1999-2000
(file last updated: [7/6/1999 - 13:19:11])
The Library Intensive Program is a special academic service to enable Brandeis students to develop the sophisticated information retrieval skills essential to modern life, in the context of formal degree programs and beyond. It is not a formal major, minor, or program.
In the courses listed below, instructional time is devoted to the formal acquisition of library research skills, including the use of more specialized resources such as scientific databases, full text electronic databases, specialized abstract and indexing services, archival resources, and Internet resources. Students are thus equipped to find and evaluate information from a wide variety of sources.
Courses of Instruction
AMERICAN STUDIES
AMST 20a
Environmental Issues
BIOLOGY
BISC 2a
Human Reproduction, Population Explosion, Global Consequences
BIOL 160b
Human Reproductive Biology
BIOL 172b
Cancer
CHEMISTRY
CHSC 6a
Forensic Science: Col. Mustard, Candlestick, Billiard Room
ECONOMICS
Technological and Economic Change
ENGLISH
Victorian Poetry and its Readers
FINE ARTS
Methods and Approaches in the History of Art
HELLER SCHOOL
Family Policy
HISTORY
The Making and the Unmaking of the Mexican Revolution
INTERNATIONAL BUSINESS
Work in the Global Business Environment: Internship and Seminar
LEGAL STUDIES
Law and Letters in American Culture
Libel and Defamation, Privacy and Publicity
POLITICS
Seminar: The Politics of the Modern Welfare State: Women, Workers, and Social Citizenship
PSYCHOLOGY
Experimental Psychology
SOCIOLOGY
Families
Historical and Comparative Sociology
SPANISH LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE
Spanish Composition, Grammar and Stylistics
Introduction to Latin American Literature
Literary Women in Early Modern Spain