates
Not available to BISP Students
See decal.org for course listings
X
Not available to BISP Students
ENVIRONMENTAL EC ONOMICS & POLICY
ENVECON C102
Natural Resource Economics
Also listed as Economics C102
X
Interested students should register for ENVECON
C102
ENVECON C151
Economic Development
Also listed as Economics C171
X
Interested students should register for ENVECON
C151
All other ENVECON
courses
ETHNIC STUDIES
various
status pending
ETHSTD 10AC
A History of Race and Ethnicity
in Western North America
ETHSTD 24
Freshman Seminar
ETHSTD 41AC
ETHSTD 97
X
Not available to BISP Students
A Comparative Survey of
Protest Movements Since the
60's
Field Study in Communities of
Color
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
ETHSTD 98
Supervised Group Study
ETHSTD 98BC
Berkeley Connect
ETHSTD 99
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
Not available to BISP Students
ETHSTD 101B
Humanities Methods in Ethnic
Studies
Not available to BISP Students
ETHSTD 135
Contemporary U.S. Immigration
ETHSTD 159AC
The Southern Border
ETHSTD 180.1
Selected Topics in Comparative "Indigenous Issues Across the Americas"
Ethnic Studies
ETHSTD 180.2
ETHSTD 190.1
See decal.org for course listings
X
Also listed as Geography 159AC
X
"Immigration Reform and the 2016 Presidential Campaign" - This
course will examine the early stages of the 2016 presidential
campaign in light of candidates' positions on the issue of
immigration reform. Particular attention will be focused on those
groups most concerned with the racialization of immigration
Selected Topics in Comparative policies. Among the issues to considered: the entry of foreignEthnic Studies
born students and professionals; legalization of the
undocumented; state vs. federal legislation on "illegals"; post9/11
visa controls; employer sanctions; judicial rulings on federal/state
immigration legislation; as well as other questions.
Advanced Seminar in
Comparative Ethnic Studies
ETHSTD 190.3
Advanced Seminar in
Comparative Ethnic Studies
ETHSTD 196
Senior Thesis
X
X
"Race, War, Culture" - This seminar investigates regimes of
racial relationality that have utilized and contested the concept of
war. The course advances historical and theoretical approaches
to what appear in the contemporary moment as new forms of
racialization. It focuses on three overlapping lines of inquiry:
Fanon's entanglement of anti-blackness, colonialism, and
decolonization; Foucault's investigations of sovereignty and
biopower; and Hall's Gramscian theorizations of race. Students
will engage social, cultural, and political theory alongside critical
culture work, and will produce a final seminar paper.
X
"Race, Ethnicity, And Indigeneity In California History"
X
Not available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
ETHSTD H196A
Senior Honors Thesis for Ethnic
Studies Majors
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ETHSTD 197
Field Study in Communities of
Color
ETHSTD 198
Supervised Group Study
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ETHSTD 198BC
Berkeley Connect
ETHSTD 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
FILM R1A
The Craft of Writing - Film
Focus
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
FILM R1B
The Craft of Writing - Film
Focus
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
FILM 20
Film and Media Cultures
FILM 25A
The History of Film
FILM 25B
The History of Film
FILM 26
INTRO DIG VID PROD
FILM 108
Special Topics in Film Genre
FILM 129
History of Avant-Garde Film
FILM 140.1
Special Topics in Film
Note: "Color Theory"
X
FILM 140.2
Special Topics in Film
Note: "The 1950's"
X
FILM 140.4
Special Topics in Film
Note: "Italian Cinema"
X
FILM 151.1
Auteur Theory
Note: "Coen Brothers"
X
FILM 151.2
Auteur Theory
Note: "Contemporary Chinese Film Auteurs"
X
FILM 160
National Cinema
Note: "Japanese Cinema"
FILM 180
Introduction to Screenwriting
Note: Interview at first class session
FILM 180B
Screenwriting
Note: Interview at first class session
FILM 185
Narrative Production
FILM H195
Film Honors Thesis
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
FILM 197B
Field Studies for Majors
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
FILM 198
Directed Group Study
See decal.org for course listings
FILM 200+
various
Graduate courses in Film are not available to BISP students
FILM & MEDIA
See decal.org for course listings
Available for those interested in Ethnic Studies and
African American Studies
X
Note: "Romantic Comedy"
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
FRENCH
FRENCH 1
FRENCH R1A
FRENCH R1B
Elementary French
English Composition in
Connection with the Reading of
Literature
English Composition in
Connection with the Reading of
Literature
Students interested in Elementary French should
select a section to attend. Students should meet
with Carol Dolcini (4209 Dwinelle) at some point
during the first week of the semester to discuss
their availability for alternate sections. Flexibility is
required for students who wish to take French 1.
When space is available in a section, Carol will let
the student know which section is open; it may not
necessarily be the same time as the one they had
been attending, but all sections learn the same
material at the same pace.
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
FRENCH 2
FRENCH 3
FRENCH 4
Elementary French
X
Intermediate French
The Cultures of FrancoAmerica
GENDER & WOMEN'S STUDIES
X
GWS 10
Introduction to Gender and
Women's Studies
X
GWS 24
Freshman Seminars
GWS 40
Special Topics
"Gendered Ecologies: Exploring Human-Nonhuman
Entanglements"
X
GWS 50AC
Gender in American Culture
"Gender in American Cultures: Interrogating 'America' and its
Emblems"
X
GWS 102
Transnational Feminism
GWS 103
Identities Across Difference
GWS 111
Special Topics
GWS 115
Engaged Scholarship in
Women and Gender
GWS 130AC
Gender, Race, Nation, and
Health
Taught In English.
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
X
"Gender and Capitalism"
X
X
Small seminar-style course
X
GWS 133AC
Women, Men, and Other
Animals: Human Animality in
American Cultures
X
GWS 140
Feminist Cultural Studies
X
GWS 195
Students interested in Intermediate French should
select a section to attend. Students should meet
with Carol Dolcini (4209 Dwinelle) at some point
during the first week of the semester to discuss
their availability for alternate sections. Flexibility is
required for students who wish to take French 4.
When space is available in a section, Carol will let
the student know which section is open; it may not
necessarily be the same time as the one they had
been attending, but all sections learn the same
material at the same pace.
X
FRENCH 142AC
GWS C146A
Students interested in Intermediate French should
select a section to attend. Students should meet
with Carol Dolcini (4209 Dwinelle) at some point
during the first week of the semester to discuss
their availability for alternate sections. Flexibility is
required for students who wish to take French 3.
When space is available in a section, Carol will let
the student know which section is open; it may not
necessarily be the same time as the one they had
been attending, but all sections learn the same
material at the same pace.
X
Advanced Intermediate French
Cultural Representations of
Sexualities: Queer Literary
Culture
Gender and Women's Studies
Senior Seminar
Students interested in Elementary French should
select a section to attend. Students should meet
with Carol Dolcini (4209 Dwinelle) at some point
during the first week of the semester to discuss
their availability for alternate sections. Flexibility is
required for students who wish to take French 2.
When space is available in a section, Carol will let
the student know which section is open; it may not
necessarily be the same time as the one they had
been attending, but all sections learn the same
material at the same pace.
Also listed as Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender St C146A
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
GWS C196A
UCDC Core Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
GWS C196B
UCDC Internship
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
GWS C196W
Special Field Research
Not available to BISP Students
X
GWS 200+
various
X
Not available to BISP Students
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Gender & Women's Studies courses. Space is
extremely limited in graduate courses.
GEOGRAPHY
GEOG 10
World Regions, Peoples, and
States
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
GEOG 24
Freshman Seminar
GEOG C32
Introduction to Development
GEOG 40
Introduction to Earth System
Science
GEOG 50AC
California
GEOG C55
Introduction to Central Asia
GEOG 80
Digital Worlds: An Introduction
to Geospatial Technologies
GEOG C82
Oceans
GEOG 110
Economic Geography of the
Industrial World
GEOG 123
Postcolonial Geographies
GEOG C139
Atmospheric Physics and
Dynamics
GEOG 140B
GEOG 147
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
X
X
Also listed as Near Eastern Studies C26
X
X
Also listed as Integrative Biology C82 and Earth and
Planetary Science C82
X
X
X
Students should be prepared to write a lot of
papers in this course.
X
Prerequisite: background in Physics & Calculus
Physiography and
Geomorphologic Extremes
X
Prerequisite: background in Physics & Calculus
Communicating Climate
Science
X
Prerequisite: background in Physics & Calculus
GEOG 148
Biogeography
X
Prerequisite: background in Physics & Calculus
GEOG C152
Multicultural Europe
Also listed as History C176 and Interdisciplinary Studies
Field Maj C145
GEOG 159AC
The Southern Border
Cross-listed with Ethnic Studies 159AC
GEOG 170
Special Topics in Geography
GEOG 171
Special Topics in Physical
Geography
GEOG 175
Undergraduate Seminars
GEOG 183
Cartographic Representation
X
GEOG C188
Geographic Information
Systems
X
GEOG H195A
Honors Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
GEOG H195B
Honors Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
GEOG 200+
Also listed as Earth and Planetary Science C181
"Post-Socialist Spaces"
X
X
X
X
"The Geographical Imagination"
X
various
GEOG 80 is a good alternative for students with a
minimal GIS background
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Geography courses. Space is extremely limited in
graduate courses.
X
GERMAN
GERMAN 1
Elementary German 1
GERMAN 2
Elementary German 2
GERMAN 3
Intermediate German I
GERMAN 4
Intermediate German II
GERMAN R5A
Reading and Composition
Take German 1 if you have had a) no prior exposure to
German or b) not more than two years of high school
German. Students enrolled in German 1 will be dropped for
non-attendance after the second class meeting. This section
of German 1 meets three days per week for a total of five
hours per week.
Take German 2 if you have successfully completed a)
German 1 or German 1E, or b) another first semester college
German course, or c) three years of high school German.
Students enrolled in German 2 will be dropped for nonattendance after the second class meeting. This section of
German 2 meets three days per week for a total of five hours
per week.
Take German 3 if you have successfully completed a)
German 2, or b) another 2nd or 3rd semester college
German course, or c) 4 years of high school German, or d)
have an AP score of 3. This section of German 3 meets five
days per week for a total of five hours per week.
Take German 4 if you have successfully completed a)
German 3, or b) another 4th semester college German
course, or c) have an AP score of 4. This section of German
4 meets five days per week for a total of five hours per week.
Not Available to BISP Students
X
Look for sections with available seats
X
Look for sections with available seats
X
Look for sections with available seats
X
Look for sections with available seats
X
Not Available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
This course explores the ways in which Marx, Nietzsche, and
Freud--three of the most important thinkers in modern Western
thought--can be read as responding to the Enlightenment and its
notions of reason and progress. We will consider how each
remakes a scientific understanding of truth, knowledge, and
subjectivity, such that rationality, logic, and the powers of human
cognition are shown to be distorted, limited, and subject to forces
outside our individual control.
GERMAN C25
Revolutionary Thinking: Marx,
Nietzsche, Freud
GERMAN 39N
Freshman Seminar
Not Available to BISP Students
X
Not Available to BISP Students
GERMAN 98
Directed Group Study
Not Available to BISP Students
X
Not Available to BISP Students
GERMAN 99
Supervised Independent Study
Not Available to BISP Students
X
Not Available to BISP Students
GERMAN 100
This course is intended to acquaint students with selected works
Introduction to Reading Culture from German cultural history and to familiarize them with various
methods of interpretation and analysis.
GERMAN 101
GERMAN 102D
GERMAN 103
Focusing on five central themes, this advanced-level language
course will help students to improve and expand on spoken and
written language functions utilizing a variety of works from
different genres in journalism, broadcasting, literature, fine arts,
Advanced German:
Conversation, Composition and and the cinema. The final goal is to enable students to participate
in the academic discourse, written and spoken, at a linguistic and
Styl...
stylistic level appropriate for an advanced student of German in
upper division courses.
Advanced Language Practice:
Popular Culture in Germ...
This course focuses on enhancing speaking and writing skills by
exploring pop culture in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland.
Drawing on music, film, literature and social media, students will
present their understandings of pop culture in Germanspeaking
countries in a final project.
Introduction to German
Linguistics
Overview of linguistic study of German; gateway course, required
for majors, minors.
GERMAN 105
Middle High German for
Undergraduates
GERMAN 108
Literary Translation
GERMAN 123
GERMAN 148
GERMAN 160B
GERMAN 160D
From 1800 to the Present
Topics in Narrative
Facism and Propaganda
Multicultural Germany
The aim of the course is to help students develop proficiency in
Middle high German language to enable them to read original
texts written in German before 1400. The course necessarily
emphasizes grammar, though the cultural context of the literary
documents and of the production of texts during the Middle Ages
will be discussed as well. Students will read selections from
major works of the medieval period.
This course seeks to give students a basic sense of the historical
development of German literature in the 19th and 20th centuries
by reading a number of canonical texts. The theme this semester
will be the narrative, dramatic, and lyrical representations of
sexuality. Authors include Goethe, E.T.A. Hoffmann, SacherMasoch, Wedekind, Schnitzler, Thomas Mann, and Jelinek.
"Family Stories". This course examines how family has been
constructed and contested within narrative works from the
nineteenth century to the present. Focusing on short prose,
drama, and film, we will study texts that narrate the formation
and transformation of family in its many valences: an emotional
union, a politically defined institution, an economic unit, and a
gender regime. We will consider how family stories from a range
of cultural periods (romanticism, realism, modernism, the
postwar era, and the present) communicate with critical theories
of family from Engels and Freud onward.
Europe's 20th century was marked by two of the largest and
bloodiest conflicts ever seen by mankind, the First and the
Second World War, the rise of extreme ideologies, the Cold War,
and finally a unification process that caused many citizens of
European states to assume new identities as Europeans. This
course will focus on the theory and practice of propaganda during
the 12 years of the Third Reich. The course is divided into two
main parts, which address (1) the historical developments in Nazi
Germany until the outbreak of the War, 1933-1939; and (2) the
Second World War and the destruction of European Jewry, 19391945.
This course will deal with the culture and politics of minorities in
contemporary Germany. We will discuss how ethnic identities are
perceived, constructed, and marketed. We also engage critically
with such concepts as migration, assimilation, citizenship,
diaspora, hybridity, and authenticity, as well as rhetorical
strategies of "speaking back." We will focus on exemplary texts
and films from Germany, but include comparisons with minority
experiences in other countries.
X
All lectures and readings in English.
X
Taught in German.
X
Taught in German.
X
Taught in German.
X
Taught in German, readings in german
X
Reading Material in German
X
Taught in German
X
Readings in German. Discussions in German or
English.
X
Readings and discussion in German.
X
Taught in English, readings in english
X
Taught in English, readings in english
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
GERMAN 175B
20th-Century Poetry
In this seminar, we will engage in in-depth readings of prime
examples of 20th century lyric poetry in German, including works
by Georg Trakl, Hugo von Hofmannsthal, Rainer Maria Rilke,
Stefan George, Else Lasker-Schueler, Gottfried Benn,
Ingeborg Bachmann, Johannes Bobrowski, Rose Auslaender,
Paul Celan, Nelly Sachs, Rolf Dieter Brinkmann, Ernst Herbeck,
Ernst Jandl, Friederike Mayroecker, and Durs Gruenbein.
Language, madness, boundary issues, questions regarding
translation, and poetological statements will be among our
interests. Among our readings will be Gaston Bachelard, "The
Poetics of Space."
"Arendt, Benjamin and Scholem on Modern Chaos - This course
will focus on the writings of three major figures in twentiethcentury
thought whose works are still considered crucial points of
departure for contemporary debates in the fields of political and
ethical philosophy; literary-cultural history, theory, and criticism;
and religious-mystical traditions and their relation to modern
historical analysis."
X
Taught in German
X
Taught in English, readings in english
GERMAN 179
Special Topics in German
GERMAN H196
Honors Studies in German
Not Available to BISP Students
X
Not Available to BISP Students
GERMAN 198
Directed Group Study
Not Available to BISP Students
X
Not Available to BISP Students
GERMAN 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
Not Available to BISP Students
X
Not Available to BISP Students
GREEK
GREEK 1
Elementary Greek
This course is an introduction to Ancient (Attic)
Greek. Students interested in learning Modern
Greek should enroll in Comparative Literature
112A
X
HISTORY
HISTORY R1B
Reading and Composition in
History
HISTORY 3
After the Roman Empire: the
East
X
HISTORY 4A
The Ancient Mediterranean
World
X
HISTORY 5
Not available to BISP Students
European Civilization from the
Renaissance to the Present
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
HISTORY 6A
History of China: Origins to the
Mongol Conquest
X
HISTORY 7A
The United States from
Settlement to Civil War
X
HISTORY 10
African History
X
HISTORY 11
India
X
HISTORY 12
The Middle East
X
HISTORY 24
Freshman Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
HISTORY 24
Freshman Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
HISTORY 30
Science and Society
HISTORY 98BC
Berkeley Connect for Lower
Division Students
X
See
http://history.berkeley.edu/undergraduate/berkeleyconnecthistory for details.
Space may be limited in certain sections, but is
generally available. Course begins in the second
week of the semester.
X
HISTORY 100AC
Special Topics in the History of Defiant Women: Gender, Power and Violence in American
the United States
History
X
HISTORY 100B
Special Topics in European
History
HISTORY 100D
Special Topics in the History of "Crime, Punishment, and Power in U.S. History"
the United States
X
HISTORY 100U
Special Topics in Comparative
History
X
Yugoslavia
X
"Social Theory for Historians"
HISTORY 101
Seminar in Historical Research
and Writing for History Majors
HISTORY 103A.2
Ancient
Civil Discord and Violence in the Ancient World
HISTORY 103B.3
Europe
The Frontier in Global History
X
HISTORY 103B.4
Europe
German History since 1945
X
HISTORY 103B.5
Europe
“God Wills It!”: Five Centuries of Crusade
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
HISTORY 103B.6
Europe
Religious Violence in Early Modern Europe and the World
HISTORY 103C
England
Gender and Sex in Britain, 1640-Present
HISTORY 103D.2
United States
Sexing the Body: Medical and Scientific Conceptions of Gender
and Sexuality
X
HISTORY 103D.3
United States
Love, Sex and Marriage in U.S. History
X
HISTORY 103D.4
United States
The Trial in American History
X
HISTORY 103D.5
United States
Twentieth-Century U.S. Intellectual History
HISTORY 103D.6
United States
Social Protest in America
HISTORY 103D.7
United States
Variations on a Global Theme: Stories About Science,
Economies, and Environments
HISTORY 103E
Latin America
The Image of the City in Latin America
X
HISTORY 103F.2
Asia
The Vietnam War Through Film, Fiction and Memoir
X
HISTORY 103F.3
Asia
The Post-Ottoman World
X
HISTORY 103F.4
Asia
Sugar and Spice (and Everything Nice): Commodities in World
History
HISTORY 103F.5
Asia
Science, Society, and Empire in Late Imperial China
HISTORY 103F.6
Asia
The Emergence of Modern Jerusalem, 1850-1950
X
HISTORY 103S.2
History of Science
Science, Environments and European Colonialism
X
HISTORY 103S.3
History of Science
Science, Religion, and Magic in Early Modern Europe
X
HISTORY 103U
Studies in Comparative History Development in Historical Perspective
HISTORY 106A
The Roman Republic
X
HISTORY 116D
Twentieth-Century China
X
HISTORY 120AC
American Environmental and
Cultural History
HISTORY 124A
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
The United States from the
Late 19th Century to the eve of
World War II
HISTORY 125B
Soul Power: African American
History 1861-1980
HISTORY 130
American Foreign Policy
X
X
X
HISTORY 138
Creating Modern American
Society: From the End of the
Civil War to the Global Age
History of Science in the U.S
HISTORY 140B
Modern Mexico
X
HISTORY 141B
Social History of Latin America:
Social History of Modern Latin
America
X
HISTORY 156C
The State in the Middle Ages
HISTORY C157
The Renaissance and the
Reformation
HISTORY 159B
European Economic History
X
HISTORY 162A
Europe and the World: Wars,
Empires, Nations 1648-1914
X
HISTORY 166B
Old Regime and Revolutionary
France
X
HISTORY 167C
Germany 1914 to the Present
X
HISTORY 172
Russian Intellectual History
X
HISTORY 177A
Armenia from Ethnogenesis to
the Dark Ages
X
HISTORY 131B
Fabulous course!
X
X
X
Also listed as Religious Studies C124
X
Students should have a basic economics
background
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
HISTORY 185B
History of Christianity from
1250
HISTORY C187
The History and Practice of
Human Rights
HISTORY 198BC
X
X
Berkeley Connect for Upper
Division Students
See
http://history.berkeley.edu/undergraduate/berkeleyconnecthistory for details.
Space may be limited in certain sections, but is
generally available. Course begins in the second
week of the semester.
X
HISTORY 200+
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate History
courses. Space is extremely limited in graduate
courses.
X
HISTORY OF ART
HISTART R1B
Reading and Writing about
Visual Experience
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
HISTART 35
Art and Architecture in Japan
X
HISTART 62
Introduction to Italian
Renaissance Art
X
HISTART 101
Theories & Methods for a
Global History of Art
Topics in Islamic Art
HISTART 130A
Early Chinese Art, Part I
X
HISTART 136B
South Asian Art: Early Modern
X
HISTART 141A
Archaic Greek Art and
Architecture (750-480 B.C.)
X
Visual Culture in Early Modern
Spain and Colonial Latin
America
HISTART 186C
Art in the Later 20th Century
HISTART 192B
Ancient
HISTART 192C
Medieval
HISTART 192F
19th-20th Century
HISTART 192H
Modern/Contemporary Art
HISTART 192L
Undergraduate Seminar: Latin
American
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Note: This course introduces students to the art, architecture,
and visual and material cultures in Islamic contexts, from the 7th
through the 19th centuries. The course will examine the
aesthetic manifestations of Islam within the context of institution
Cross-listed with Near Eastern Studies C121A
development, in particular the 'formative' negotiations of the
Umayyad, Abbasid, Fatimid, Seljuk, and Mamluk periods
between visual idioms and new spiritual and political programs.
HISTART C121A
HISTART 171
X
X
X
X
Note: "Persia and the West"
X
X
Note: "Art and Evolution"
X
X
Note: "Mural Painting and the Ancient Americas"
X
HISTART 198
Special Study for Honors
Candidates in the History of Art
Major
Supervised Group Study
HISTART 199
Supervised Independent Study
Not available for BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
HISTART 200+
various
Graduate courses in History of Art are not available to BISP
students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
HISTART H195
INTEGRATIVE BIOLOGY
Not available to BISP Students
See decal.org for course listings
INTEGBI 24
Freshman Seminars
INTEGBI 35AC
Human Biological Variation
INTEGBI C82
Oceans
INTEGBI 95
Special Research Project in
Biology 1B
Not available for BISP students
INTEGBI C96
Studying the Biological Sciences
Not available for BISP students
INTEGBI C105
Natural History Museums and
Biodiversity Science
INTEGBI C107L
Principles of Plant Morphology
with Laboratory
INTEGBI 117
Medical Ethnobotany
X
Not available for BISP students
X
X
X
X
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
INTEGBI 117LF
Medical Ethnobotany Laboratory
INTEGBI 118
Host-Pathogen Interactions: A
Trans-Discipline Outlook
X
INTEGBI 123AL
Exercise Physiology with
Laboratory
X
INTEGBI C125L
INTEGBI 131
X
Introduction to the
Biomechanical Analysis of
Human Movement
General Human Anatomy
X
X
INTEGBI 131L
General Human Anatomy
Laboratory
X
INTEGBI 137
Human Endocrinology
X
INTEGBI 139
The Neurobiology of Stress
X
INTEGBI C144
Animal Behavior
X
INTEGBI 153
Ecology
X
INTEGBI 154
Plant Ecology
INTEGBI 154L
Plant Ecology Laboratory
INTEGBI C156
Principles of Conservation
Biology
INTEGBI 157LF
Ecosystems of California
INTEGBI 158LF
Biology and Geomorphology of
Tropical Islands
X
X
X
X
Not available for BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
INTEGBI 159
The Living Planet: Impact of the
Biosphere on the Earth System
INTEGBI 160
Evolution
X
INTEGBI 164
Human Genetics and Genomics
X
INTEGBI 194
Undergraduate Student
Instructor for Integrative Biology
Not available for BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
INTEGBI 200+
various
Graduate courses are not available for BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ITALIAN 1
Elementary Italian
Students must attend the first day of classes and attend at
least the first 4 of 5 class meetings.
ITALIAN 1S
Intensive Italian for Spanish
Speakers
ITALIAN 2
Elementary Italian
ITALIAN 3
X
ITALIAN STUDIES
X
X
Prerequisite: Spanish 4 or proficiency determined
by instructor.
Students must attend the first day of classes and attend at
least the first 4 of 5 class meetings.
X
Prerequisite: Italian 1 or proficiency determined by
instructor.
Intermediate Italian
Students must attend the first day of classes and attend at
least the first 4 of 5 class meetings.
X
Prerequisite: Italian 2 or proficiency determined by
instructor.
ITALIAN 4
Advanced Italian
Students must attend the first day of classes and attend at
least the first 4 of 5 class meetings.
X
Prerequisite: Italian 3 or proficiency determined by
instructor.
ITALIAN R5A
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ITALIAN R5B
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ITALIAN 30
Dante (in English)
X
Taught in English with readings in English.
ITALIAN 40
Italian Culture (in English)
X
Taught in English with readings in English.
ITALIAN 50
The Italian Renaissance
ITALIAN 97
Field Studies
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ITALIAN 98
Directed Group Study
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Taught in English with readings in English.
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
ITALIAN 101A
Advanced Grammar, Reading,
and Composition
X
ITALIAN 102
Italian through Theater:
Advanced Language in Perfo...
X
ITALIAN 104
Reading Italian Literature
X
ITALIAN 160
Studies in the History, Society,
and Politics of th...
ITALIAN 170
The Italian Cinema: History,
Genres, Authors
"Cavalleria, fantasia, e realtë: Ariosto e Calvino"
Prerequisite: Italian 4 or proficiency determined by
Instructor. Taught in Italian with readings in Italian.
Prerequisite: Italian 4 or proficiency determined by
Instructor. Taught in Italian with readings in Italian.
Prerequisite: Italian 4 or proficiency determined by
Instructor. Taught in Italian with readings in Italian.
Prerequisite: Italian 4 or proficiency determined by
Instructor. Taught in Italian with readings in Italian.
X
"Italians in America, America in Italian Films" Cowboys and
mobsters, divas and immigrants, Hollywood and Cinecitta; films
by Francis Ford Coppola, Fellini, Leone, Amelio, Crialese from
The Godfather trilogy to La dolce vita, "spaghetti westerns" to
many other classics of Italian cinema.
X
Taught in English with readings in English.
ITALIAN H195
Special Studies for Honors
Candidates
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ITALIAN 197
Field Studies
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ITALIAN 198
Directed Group Study
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
ITALIAN 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research for Advan...
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
JAPANESE
JAPAN 1A
Elementary Japanese
X
Note: Enroll in Japanese 1A if you have minimal or
no knowledge of Japanese.
JAPAN 7A
Introduction to Premodern
Japanese Literature and Culture
X
Taught in English
JAPAN 10A
Intermediate Japanese
X
Note: Enroll in Japanese 10A if you have
completed Japanese 1A and 1B unless you are
advised to take a higher level.
JAPAN 10X
Intermediate Japanese for
Heritage Learners
X
JAPAN 100A
Advanced Japanese
X
Note: Enroll in Japanese 100A if you have
completed Japanese 10A and 10B unless you are
advised to take a higher level.
JAPAN 101
Fourth-Year Readings: Social
Sciences
X
Note: Enroll in Japanese 101 if you have
completed Japanese 100B unless you are advised
to take a higher level.
JAPAN 103
Fourth-Year Readings:
Japanese Literature
X
Note: Enroll in Japanese 103 if you have
completed Japanese 100B unless you are advised
to take a higher level.
JAPAN C115
Japanese Buddhism
X
Taught in English
JAPAN 120
Introduction to Classical
Japanese
JAPAN C141
Introductory Readings in
Japanese Buddhist Texts
JAPAN 155
Modern Japanese Literature
X
JAPAN 160
Introduction to Japanese
Linguistics: Grammar
X
JAPAN 163
Translation: Theory and
Practice
X
JAPAN 185
Introduction to Japanese
Cinema
X
JAPAN H195A
Honors Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
JAPAN H195B
Honors Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
JAPAN 230
JAPAN 255
Seminar in Classical Japanese
Poetry
Seminar in Prewar Japanese
Literature
Note: Cross-listed with Buddhist Studies C115 section 1.
X
Note: Cross-listed with Buddhist Studies C141 section 1.
X
Taught in English
Taught in English
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Japanese courses. Space is extremely limited in
graduate courses.
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Japanese courses. Space is extremely limited in
graduate courses.
KOREAN
KOREAN 1A
Elementary Korean
Note: Enroll in Korean 1A if you have no
knowledge of Korean.
Not appropriate for BISP students from
Korea.
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
KOREAN 1AX
Elementary Korean for Heritage
Speakers
KOREAN 7A
Introduction to Premodern
Korean Literature and Culture
KOREAN 10A
Intermediate Korean
KOREAN 10AX
Intermediate Korean for
Heritage Speakers
KOREAN 100A
Advanced Korean
KOREAN 100AX
Advanced Korean for Heritage
Speakers
Note: Enroll in Korean 1AX if you speak some
Korean but cannot read or write it.
X
Not appropriate for BISP students from
Korea.
Taught in English
Note: Enroll in Korean 10A if you have completed Not appropriate for BISP students from
Korean 1A and 1B unless you are advised to take Korea.
a higher level.
Note: Enroll in Korean 10AX if you have completed Not appropriate for BISP students from
Korean 1BX unless you are advised to take a
Korea.
higher level.
Note: Enroll in Korean 100A if you have completed Not appropriate for BISP students from
Korean 10B unless you are advised to take a
Korea.
higher level.
Note: Enroll in Korean 100AX if you have
Not appropriate for BISP students from
completed Korean 10BX unless you are advised to Korea.
take a higher level.
Fourth-Year Readings: Korean
Literature
Note: Enroll in Korean 101 if you have completed
Korean 100A or 100B, Korean 100AX or 100BX, or
the equivalent of three years of college-level
Korean.
KOREAN 111
Fifth-Year Readings: Reading
and Analysis of Advanced
Korean Texts
Note: Enroll in Korean 111 if you have completed
Korean 101 or Korean 102 or the equivalent of four
years of college-level Korean.
KOREAN 155
Modern Korean Fiction
X
Taught in Korean
KOREAN 157
Contemporary Korean
Literature
X
Taught in Korean
KOREAN 170
Intercultural Encounters in
Korean Literature
X
Taught in English
KOREAN 187
History and Memory in Korean
Cinema
X
Taught in English
KOREAN 188
Cold War Culture in Korea:
Literature and Film
X
Taught in English
LATIN 1
Elementary Latin
X
LATIN 2
Elementary Latin
X
LATIN 10
LEGAL STUDIES
Intensive Elementary Latin
X
LEGALST R1B
Reading and Composition in
Connection with the Law ...
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
LEGALST 39D
Freshman/Sophomore Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
LEGALST 39G
Freshman/Sophomore Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
LEGALST 100
Foundations of Legal Studies
LEGALST 103
Theories of Law and Society
LEGALST 109
Aims and Limits of the Criminal
Law
LEGALST 140
Property and Liberty
LEGALST 145
Law and Economics I
X
LEGALST 158
Law and Development
X
LEGALST 163
Adolescence, Crime and
Juvenile Justice
LEGALST 171
European Legal History
X
LEGALST 182
Law, Politics and Society
X
LEGALST 184
Sociology of Law
LEGALST 190.1
Seminar on Topics in Law and
Society
"Surveillance, Privacy, and the Law"
X
LEGALST 190.2
Seminar on Topics in Law and
Society
"Making Empire: Law and Colonization of America"
X
LEGALST 190.3
Seminar on Topics in Law and
Society
"Law, Politics and Literature"
LEGALST H195A
Honors Seminar
KOREAN 101
LATIN
X
X
X
X
Students should have a strong Economics
background
X
X
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
LEGALST H195B
Honors Thesis
Not available to BISP Students
X
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
LESBIAN GAY BISEXU AL TRANSGENDER STUDIES
X
LEGALST 199
LGBT 20AC
Alternative Sexual Identities and
Communities in Co...
LGBT 100
Special Topics
LGBT C146A
Cultural Representations of
Sexualities: Queer Literary
Culture
LINGUISTICS
X
"Literature and Sexual Identity"
X
Also listed as Gender and Women's Studies C146A
Interested Students should register for GWS
C146A
X
LINGUIS 1A
American Sign Language I
LINGUIS R1B
Endangered Languages: What
We Lose when a Language ...
LINGUIS 5
Language and Linguistics
LINGUIS 24
Freshman Seminar
LINGUIS 100
Introduction to Linguistic
Science
LINGUIS 106
Metaphor
LINGUIS 110
Introduction to Phonetics and
Phonology
Pre-Requiste Linguistics 100
X
LINGUIS 121
Logical Semantics
Pre-Requiste Linguistics 120
X
LINGUIS 123
Pragmatics
Pre-Requiste Linguistics 100
LINGUIS 130
Comparative and Historical
Linguistics
Pre-Requiste Linguistics 100
LINGUIS C137
Introduction to Slavic Linguistics
LINGUIS 170
History, Structure, and
Sociolinguistics of a Parti...
LINGUIS 175
American Indian Languages
LINGUIS 197
Research Practicum lemental
MATHEMATICS - Supp Application Required
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
X
X
X
X
"Sanskrit"
X
X
Not available to BISP Students k your professor to sign a
Math Department Concurrent E
: During the first and second weeks of classes you should as
X
Not available to BISP Students
ilable in the
nature indicates his or her approval
nrollment Ins tructor Appro val Form, ava h
allway outside 964 Evans. Your instructor's sig
MATH 1A
Calculus
X
MATH 1B
Calculus
X
MATH H1B
Honors Calculus
X
MATH 10A
Methods of Mathematics:
Calculus, Statistics, and
Combinatorics
X
MATH 16A
Analytic Geometry and Calculus
X
MATH 16B
Analytic Geometry and Calculus
MATH 24
Freshman Seminars
MATH 32
Precalculus
MATH 49
Supplementary Work in Lower
Division Mathematics
MATH 53
Multivariable Calculus
X
MATH H53
Honors Multivariable Calculus
X
MATH 54
Linear Algebra and Differential
Equations
X
MATH 55
Discrete Mathematics
X
MATH 98BC
Berkeley Connect
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Students with a strong math background are
advised to enroll in Section 2. Those with a weaker
math background are advised to enroll in Section
1.
Students are advised to enroll in Section 2, not
Section 1.
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
MATH C103
Introduction to Mathematical
Economics
MATH 104
Introduction to Analysis
X
MATH H104
Honors Introduction to Analysis
X
MATH 110
Linear Algebra
X
MATH H110
Honors Linear Algebra
X
MATH 113
Introduction to Abstract Algebra
X
MATH 114
Second Course in Abstract
Algebra
X
MATH 116
Cryptography
MATH 121A
Mathematical Tools for the
Physical Sciences
X
MATH 125A
Mathematical Logic
X
MATH 126
Introduction to Partial
Differential Equations
MATH 128A
Numerical Analysis
MATH 130
The Classical Geometries
X
MATH 136
Incompleteness and
Undecidability
X
MATH 140
Metric Differential Geometry
X
MATH 142
Elementary Algebraic Topology
X
MATH 143
Elementary Algebraic Geometry
X
MATH 152
Mathematics of the Secondary
School Curriculum II
X
MATH 170
MATH 185
MATH 198BC
Berkeley Connect
Very few spaces, if any, will be available.
There are multiple lectures for Math 104. Students
should be prepared to enroll in whatever section
has space. If the section you go to is full, try
another section.
There are multiple lectures for Math 113. Students
should be prepared to enroll in whatever section
has space. If the section you go to is full, try
another section.
Students interested in this course that are strong in
Number Theory may want to check out Math 254A
instead.
X
X
X
X
Introduction to Complex
Analysis
MATH 191
MATH 200+
X
Mathematical Methods for
Optimization
Mathematical Methods in
Classical and Quantum
Mechanics
Experimental Courses in
Mathematics
MATH 189
Also listed as Economics C103
There are multiple lectures for Math 185.
Students should be prepared to enroll in whatever
section has space. If the section you go to is full,
try another section.
X
X
Putnam Exam Workshop
https://math.berkeley.edu/courses/fall-2015-math-191001sem
Interested students should talk to the professor in
the first week of class to make sure the course is a
good fit for them.
X
X
various
Students interested in graduate math courses
must speak to the professor of the course in order
to determine if they have the background for the
course. There typically is space in most graduate
Math courses, subject to professor and department
approval.
X
MOLECULAR & CELLULAR BIOLOGY
MCELLBI 32
Introduction to Human
Physiology
MCELLBI 32L
Introduction to Human
Physiology Laboratory
MCELLBI 55
Plagues and Pandemics
MCELLBI C62
Drugs and the Brain
MCELLBI C64
Exploring the Brain:
Introduction to Neuroscience
X
X
X
http://lsdiscovery.berkeley.edu/detail_lsd.php?identity=341
X
X
MCELLBI 90A
Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology
Note: "Evolution: Creatures, Not Creation"
Not available for BISP students
X
Not available for BISP students
MCELLBI 90E
Neurobiology
Note: "Matter, Mind, Consciousness
Not available for BISP students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
MCELLBI C96
MCELLBI C100A
MCELLBI 102
MCELLBI 104
Studying the Biological
Sciences
Biophysical Chemistry:
Physical Principles and the
Molecules of Life
Survey of the Principles of
Biochemistry and Molecular
Biology
Genetics, Genomics, and Cell
Biology
MCELLBI C110L
Molecular Biology:
Macromolecular Synthesis and
Cellular Function
General Biochemistry and
Molecular Biology Laboratory
MCELLBI C112
General Microbiology
MCELLBI C112L
General Microbiology
Laboratory
MCELLBI C116
Microbial Diversity
MCELLBI 118
The Cancer Karyotype: What it
is and What it Does
MCELLBI 132
Biology of Human Cancer
MCELLBI 133L
Physiology and Cell Biology
Laboratory
MCELLBI 110
Not available for BISP students
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Not recommended for BISP students. Interested
students should take MCELLBI 132 instead
X
X
X
MCELLBI 136
Topics in Cell and
Developmental Biology:
Molecular Endocrinology
Physiology
X
MCELLBI 140
General Genetics
X
MCELLBI 143
Evolution of Genomes, Cells,
and Development
X
MCELLBI 150
Molecular Immunology
X
MCELLBI 150L
Immunology Laboratory
MCELLBI 135A
Not available to BISP Students
X
X
MCELLBI 160
Cellular and Molecular
Neurobiology
MCELLBI 163
Mammalian Neuroanatomy
X
X
Students should have a physics background
MCELLBI 166
Biophysical Neurobiology
X
MCELLBI 198
Directed Group Study
MCELLBI 200+
MONGOLIAN
various
MONGOLIAN 1A
Elementary Mongolian
Students should have at least one year of physics,
one year of calculus, and some neurobiology
See decal.org for course listings
Graduate courses are not available for BISP students
X
X
First-year language; no prerequisites.
MUSIC: Most of the music classes require either a placement test or audition. The Placement Exam will be given on Monday August 24th. You can find more information at this website: http://music.berkeley.edu/academic-programs/undergraduate-degree-program/placement-procedure-for-music-major-courses/. For the music
performance courses, there are auditions either immediately prior to or during the first week of instruction. You can read about all the performance opportunities at this website: http://music.berkeley.edu/academic-programs/undergraduate-degree-program/performance-courses/. Because so many music courses require auditions or
placements, course availability is not marked for most courses. Go to the first class session and speak with the instructor. You should review the music department website for course descriptions before instruction begins.
MUSIC 20A
Basic Musicianship
X
MUSIC 20B
Basic Musicianship
X
MUSIC 25A
Introduction to Music Theory
X
MUSIC 27
Introduction to Western Music
MUSIC 40
Group Carillon Lessons for
Beginning Students
Please email ucbells@berkeley.edu for additional
information.
MUSIC 41A
Private Carillon Lessons for
Beginning Students
Please email ucbells@berkeley.edu for additional
information.
MUSIC 41B
Private Carillon Lessons for
Intermediate Students
Please email ucbells@berkeley.edu for additional
information.
MUSIC 44
Voice Class
For tweets on class enrollment and announcements, follow
@VoiceClass on Twitter.
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
MUSIC 49B
Musicianship
The Music Placement Examination is required for all
sections of Music 49B.
Music Placement Exam Required
MUSIC 49C
Harmony
The Music Placement Examination is required for all
sections of Music 49C.
Music Placement Exam Required
MUSIC 50
Musicianship
The Music Placement Examination is required for all
sections of Music 50.
Music Placement Exam Required
MUSIC 51
Musicianship
The Music Placement Examination is required for all
sections of Music 51.
Music Placement Exam Required
MUSIC 60
Harmony
The Music Placement Examination is required for all
sections of Music 60.
Music Placement Exam Required
MUSIC 61
Harmony
The Music Placement Examination is required for all sections
of Music 61.
MUSIC 70
History of Music I
MUSIC 74.1
Introduction to Selected Musics
"Music of Japan"
of the World
Music 74 section 1 is only for music majors who are not
junior transfers and who wish to use this course to satisfy the
lower-division music major requirement. All others should
enroll in the upper division equivalent, Music 134B.
MUSIC 74.2
Introduction to Selected Musics
"Music of Bali"
of the World
Music 74 section 2 is only for music majors who are not
junior transfers and who wish to use this course to satisfy the
lower-division music major requirement. All others should
enroll in the upper division equivalent, Music 139.
MUSIC 97
Field Studies
Not available to BISP Students
MUSIC 98.1
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
"Chamber Music for Fun"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98.2
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
"Introduction to Korean Drumming: P'ungmul"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98.3
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
"From Bach to Whitacre: Listening to Classical Music
Throughout the Ages"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98.4
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
"The Music, Lyrics, and Art of Radiohead"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98.5
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
"An Introduction to Jazz: Learn How to Play a Jazz Solo!"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98.6
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
"Jazz Combo"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98.7
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
"Introduction to Chinese Music: The Art of Erhu"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98.8
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
"Theory and Practice of North Indian Classical Music"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98.9
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
"Learn to Play the Sather Tower Bells: Carillon"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98 others
Directed Group Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
See decal.org for course listings
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 98BC
Berkeley Connect
MUSIC 99
Independent Study for
Freshmen and Sophomores
MUSIC 107
Independent Projects in
Computer Music
MUSIC 108
Music Perception and Cognition
MUSIC 108M
Music Perception and Cognition
MUSIC 109
Music Cognition: The Mind
Behind the Musical Ear
MUSIC 109M
Music Cognition: The Mind
Behind the Musical Ear
MUSIC 116A
Jazz Theory and Performance 1
MUSIC 116AM
Jazz Theory and Performance 1
MUSIC 128
Topics in the History of
European and American Musi... "Music Travels"
MUSIC 128A
Opera
MUSIC 128AM
Opera
Music Placement Exam Required
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
MUSIC 134B
Music of Japan
"Music of Japan"
Music 134B is only for non-majors and music majors who are
junior transfers. Music majors who are not junior transfers
should enroll in the lower division equivalent, Music 74
section 1.
MUSIC 139
Topics in Musics of the World
"Music of Bali"
Music 139 is only for non-majors and music majors who are
junior transfers. Music majors who are not junior transfers
should enroll in the lower division equivalent, Music 74
section 2
MUSIC 140.1
Javanese Gamelan
Performance ensemble course. Auditions are required.
Section 1 is for beginning students.
Audition Required
MUSIC 140.2
Javanese Gamelan
Performance ensemble course. Auditions are required.
Section 2 is for beginning students.
Audition Required
MUSIC 140.3
Javanese Gamelan
Performance ensemble course. Audition is required. Section
3 is for intermediate students.
Audition Required
University Symphony Orchestra
Performance ensemble course. Auditions are required. See
the Department of Music website at music.berkeley.edu for
details.
Audition Required
MUSIC 142
University Wind Ensemble
Performance ensemble course. Auditions are required. See
the Department of Music website at music.berkeley.edu for
details.
Audition Required
MUSIC 143
Gospel Chorus
MUSIC 144
University Chorus
Performance ensemble course. Auditions are required. See
the Department of Music website at music.berkeley.edu for
details.
Audition Required
MUSIC 145
University Chamber Chorus
Performance ensemble course. Auditions are required. See
the Department of Music website at music.berkeley.edu for
details.
Audition Required
MUSIC 146B
Balinese Gamelan
MUSIC 148
African Music Ensemble
Performance ensemble course. Auditions are required. See
the Department of Music website at music.berkeley.edu for
details.
Audition Required
MUSIC 149
University Baroque Ensemble
Performance ensemble course. Auditions are required. See
the Department of Music website at music.berkeley.edu for
details.
Audition Required
MUSIC 150A
Instrumental Performance
MUSIC 150B
Vocal Performance
MUSIC 150C
Keyboard Performance
"Keyboard Instruments"
MUSIC 150D
Various Musical Practices
Performance
"Non-Western Instruments"
MUSIC 150E
Jazz Performance
"Jazz and Improvisation"
MUSIC 150G
Guitar Performance
MUSIC 150H
Early Music Performance
MUSIC 154A
Counterpoint
MUSIC 155
Music Composition
MUSIC 156
Studies in Musical Analysis
MUSIC 158A
Sound and Music Computing
with CNMAT Technologies
MUSIC 161A
Instrumental Conducting
MUSIC 165
Berkeley Nu Jazz Collective
MUSIC 179
Topics in History, Culture, and
Analysis
"French Modernisms"
MUSIC 189
Topics in Research and
Performance
"Performing Bach Keyboard Music"
MUSIC H195
Special Study for Honors
Candidates in Music
MUSIC 197
Field Studies
MUSIC 198.1
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
"Chamber Music for Fun"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 198.2
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
"Introduction to Korean Drumming: P'ungmul"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 198.3
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
"From Bach to Whitacre: Listening to Classical Music
Throughout the Ages"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 141
"Orchestral Instruments"
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
MUSIC 198.4
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
"The Music, Lyrics, and Art of Radiohead"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 198.5
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
"An Introduction to Jazz: Learn How to Play a Jazz Solo!"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 198.6
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
"Jazz Combo"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 198.7
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
"Introduction to Chinese Music: The Art of Erhu"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 198.8
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
"Theory and Practice of North Indian Classical Music"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 198.9
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
"Learn to Play the Sather Tower Bells: Carillon"
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 198 others
Group Special Study for
Advanced Undergraduates
See decal.org for course listings
See decal.org for details
MUSIC 198BC
Berkeley Connect
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
MUSIC 198BC
Berkeley Connect
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
MUSIC 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
MUSIC 200+
various
Graduate courses in Music are typically not available to BISP
students.
X
NATIVE AMERICAN ST UDIES
Space is extremely limited in graduate courses.
NATAMST R1A
Native American Studies
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
NATAMST R1B
Native American Studies
Reading and Composition
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
NATAMST 20A
Introduction to Native American
Studies
NATAMST 71
Native Americans in North
America to 1900
NATAMST 90.1
Freshman Seminar--Myth,
Memory and History
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
NATAMST 90.2
Freshman Seminar--Myth,
Memory and History
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
NATAMST 97
Field Work in Native American
Communities
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
NATAMST 98
Supervised Group Study and
Research
NATAMST 99
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
NATAMST 100
Native American Law
X
NATAMST 105
Indigenous Issues Across the
Americas
X
NATAMST 110
Theories and Methods in Native
American Studies
X
NATAMST 158
Native Americans and the
Cinema
X
NATAMST 175
History of Native Americans in
California
NATAMST 195
Senior Thesis
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
NATAMST H195A
Senior Honors Thesis for
Native American Studies Ma...
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
Not Available to BISP Students
X
Not Available to BISP Students
NATAMST 197
Field Work in the Native
American Community
NATAMST 198
Supervised Group Study
NATAMST 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
X
X
See decal.org for course listings
"Race, Ethnicity, And Indigeneity In California History"
X
See decal.org for course listings
NEAR EASTERN STUDIES
NREAST R1A
Reading and Composition in
Near Eastern Studies
NREAST 10
Introduction to the Near East
NREAST 18
Introduction to Ancient Egypt
NREAST 24
Freshman Seminars
The Middle East is an area of vital concern to Americans, an area
where exciting events are taking place. To understand these
events, we will discuss the history, politics, and religions of the
different peoples who live there.
X
Great intro class
X
Not Available to BISP Students
X
Not Available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
NREAST C26
NREAST 108
Introduction to Central Asia
Topics in the Ancient
Mediterranean World
Also listed as Geography C55
The course presents the origins and history of ancient astronomy
from Mesopotamia to the Greco-Roman world. Readings from
primary texts, including Babylonian astronomical and astrological
documents and Greek treatises such as Ptolemy's Almagest are
used. Problems of the calendar and of planetary motion are of
special interest. Focus here is on the sun and planets, the
earliest developments of a mathematical route to astronomical
problem-solving, and the earliest known written evidence of
astronomical model-making and theory.
X
X
NREAST 110
Art and Archaeology of Ancient
Egypt in the First M...
X
NREAST 113
Gilgamesh: King, Hero, and
God
X
NREAST C121A
Topics in Islamic Art
NREAST 123
Mesopotamian Archaeology
NREAST 129
NREAST 144
NREAST 162A
NREAST 170
NREAST 190A
NREAST 190C
Arts of Iran and Central Asia
Note: This course introduces students to the art, architecture,
and visual and material cultures in Islamic contexts, from the 7th
through the 19th centuries. The course will examine the
aesthetic manifestations of Islam within the context of institution
development, in particular the 'formative' negotiations of the
Umayyad, Abbasid, Fatimid, Seljuk, and Mamluk periods
between visual idioms and new spiritual and political programs.
Cross-listed with History of Art C121A section 1.
X
X
"The Iranian 'Silk Road': Art and Archaeology of Persia and
Central Asia, 1st - 10th century CE" - This course examines
Iranian artistic production and archaeology found in Persia and
Central Asia during the first millennium CE. The course will look
at the macro-regional arts of ancient Persia where most of the
artifacts do not come from controlled excavation, and, when
possible, at the micro-regional, following the main trends of
development of single sites, architecture, paintings, metal and
textile production, and burial customs. The course will also
distinguish the Iranian cultural features found in both ancient
Persia and Central Asia.
X
This course explores the phenomenon of Sufism in the Islamic
tradition. Topics include Sufi foundations, the sources upon
which it is based, ritual practices, themes, and doctrines
developed during its formative period and its eventual
systemization. The course investigates the lives of several key
Sufism: The Mysticism of Islam Sufi figures including, As-Sadiq (d.765), Rabia (d. 801), alJunayd
(d. 910), al-Hujwiri (d. 1077), al-Ghazali (d. 1111), Ibn alArabi (d.
1240) and Rumi (d. 1273) among others. Also covered are
central Sufi concepts as annihilation (fana), love (mahabba),
knowledge ('ilm), gnosis (ma'rifa), intellect ('aql), reality
(haqiqah) and unity (tawhid)
History of Persian Literature
X
X
Islamic History and
Historiography (600-1050)
Ancient Near Eastern Studies
Jewish Studies
good for junior/seniors
advance
X
"The Impermanence of Things: a Cultural Heritage Crisis for the
21st Century" - This seminar will examine how "world heritage"
sites in Western Asia have been idealistically shepherded not
only into an era of technology and cultural awareness, but also
one of conflicting philosophies regarding its conservation,
representation, purpose and (most recently) deliberate
destruction for political means. The course will carefully focus on
archaeological sites recently damaged in Iraq and Syria; as well
as, issues of looting, black market trade in antiquities, forgeries,
cultural colonialization, and the eternal question, "to whom does
the past belong"?
X
Trailing Berkeley's long tradition of understanding the "other," this
course pursues the search for one of the civilizations that deeply
marked and inspired Western civilization. The Jewish tradition,
one of the cornerstones of Europe and the New World, belongs
to a group of ancient cultures originated in the Fertile Crescent,
which throughout time was crystallized in evolving oral and
written references, around which were condensed and preserved
fundamental moments of the relation between God and
humanity. This course will examine thoughts of Jewish authors
who dedicated themselves to the study of their tradition in a
particularly creative mode.
X
PHILOSOPHY
PHILOS 2
Individual Morality and Social
Justice
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during the
first two weeks of instruction.
PHILOS 7
Existentialism in Literature and
Film
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
PHILOS 10
Comparative Ethics
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 12A
Introduction to Logic
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 18
Confucius for Today
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 25A
Ancient Philosophy
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 98BC
Berkeley Connect
PHILOS 100
Philosophical Methods
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
PHILOS 108
Contemporary Ethical Issues
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
PHILOS 116
Special Topics in Political
Philosophy
PHILOS 125
Metaphysics
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 134
Form and Meaning
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 136
Philosophy of Perception
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
PHILOS 146
Philosophy of Mathematics
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 155
Medieval Philosophy
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 161
Aristotle
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 170
Descartes
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
X
PHILOS 176
Hume
An additional one hour discussion will be arranged during
the first two weeks of instruction.
PHILOS 190
Proseminar
PHILOS 198BC
Berkeley Connect
This is a quantitative course, with a math focus
X
X
X
Interested students should talk to the instructor
X
X
X
Interested students should talk to the instructor
PHYSICS: Supplemental Application Required. Obtain from the undergraduate advisor in 368 LeConte Hall.
PHYSICS 7A
Physics for Scientists and
Engineers
Discussion and lab (D/L) sections begin on the first day of
instruction. You must attend your D/L sections during the
first and second week, or you may be dropped. Physics 7A
midterms will be held for 2 hours between 6:00 and 9:00
p.m. on 09/28/15 and 11/02/15 for lecture section 1. Exact
midterm time to be announced. Plan accordingly. Do not
schedule any conflicts.
PHYSICS H7A
Physics for Scientists and
Engineers
Discussion and lab (D/L) sections begin on the first day of
instruction. You must attend your D/L sections during the
first and second week, or you may be dropped from the
course.
X
PHYSICS 7B
Physics for Scientists and
Engineers
Discussion and lab (D/L) sections begin on the first day of
instruction. You must attend your D/L sections during the
first and second week, or you may be dropped. Physics 7B
midterms will be held for 2 hours between 6:00 and 9:00
p.m. on 09/28/15 and 11/02/15 for lecture section 1. Exact
midterm time to be announced. Plan accordingly. Do not
schedule any conflicts.
X
PHYSICS H7B
PHYSICS 7C
PHYSICS H7C
PHYSICS 8A
Physics for Scientists and
Engineers
Physics for Scientists and
Engineers
Lecture 2 has the most space at this time.
X
Discussion and lab (D/L) sections begin on the first day of
instruction. You must attend your D/L sections during the
first and second week, or you may be dropped. Switching
sections is not allowed. Physics 7C midterms will be held for
2 hours between 6:00 and 9:00 p.m. on 09/29/15 and
11/03/15 for lecture section 1. Exact midterm time to be
announced. Plan accordingly. Do not schedule any conflicts.
Physics for Scientists and
Engineers
Introductory Physics
X
X
X
Discussion and lab (D/L) sections begin on the first day of
instruction. You must attend your D/L sections during the
first and second week, or you may be dropped. Physics 8A
midterms will be held for 2 hours between 6:00 and 9:00
p.m. on 10/07/15 and 11/04/15 for lecture section 1. Exact
midterm time to be announced. Plan accordingly. Do not
schedule any conflicts.
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
Discussion and lab (D/L) sections begin on the first day of
instruction. You must attend your D/L sections during the
first and second week, or you may be dropped. Physics 8B
midterms will be held for 2 hours between 6:00 and 9:00
p.m. on 10/08/15 and 11/12/15 for lecture section 2. Exact
midterm time to be announced. Plan accordingly. Do not
schedule any conflicts.
PHYSICS 8B
Introductory Physics
PHYSICS C10
Descriptive Introduction to
Physics
PHYSICS 49
Supplementary Work in Lower
Division Physics
PHYSICS 89
Introduction to Mathematical
Physics
PHYSICS 98.4
Directed Group Study
DeCal: "Science in Sci-Fi Movies"
PHYSICS 98.5
Directed Group Study
DeCal: "Bicycle Mechanics & Repair"
PHYSICS 98BC
Berkeley Connect
PHYSICS 99
Supervised Independent Study
PHYSICS 105
Analytic Mechanics
X
PHYSICS 110A
Electromagnetism and Optics
X
PHYSICS 110B
Electromagnetism and Optics
"Physics for Future Presidents"
X
X
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
Lecture 1 has more space at this time
X
PHYSICS 111A
Instrumentation Laboratory
Physics 111A lab hours are M 12:00 to 4:00 p.m. and TWTF
1:00 to 5:00 p.m. Physics 111A meets the first day of class
at 1:00 p.m. in 282 LeConte Hall. You must attend the
weekly lecture, and have at least two free afternoons each
week to spend in lab ($175 Course Materials Fee - subject
to change).
PHYSICS 111B
Advanced Experimentation
Laboratory
Physics 111B lab hours are M 12:00 to 4:00 p.m. and
TWTF 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. Physics 111B meets the first day of
class at 1:00 p.m. in 286 LeConte Hall. You must have a
least four free afternoons each week to spend in lab. ($140
Course Materials Fee - subject to change).
PHYSICS 112
Introduction to Statistical and
Thermal Physics
PHYSICS 129
Particle Physics
PHYSICS 137A
Quantum Mechanics
PHYSICS 137B
Quantum Mechanics
PHYSICS 141A
Solid State Physics
PHYSICS H195A
Senior Honors Thesis Research
PHYSICS H195B
Senior Honors Thesis Research
PHYSICS 198.4
Directed Group Study
DeCal: "Science in Sci-Fi Movies"
PHYSICS 198.5
Directed Group Study
DeCal: "Bicycle Mechanics & Repair"
PHYSICS 198BC
Berkeley Connect
PHYSICS 199
Supervised Independent Study
X
X
X
Lecture 1 has more space at this time
X
X
Lecture 1 has more space at this time
X
X
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
POLITICAL SCIENCE
POLSCI 3
Introduction to Empirical
Analysis and Quantitative..
X
POLSCI 5
Introduction to International
Relations
X
POLSCI all other
courses
various
POLSCI C131A
Applied Econometrics and
Public Policy
POLSCI 138E
The Varieties of Capitalism:
Political Economic Systems of
the World
POLSCI 143A
Northeast Asian Politics: China
POLSCI 149E
Special Topics in Area Studies
Space availaibility to be updated after August 16th.
Space availaibility to be updated after August 16th.
X
Also listed as Econ C142
X
Prerequisite: econometrics or consent of instructor Contact Jenny Cornet-Carrillo for
enrollment information
X
X
Topic: The Politics of Southeast Asia: Crisis, Conflict and Reform
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
POLSCI 179
Undergraduate Colloquium on
Political Science
X
POLSCI 191
Junior Seminar
X
Space availaibility to be updated after August 16th.
POLSCI 191
Junior Seminar
X
Space availaibility to be updated after August 16th.
POLSCI 191
Junior Seminar
X
Space availaibility to be updated after August 16th.
POLSCI 191
Junior Seminar
X
Space availaibility to be updated after August 16th.
POLSCI 191
Junior Seminar
X
Space availaibility to be updated after August 16th.
PORTUGUESE
PORTUG 24
Freshman Seminar
PORTUG 101A
Portuguese for Advanced
Students
PORTUG 101B
Portuguese for Advanced
Students: Workshop
PORTUG 102
Readings in Portuguese
PORTUG 103
PORTUG 104
PORTUG 135.1
Not available to BISP Students
Prerequisites: Knowledge equivalent to two college years of
Spanish language or consent of instructor. This is an introductory
course for students with no previous study of Portuguese,
designed to introduce the basics of the language, through
readings in a variety of fields. Students must enroll concurrently
in a section of 101B. The combination of 101A101B constitutes
an intensive introduction to Portuguese and prepares the student
for further upper division language course work.
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Taught in Portuguese
X
Taught in Portuguese
X
Taught in Portuguese
Advanced Grammar and
Composition
X
Taught in Portuguese
Introduction to Brazilian
Literature
X
Taught in Portuguese
X
Taught in Portuguese
X
Taught in Portuguese
Studies in Luso-Brazilian
Literature
Portuguese 101B is a language skills workshop designed to
complement 101A; enrollment must be concurrent with that
course. There is an emphasis on understanding, speaking, and
writing Portuguese.
"Dogs and Sailors: Anti-Traditionalist Thoughts on Short Stories
in Portuguese" - This course embraces literary creation in
Portuguese Language, from the end of 19th century to present
time. Portuguese, Brazilian, Mozambican, Angolan and Cape
Verdean authors give voice to sailors and animals (mainly dogs),
characters from short stories that defy conventionality and
traditions. These provocative texts are the keys to understanding
identity questions that go far beyond the frontiers of Portuguese
speaking countries, such as animal rights, sexuality and religion.
Students should be able to read, understand and communicate in
Portuguese.
PORTUG 135.2
Studies in Luso-Brazilian
Literature
"Translating Brazil: Brazilian Literature & Culture"
PORTUG H195
PSYCHOLOGY
Portuguese Honors Course
PSYCH 1
General Psychology
X
PSYCH W1
General Psychology
X
PSYCH 2
Principles of Psychology
X
PSYCH 10
Research and Data Analysis in
Psychology
PSYCH C19
Drugs and the Brain
PSYCH 24
Freshman Seminars
PSYCH C64
Exploring the Brain:
Introduction to Neuroscience
PSYCH 98.18
Supervised Group Study
"Beyond Pink & Blue: Illuminating Diversities of Gender &
Sexuality"
Contact professor to apply at rmd@berkeley.edu
PSYCH 98.19
Supervised Group Study
"Color Blind or Blind to Color?: Views on Race at UC Berkeley"
Contact professor to apply at rmd@berkeley.edu
PSYCH 98 (others)
Supervised Group Study
PSYCH 101
Research and Data Analysis in
Psychology
PSYCH 102
Methods for Research in
Psychological Sciences
Not available to BISP Students
X
Note: This course has no in-person lectures. It
takes place entirely over the Internet. It is also
offered on campus as Psych 1.
X
Also listed as Molecular and Cell Biology C62
"The Shattered Mind"
Students should enroll in Psych 101 instead.
X
Not available to BISP Students
Cross-listed with Molecular and Cell Biology C64
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
See decal.org for course listings
See decal.org for course listings
X
Not available to BISP Students
Not available to BISP Students
Students may not sign up for both Psych 10 and
101.
X
Not available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
PSYCH 110
Introduction to Biological
Psychology
PSYCH C120
Basic Issues in Cognition
PSYCH C127
Cognitive Neuroscience
PSYCH 130
Clinical Psychology
PSYCH 131
Developmental
Psychopathology
PSYCH 133
Psychology of Sleep
PSYCH 134
Health Psychology
PSYCH 140
Developmental Psychology
PSYCH 158
Topical Seminars in Personality "Personality and Socio-Emotional Learning in Education"
PSYCH 160
Social Psychology
PSYCH 164
Social Cognition
PSYCH 167AC
Stigma and Prejudice
PSYCH H194A
Honors Seminar
PSYCH 198.18
Directed Group Study
"Beyond Pink & Blue: Illuminating Diversities of Gender &
Sexuality"
Contact professor to apply at rmd@berkeley.edu
PSYCH 198.19
Directed Group Study
"Color Blind or Blind to Color?: Views on Race at UC Berkeley"
Contact professor to apply at rmd@berkeley.edu
PSYCH 198 (others)
Supervised Group Study
See decal.org for course listings
PSYCH 200+
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
Enrollment by application only.
X
X
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
various
Not available to BISP Students
Interested students should speak to the professor
of the course to gain admission in graduate
Psychology courses. Space is extremely limited in
graduate courses.
X
RHETORIC
RHETOR R1A
The Craft of Writing
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
RHETOR R1B
The Craft of Writing
R1A and R1B courses are not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
RHETOR 10
Introduction to Practical
Reasoning and Critical Analysis
RHETOR 84
Sophomore Seminar
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
RHETOR 98
Supervised Group Study
See decal.org for course listings
RHETOR 103A
Approaches and Paradigms in
the History of Rhetoric...
X
RHETOR 106
Rhetoric of Historical Discourse The History of the Everyday
X
RHETOR 107
Rhetoric of Scientific Discourse
X
RHETOR 108
Rhetoric of Philosophical
Discourse
RHETOR 114
Rhetoric of New Media
X
RHETOR 121
Rhetoric of Fiction
X
RHETOR 122
Rhetoric of Drama
X
RHETOR 132T
Auteur in Film
"Coen Brothers"
X
RHETOR 135T
Selected Topics in Film
"Color Theory"
X
RHETOR 152AC
Race and Order in the New
Republic
RHETOR 157B
Rhetoric of Contemporary
Political Theory
RHETOR 160
Introduction to the Rhetoric of
Legal Discourse
X
"Dangerous Subjects: In Search of the Ancient Self, from Plato to
Foucault"
X
X
"The Aesthetic Turn in Political Thought"
X
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
RHETOR 164
Rhetoric of Legal Theory
X
RHETOR H190A
Honors Thesis
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
RHETOR H190B
Honors Thesis
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
RHETOR 198
Supervised Group Study
RHETOR 199
Supervised Independent Study
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
SCANDIN R5A
Reading and Composition
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SCANDIN R5B
Reading and Composition
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SCANDINAVIAN
SCANDIN 75
Literature and Culture of the
Nordic World
SCANDIN 98
Directed Group Study
SCANDIN 101A
INTRO OLD NORSE
X
Taught in English with readings in Old Norse.
SCANDIN 123
Viking and Medieval
Scandinavia
X
Taught in English with readings in English.
SCANDIN 125
Old Norse Literature
X
Taught in English with readings in English.
SCANDIN 145
Senior Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SCANDIN 149
Major Studies
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SCANDIN 180
X
Not available to BISP Students
"Sagas" - The famous Icelandic sagas are one of the most
enduring literary artifacts of the Middle Ages. In this course we
will read and examine the most famous of these sagas
(including Njal's Saga, Egil's Saga, and many more), as well as
works that strongly influenced them (such as the Saga of the
Volsungs).
"Sociohistorical Scandinavian Linguistics" - This course is a
special look at the history of Scandinavia not through its people
and nations, but through its languages. Join us as we examine
the earliest evidence of the written word in Scandinavia in ancient
runic inscriptions, look at the evidence we have for what was
happening even earlier thanks to linguistic reconstruction, and
Special Topics in Scandinavian
then journey into more recent centuries to look at e.g. the
Norwegian language struggle, the position of Sami, and the
interesting interactions between Finnish and Swedish in eastern
Scandinavia.
Taught in English with readings in English.
X
x
Not available to BISP Students
Taught in English with readings in English.
SCANDIN 198
Group Study for Advanced
Undergraduates
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SCANDIN 199
Independent Study and
Research
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
SLAVIC R5A
Reading and Composition
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC R5B
Reading and Composition
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC 24
Freshman Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC 39C
Freshman/Sophomore Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC 45
Nineteenth-Century Russian
Literature
SLAVIC 98
Directed Group Study
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC 99
Individual Study
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC 100
Seminar: Russian, East
European, and Eurasian Cultu...
X
X
Not available to BISP Students
Russian literature course is taught in English with
readings in English.
X
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC 132
Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and the
English Novel
X
Taught in English with readings in English.
SLAVIC 134E
Chekhov
X
Taught in Englishwith readings in English.
X
PREREQUISITE: MUST HAVE AT LEAST ONE
YEAR OF A SLAVIC LANGUAGE. CONSENT OF
INSTRUCTOR.
Introduction to Slavic Linguistics
SLAVIC C137
SLAVIC 158
Also listed as Linguistics C137
Topics in East
European/Eurasian Cultural
History
"The Rise and Fall of the Former Yugoslavia"
X
Cultural studies course is taught in English with
readings in English.
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
SLAVIC 171
Readings in Yugoslav
Literatures
X
Taught in Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian with readings
in Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian.
SLAVIC 182
Pushkin
SLAVIC H195
Honors Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC 198
Supervised Group Study for
Undergraduates
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SLAVIC 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SOCIOL 1
Introduction to Sociology
Not available for BISP students
X
SOCIOL 3AC
Principles of Sociology:
American Cultures
Not available for BISP students
X
SOCIOL 5
Evaluation of Evidence
SOCIOL 7
The Power of Numbers:
Quantitative Data in Social
Sciences
SOCIOL 98
Directed Group Study
SOCIOL 98BC
Berkeley Connect
Not available for BISP students
X
SOCIOL 101
Sociological Theory I
Not available for BISP students
X
SOCIOL 106
Quantitative Sociological
Methods
X
SOCIOL 108
Advanced Methods: In-depth
Interviewing
X
SOCIOL 110
Organizations and Social
Institutions
X
SOCIOL 111AC
Sociology of the Family
X
SOCIOL C115
Sociology of Health and
Medicine
X
SOCIOL 116
Sociology of Work
X
SOCIOL 119S
Organizational Strategy and
Design: A Sociological ...
X
SOCIOL 120
Economy and Society
X
SOCIOL 121
Innovation and
Entrepreneurship: Social and
Cultura...
X
SOCIOL 124
Sociology of Poverty
SOCIOL C126
Social Consequences of
Population Dynamics
SOCIOL 127
Development and Globalization
X
SOCIOL 130
Social Inequalities
X
SOCIOL 135
Sexual Cultures
X
SOCIOL 140
Politics and Social Change
X
SOCIOL 150
Social Psychology
X
SOCIOL 160
Sociology of Culture
X
SOCIOL 166
Society and Technology
X
SOCIOL C167
Virtual Communities/Social
Media
X
PREREQUISITE: 3 YEARS OF COLLEGE
RUSSIAN EQUIVALENT TO RUSSIAN 103B.
CONSENT OF INSTRUCTOR.
SOCIOLOGY
SOCIOL 180I
X
X
"The International Student Experience: Pathway to Personal &
Academic Success"
X
Also listed as Demography C126
Comparative Perspectives on
U.S. and European Societies
SOCIOL 189G
Comparative Perspectives in
Sociology: The Global Elite
SOCIOL 190
Seminar and Research in
Sociology
X
Interested students should register for
DEMOG C126
You must be present at the first two lectures or you
will be subject to instructor drop.
X
X
Note: "The Sociology of Elites"
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
SOCIOL 190
Seminar and Research in
Sociology
Note: "Absolutely Surplus: Social Exclusion in Contemporary
Sociology"
SOCIOL 190
Seminar and Research in
Sociology
Note: "Cultural Production: Institutional Underpinnings of the Arts
and Media"
SOCIOL 190
Seminar and Research in
Sociology
Note: "The Social Psychology of Inequality"
SOCIOL 190
Seminar and Research in
Sociology
Note: "The Sociology of Immigration Politics"
SOCIOL 190
Seminar and Research in
Sociology
Note: "The Black Middle Class"
SOCIOL H190A
Senior Honors Thesis and
Seminar
Not available to BISP students
SOCIOL H190A
Senior Honors Thesis and
Seminar
Not available to BISP students
SOCIOL 193
Reading and Writing Seminar
for Sociology
SOCIOL 194
Writing Research
X
SOCIOL 194
Writing Research
X
SOCIOL 198
Directed Group Study for
Undergraduates
X
Not available to BISP students
X
Not available to BISP students
X
Note: "The International Student Experience: Pathway to
Personal & Academic Success"
Please note: This is NOT the SOC 198 course for
BISP students. You will receive an email with
instructions about that course.
Directed Group Study for
Undergraduates--Berkeley
Connect
SOUTH AND SOUTHE AST ASIAN STUDIES
Not available for BISP students
X
S,SEASN R5A
Self, Representation, and
Nation
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
S,SEASN 39K
Freshman/Sophomore Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
S,SEASN C52
Introduction to the Study of
Buddhism
Also listed as East Asian Languages and Cultures C50 and
Buddhist Studies C50
S,SEASN 84
Sophomore Seminar
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
S,SEASN 98A
South Asian Studies
S,SEASN 99A
South Asian Studies
S,SEASN 120.1
Topics in South and Southeast
Asian Studies
X
S,SEASN 120.3
Topics in South and Southeast
Asian Studies
X
S,SEASN 149
Studies in South and Southeast
Asian Languages
X
S,SEASN 150
Southeast Asian Mythology
S,SEASN H195A
South Asian Studies
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
S,SEASN H195B
Tamil
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
S,SEASN H195E
Southeast Asian Studies
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
S,SEASN H195F
Sanskrit
S,SEASN 199A
South Asian Studies
S,SEASN 199E
Southeast Asian Studies
S,SEASN 199F
SPANISH
Sanskrit
SPANISH 1
Elementary Spanish
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH R1A
Reading and Composition
Through Readings from the S...
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH 2
Elementary Spanish
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH 3
Intermediate Spanish
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH 4
Intermediate Spanish
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SOCIOL 198BC
Please note: This is NOT the SOC 198 course for
BISP students. You will receive an email with
instructions about that course.
X
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
SPANISH 21
Spanish for Bilingual Students,
First Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH 22
Spanish for Bilingual Students,
Second Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH 24
Freshman Seminars
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH 25
Reading and Analysis of
Literary Texts
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH 98
Directed Group Study
SPANISH 100
Introduction to Spanish
Linguistics
X
Taught in Spanish
SPANISH 102A
Advanced Grammar and
Composition
X
Prerequisite: Spanish 25
X
Taught in Spanish
X
Taught in Spanish
X
Taught in Spanish
This course provides practical opportunities to experience the
living languages and cultures studied in our Department.nt. You
will develop the competencies necessary for volunteering and
finding a job in Spanish-speaking countries and with the Latino
community in the USA. The course includes volunteering for a
total of 20 hours at Santuario or Oakland International High
School, as well as working in teams in the classroom and online
to research specific opportunities of volunteering and working
with global NGO's.
SPANISH 102C
Advanced Writing Workshop
SPANISH 104A
Survey of Spanish American
Literature
SPANISH 107A
Survey of Spanish Literature
SPANISH 111A
Cervantes
"Don Quijote"
X
Taught in Spanish
SPANISH 135.1
Studies in Hispanic Literature
"The Cuban Revolution: Literature, Culture & Politics"
X
Taught in Spanish
SPANISH 135.2
Studies in Hispanic Literature
"La Ciudad de Mexico"
X
SPANISH 135.3
Studies in Hispanic Literature
"Literature, Film & the Politics of Childhood"
SPANISH 135.4
Studies in Hispanic Literature
"Juan Rulfo"
X
Taught in Spanish
SPANISH 135.5
Studies in Hispanic Literature
"La cultura latinoamericana y el medio ambiente: plantas,
animales y ecosistemas en el cine, el arte y la literatura"
X
Taught in Spanish
SPANISH 135.6
Studies in Hispanic Literature
"Costumbrismo in the Americas & in the Caribbean"
X
Taught in Spanish
SPANISH 135W.1
Studies in Hispanic Literature Writing Intensive
"Cultura de la Transicion espanola hacia la democracia"
X
Taught in Spanish
SPANISH 135W.2
Studies in Hispanic Literature Writing Intensive
"Vanguardias hispanoamericanas"
X
Taught in Spanish
SPANISH 161
Spanish Phonetics and
Phonology
X
Taught in Spanish
SPANISH H195
Spanish Honors Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH H195A
Spanish Honors Course
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
SPANISH 198
Supervised Group Study
SPANISH 199
Supervised Independent Study
and Research
STATISTICS
"Representaciìn, apropiaciìn, y continuidad del mundo colonial
(siglos 16 al 18)"
Taught in Spanish
X
Taught in Spanish
STAT 2
Introduction to Statistics
X
STAT 20
Introduction to Probability and
Statistics
X
STAT 21
Introductory Probability and
Statistics for Busines...
STAT 94
Special Topics in Probability
and Statistics
STAT 131A
Introduction to Probability and
Statistics for Life...
X
STAT 133
Concepts in Computing with
Data
X
STAT 134
Concepts of Probability
X
Enrollment more likely in Section 1
STAT 135
Concepts of Statistics
X
Enrollment more likely in Section 1
X
Introductory course in statistics and computer science. Not
appropriate for students studying in those fields.
X
Enrollment more likely in Section 2
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
STAT 150
Stochastic Processes
X
STAT 151A
Linear Modelling: Theory and
Applications
X
STAT 153
Introduction to Time Series
X
STAT 154
Modern Statistical Prediction
and Machine Learning
X
STAT 155
Game Theory
X
Note: "Statistics and Finance" - Prerequisites: Statistics 133, 134, 135. The aim of the class is to
introduce modern statistical techniques to students, by looking at applications in Finance.
Students will learn about central ideas in Financial Engineering (time series, factor models, CAPM,
option pricing, quantitative risk management, ...) and will learn to look at them (and the
corresponding data) with a statistician's eye.
STAT 157
Seminar on Topics in
Probability and Statistics
STAT 159
Reproducible and
Collaborative Statistical Data Note: http://www.jarrodmillman.com/stat159-fall2015
Sci...
STAT 200+
Various
Students must have a background in
concepts of computing, probablity, and
statistics.
X
X
Graduate courses in statistics may be
available to advanced students. Interested
students should talk to the professor of the
course in order to demonstrate their
background in the subject matter. Space is
limited. 201A/B are likely unavailable.
X
THEATER
DANC
AND
E PERFORMANCE STUDIES:
St
udents can review course descriptions and details at http://tdps.be
rkeley.edu/programs-courses/courses/fall-courses/
THEATER R1A
Performance: Writing and
Research
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
THEATER R1B
Performance: Writing and
Research
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
THEATER 5
Public Speaking and
Presentation Skills
X
THEATER 10
Introduction to Acting
THEATER 20U
London: Theater Capital
This class is only available to students enrolled in the Fall London Program.
You will not be able to enroll in acting classes before
the beginning of the semester. You must sign up for
an audition. On-line sign-ups start August 15 for Fall
classes and December 1 for Spring classes at
tdps.berkeley.edu. Auditions are at the beginning of
the semester. Audition requirement: one-minute
speech from a play, film script, or a selection of
prose. Memorization is strongly encouraged. If you
are accepted into the course, the instructor will give
you a Course Control Number the first day your class
meets.
Not available to BISP Students
THEATER 24
Freshman Seminar
"Documentary Playmaking: School Integration, Little Rock, 195758"
Not available to BISP Students
THEATER 26
Introduction to Performance
Studies
THEATER 40
All interested students are encouraged to enroll and
must attend the first day of class which is a required
placement class. Students will be advised at the end
of the class if they have been admitted. Priority is
given to first and second year students and to majors
and minors. If admitted and not already enrolled, it is
the student's responsibility to add the course. Anyone
not admitted must drop the course. No one will be
admitted into this course without the placement class
at the start of the semester.
THEATER 60
Introduction to Technical
Theater and Production
THEATER 98.1
Directed Group Study
"New Play Practicum"
See decal.org for course listings
THEATER 98.2
Directed Group Study
"Middle Eastern and Central Asian Dancing: Culture and
Communal Dance Practice"
See decal.org for course listings
Directed Group Study
THEATER 98.4
Directed Group Study
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Not available to BISP Students
X
Introduction to Modern Dance
Technique
THEATER 98.3
Audition Required (sign up online starting
August 15th)
Placement required (first class session)
X
"Creative Swagger: Chicago Style Longform Improv Techniques" - Course control numbers will be
distributed following an interview on the first day.
See decal.org for course listings
"Magic: The Art and Theory of Deception" - Interested students must complete this form:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/15JGzr_QRlxA4buBPeDqsINoKSsFgQMtSjwXxwRynL8/viewform
See decal.org for course listings
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
THEATER 109
THEATER 110A
You will not be able to enroll in acting classes before
the beginning of the semester. You must sign up for
an audition. On-line sign-ups start August 15 for Fall
classes and December 1 for Spring classes at
tdps.berkeley.edu. Auditions are at the beginning of
the semester. Audition requirement: one-minute
monologue from a play which must be memorized. If
you are accepted into the course, the instructor will
give you a Course Control Number the first day your
class meets.
Scene Study and
Characterization
Audition Required (sign up online starting
August 15th)
You will not be able to enroll in acting classes before the
beginning of the semester. You must sign up for an audition.
On-line sign-ups start August 15 for Fall classes and
December 1 for Spring classes at tdps.berkeley.edu.
Auditions are at the beginning of the semester. Audition
requirement: one-minute monologue from a play which must
be memorized. If you are accepted into the course, the
instructor will give you a Course Control Number the first day
your class meets.
Intermediate Acting
Audition Required (sign up online starting August
15th)
You will not be able to enroll in acting classes before the
beginning of the semester. You must sign up for an audition.
On-line sign-ups start August 15 for Fall classes and
December 1 for Spring classes at tdps.berkeley.edu.
Auditions are at the beginning of the semester. Audition
requirement: one-minute monologue from a play which must
be memorized. If you are accepted into the course, the
instructor will give you a Course Control Number the first day
your class meets.
Audition Required (sign up online starting August
15th)
THEATER 111
Advanced Acting
THEATER 114
Performance Workshop
"Asian American Theater"
THEATER 119
Performance Theory
"Theatrical Modernism"
X
THEATER 121
Performance and Culture
"Race, Gender, and Embodiment on the American Stage and
Screen"
X
THEATER 122
African Theater and
Performance
THEATER 125
Performance and History
"Theater and Revolutions"
X
THEATER 126
Performance Literatures
"Chekhov"
X
THEATER 139A
Fundamentals of Playwriting
THEATER 140
Pedagogy for Movement Based
Classes - Undergraduate...
THEATER 141
Intermediate Modern Dance
Technique
Interested students must attend the mandatory first class for
a placement interview. Please prepare a 2 minute
monologue (dramatic or comedy). In addition, if you sing, be
prepared to sing a song, and if you play an instrument,
please bring it to demonstrate.
Placement Interview (first class session)
X
To be considered for this course, please submit a creative
writing sample (up to 5 pages) by August 15 to the
professor's mailbox in 101 Dwinelle Annex or by e-mail as an
attachment to joeozu@berkeley.edu. Include your name,
year, major, phone number and email address.
Writing Sample due August 15th
X
Theater 141 requires an audition. All dance students are
encouraged to enroll and must attend the first day of class
which is the required audition. Students will be advised at
the end of the class if they have been admitted. If admitted
and not already enrolled, it is the student's responsibility to
add the course. Anyone not admitted must drop. No one will
be admitted into this course without the preliminary audition.
Audition required (first day of class)
Theater 142 requires an audition. All dance students are
encouraged to enroll and must attend the first day of class
which is the required audition. Students will be advised at
the end of the class if they have been admitted. If admitted
and not already enrolled, it is the student's responsibility to
add the course. Anyone not admitted must drop. No one will
be admitted into this course without the preliminary audition.
THEATER 142
Advanced Modern Dance
Technique
THEATER 144
Sources of Movement
THEATER 146A
Choreography: Solo and Duet
Forms
THEATER 147A
Beginning Ballet Technique
THEATER 162
Fundamentals of Stage
Directing
Interested students must attend the first class for an interview
with the instructor. CCNs will then be provided to admitted
students.
THEATER 166
Special Topics: Theater Arts
Not available to BISP Students
Audition required (first day of class)
X
X
X
Interview required (first class session)
X
Not available to BISP Students
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
THEATER 167
Technical Theater:
Performance Practice
X
THEATER 168
Technical Theater: Shop
Practice
X
THEATER 169
Advanced Technical Theater
Practice
X
THEATER 171
Theatre Performance
X
THEATER 172
Advanced Production Study
X
THEATER 173A
Scenography: Scenic Design for
the Theatre
X
THEATER 174A
Scenography: Costume Design
for the Theatre
X
THEATER 175A
Scenography: Lighting Design
for the Theatre
X
THEATER 176
Applied Theatrical Design
X
THEATER 179
Supervised Theatrical Design
X
THEATER 197
Field Studies in Technical
Theatre
THEATER 198.1
Directed Group Study for
Undergraduates
"New Play Practicum"
See decal.org for course listings
THEATER 198.2
Directed Group Study for
Undergraduates
"Middle Eastern and Central Asian Dancing: Culture and
Communal Dance Practice"
See decal.org for course listings
THEATER 198.3
THEATER 198.4
Directed Group Study for
Undergraduates
Directed Group Study for
Undergraduates
"Creative Swagger: Chicago Style Longform Improv Techniques" - Course control numbers will be
distributed following an interview on the first day.
See decal.org for course listings
"Magic: The Art and Theory of Deception" - Interested students must complete this form:
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/15JGzr_QRlxA4buBPeDqsINoKSsFgQMtSjwXxwRynL8/viewform
See decal.org for course listings
TIBETAN
Note: Interested students should contact the instructor at jann.ronis@berkeley.edu. The
course time may change based on student interest.
TIBETAN 1A
Elementary Tibetan
X
TIBETAN 10A
Intermediate Tibetan
X
First-year language; no prerequisites.
Last revised 7/31/15 jcc
COURSES THAT ARE NOT AVAILABLE TO BISP-L&S STUDENTS
Spring 2016
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Any course numbered R1A/R2A/R3A/R4A/R5A
Any course numbered R1B/R2B/R3B/R4B/R5B
Any course numbered 24, 39, or 84 (unless otherwise noted by departments)
Any course numbered H195, H196, etc (ie, Honors Programs or Senior Seminars)
Art Practice 8
Art Practice 12
Economics 1
Economics 2
Economics C3
Economics 100A
Economics 100B
Economics 101A
Economics 101B
Economics 140
Economics 141
Film 25A
Film 25B
History 101
Music courses: some courses require students to audition/do placement exam
(typically prior to first day of instruction)
Philosophy 100: Philosophical Methods (restricted to declared UC Berkeley Philosophy
majors only)
Sociology 1, 2, 3AC, 5, 7, 102
Spanish 1, 2, 3, 4, 21, 25
Theater & Dance classes: for some courses, students must audition or do an interview
in order to get a spot in the course. These are typically held the first day of instruction.
○ Class audition info:
http://tdps.berkeley.edu/programs-courses/courses/class-auditions/
There are other courses that are not available or that might have limited space. Please see
the “Course Availability List” document for course specific information.
Lugar y Fecha
Comité del Programa de Excelencia Internacional
Dirección de Internacionalización
Presente
A través de la presente carta me permito postular a ____________________ con
matrícula ___________ del campus ____________________ para ser registrado-a como
participante en PEI 2016 en el periodo de semestre en la universidad
“____________________”.
El alumno-a, de la carrera ___________ cuenta con un promedio de ___________ y un
puntaje TOEFL de ___________.
(Aquí se puede mencionar algo más sobre el alumno, una recomendación más específica)
De conformidad a lo establecido anteriormente, hago constar que el alumno cuenta con mi
aprobación para postularse al Programa de Excelencia Internacional semestre 2016; el
estudiante postulado cumple a la fecha de la presente solicitud, con los siguientes
requisitos:




Ser alumno regular del Tecnológico de Monterrey
Cubrir el porcentaje mínimo de 6 materias acreditadas.
Tener promedio general de calificaciones no menor a 85.
Tener un puntaje mínimo de TOEFL de 570 (actualizado)
*Favor de revisar cada programa, todos tienen diferentes requisitos.
Atentamente
_________________________
(Nombre y firma del director de carrera)
La firma tiene que ser autógrafa y no digital
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