Summer Session 2024
Summer Session A: May 20th - June 28th
ARCH UN2013: Architectural Design Summer Studio
Kadambari Baxi, Professor of Professional Practice. MW, 9:00 - 1:00pm.
This architectural design summer studio course explores modes of visualization, technologies of mediation, and spaces of environmental and material transformations. These explorations will be used as catalysts for architectural analysis and design experimentation.
Introducing design methodologies that allow us to perceive and reshape spatial and material interactions in new ways, the studio will focus on how architecture negotiates, alters or redirects multiple forces in our world: physical, cultural, social, technological, political etc. The semester progresses through two projects that examine unique atmospheric, spatial and urban conditions with the aid of multimedia visual techniques; and that employ design to develop critical and creative interventions at different scales. Learning analog and digital drawing techniques, physical model-making, and multimedia image production, students will work in the studio and digital architecture lab. The course includes site visits and field trips in the city.
Barnard Students register here!
THTR UN3124: Art & Performance in Time of AIDS
Alice Reagan, Associate Professor of Professional Practice. TR 1:00-4:10pm.
This seminar explores the varied ways artists responded to the AIDS crisis of the 1980s and 90s through performance, theatre, and activist art. As government indifference persisted and deaths soared, artists became radicalized and contemporary art and performance became a vehicle for activism. We will follow different tactics in artwork responding to AIDS including the use of gay desire as a weapon and emblem of the fight for visibility. The work we will view, think about, discuss, and write about is political, often angry, and always suffused with loss. Because AIDS affected marginalized communities whose histories are still being told, we will examine a range of artists and materials that includes but also moves beyond the gay white male perspective. We will spend time with theatre work by Reza Abdoh, Tony Kushner, and María Irene Fornés, videos by Juanita Mohammad, visual art by Kia LaBeija, Felix González-Torres, Martin Wong, and David Wojnarowicz, music by Mark Adamo and Diamanda Galás, among other lesser known artist/activists. We will approach these works alongside critical and creative writing by José Esteban Muñoz and Audre Lorde among others. The final project will be a research paper, built in stages throughout the semester, that engages critically with artwork that intersects with AIDS activism.
Barnard Students register here!
Columbia Students register here!
Visiting Students register here!
HIST BC3177: Capitalism and Climate Change
Carl Wennerlind, Professor. TR 1:00 - 5:00pm.
Current patterns of economic growth are no longer environmentally sustainable. Global industrialization and the associated transference of carbon from the ground to the air are leading to a rapid exhaustion of resources and a warming of the planet. These changes have triggered a set of dangerous climactic transformations that are likely to cause massive ecological disruptions and disturbances of food production systems. These changes, in turn, might have a profound impact on poverty, migration, and geopolitics. To better understand how we have arrived at the present predicament, this seminar explores the history of how social and economic theorists have conceptualized the interaction between the economy and nature. The focus will be on the concept of scarcity as a way of understanding the relationship between economic growth and environmental sustainability. The course begins in the Renaissance and traces the evolution of the nature/economy nexus to the present.
Barnard Students register here!
HIST BC2321: Colonial Encounters - Europe and the Culture of Empire
Lisa Tiersten, Professor. MW 1:00- 4:10pm.
Examines the shaping of European cultural identity through encounters with non-European cultures from 1500 to the post-colonial era. Novels, paintings, and films will be among the sources used to examine such topics as exoticism in the Enlightenment, slavery and European capitalism, Orientalism in art, ethnographic writings on the primitive, and tourism.
Barnard Students register here!
URBS UN3428: Comparative Urban Challenges: Global South and North
Aaron Passell, Lecturer. Kian Tajbakhsh, Lecturer in Sociology. TR 1:00pm-4:10pm.
In this course we will explore some of the key challenges facing cities and their residents in both the Global South and Global North. The course adopts a political economy perspective highlighting how the interplay of political and economic power and inequality creates opportunities for, as well as constrain, the exercise of human agency, individual and collective. The course examines the key aspects of urbanization that impacts the welfare of non-elite households and individuals in cities of the Global South, as well as North America (with a focus on the US and New York City). Students will gain a better understanding of the function of cities, the forces causing patterns of urbanization across the planet, the key debates around sprawl versus compactness and the ways these dimensions impact areas such as the quality and standard of living of ordinary households, issues of justice and equity, climate change, and roles of markets and government in managing cities. The course delves into the challenges of the governance of cities, the opportunities, and obstacles to strengthening local democracy and accountability to all social classes, and the challenges of achieving just and equitable outcomes for all city residents. Case studies cover several cities in the Global South, as well as a focus on US cities which include possible assignments and field trips in NYC.
Barnard Students register here!
RELI GU4002: Curating Islam
Najam Haider, Professor. MW 9:00am-12:10pm.
This course focuses on the ways in which museums conceptualize, contextualize, curate and display Islamic art. In the process, it interrogates the degree to which the orientalist past and the secular present shapes our understanding of the Muslim world. Students will not just engage with material objects from Muslim societies but also consider the choices museums make about their display and presentation. These choices, in turn, speak to the role of museums in defining a specific understanding of the “sacred.” Finally, students will learn to thoughtfully and critically pose questions about the roles that museums as public institutions play in sharping public and private understandings of Islam.
The course begins with a general discussion of material objects in the study of religion. This is followed by a broad survey of Islamic Art which both describes and critiques the category as it has been framed in the Academy. Students then visit a number of museums to learn about the style and content of their Islamic collections. The course concludes by engaging a different kind of curation, namely oral histories in the Brooklyn Museum.
Barnard Students register here!
POLS BC3730: Data Science for Politics
Michael Miller, Associate Professor. MW 1:00pm-4:10pm.
This course explores techniques to harness the power of ``big data'' to answer questions related to political science and/or American politics. Students will learn how to use R---a popular open-source programming language---to obtain, clean, analyze, and visualize data. No previous knowledge of R is required.
We will focus on applied problems using real data wherever possible, using R's ``Tidyverse.'' In total, in this course we will cover concepts such as reading data in various formats (including ``cracking'' atypical government data sources and pdf documents); web scraping; data joins; data manipulation and cleaning (including string variables and regular expressions); data mining; making effective data visualizations; using data to make informed prediction, and basic text analysis. We will also cover programming basics including writing functions and loops in R. Finally, we will discuss how to use R Markdown to communicate our results effectively to outside audiences. Class sessions are applied in nature, and our exercises are designed around practical problems: Predicting election outcomes, determining the author of anonymous texts, and cleaning up messy government data so we can use it.
Barnard Students register here!
ARCH 1010UN: Design Futures - NYC
Michael Schissel, Adjunct Assistant Professor. MW 1:00pm - 4:10pm.
How does design operate in our lives? What is our design culture? In this course, we explore the many scales of design in contemporary culture -- from graphic design to architecture to urban design to global, interactive, and digital design. The format of this course moves between lectures, discussions, collaborative design work and field trips in order to engage in the topic through texts and experiences.
Barnard Students register here!
AHIS BC2013: Drawing in the City
Annabel Daou, Adjunct Associate. TR 1:00 - 5:00pm.
This course will provide an opportunity to experience New York City through drawing. It will focus on drawing as a way of experiencing and viewing the world and as a way of expressing concepts. The class takes place both in the studio and in the city itself, including in cultural institutions, parks, cafes and the street. In sketchbooks and journals, students will document and elaborate upon their encounters with the city. The class will incorporate different themes, including: history, community, intimacy, exchange, structure, motion, architecture, nature. We will learn about different drawing techniques and uses of drawing. Exercises will at times intersect with quotidian urban activities. We will, for example, document a walk through the park or sit in a cafe working out visual ideas. Students will fill their sketchbook with drawn records of their experience of the city and will learn about the history of depicting the city through the eyes of different artists such as Edward Hopper, Martin Wong, Faith Ringold, Alice Neel, Florine Stettheimer and Mina Loy.
Barnard Students register here!
EES CBC1007_001_2021_2: Earth and Environmental Science in Today
Sedelia Rodriguez, Senior Lecturer. TR 1:00-4:10pm.
In responding to the environmental issues we face today, it is critical to recognize the science behind them. This course will teach students the basic concepts in earth science/geology essential to understanding the mechanisms of our current climate crisis. These foundational concepts are crucial for any student who is interested in not only the natural sciences, but for those who wish to pursue careers related to environmental justice, sustainability, and other social science fields. Students will explore how and where natural resources form, as well as how we are rapidly depleting these reserves. Students will also learn about natural disasters and how these affect certain communities more than others. Students will gain an understanding of the formation of rocks and minerals and their economic significance. Students will be able to use the cumulative knowledge they gained during the first weeks of class to have a better understanding of the global climate issues we face and to use this information to conduct presentations on an environmental topic of their choice. The format of the course will be as follows: Primarily lecture, followed by class discussions, group activities and at least one lab component.
Barnard Students register here!
ECON BC3081: Economics of Work and Play
Lalith Munasinghe, Professor. MW 1:00pm - 4:10pm.
Is human activity the locus of human freedom? Is human wellbeing more or less to do with the consumption of goods and services (as the neoclassical economist would have us believe) or with the status of human actions (whether as play or work)? Do human institutions--the state, patriarchal households, educational establishments, corporations, factories, prisons, retirement homes--impact individual preferences, dispositions, tolerances? Or, do fixed and stable human preferences (underlying assumption of neoclassical consumer theory) underpin such hierarchical institutions around which human life is organized? What aspects of labor--lack of ownership of means of production, minimal control over the work process, simplification (deskilling) of tasks-- lead to alienation of the worker? Can we imagine alternative structures of social work that is cooperative and non-hierarchical? What factors are implicated in the recent increase in so-called "bullshit jobs" over the past 40 years or so? What does the future of work look like?
Barnard Students register here!
EDUC BC1510: Educational Foundations
Nora Gross, Assistant Professor. TR 11:00 - 3:00pm.
Introduction to the psychological, philosophical, sociological, and historical foundations of education as way to understand what education is, how education has become what it is, and to envision what education should be.
Barnard Students register here!
ENGL BC1023: Feminism, Science and Reproductive Tech
Cecelia Lie-Spahn, Lecturer. TR 9:00-12:10pm.
Reproductive technologies can refer to a wide range of techno-medical tools—contraceptives, pharmaceuticals, prenatal/genetic testing, ultrasound imaging, assisted reproductive technologies (ARTs)—all of which powerfully influence reproductive experiences across the spectrum of pregnancy. We’ll analyze the sociocultural dimensions of these often highly controversial reproductive technologies. How does reproductive technology shape how we relate to reproduction—how we imagine, experience, and construct identities around reproductive processes? How do they both perpetuate and disrupt notions of race, gender, class, and ability? What freedoms do these reproductive technologies promise, and for whom? Course material will focus on the intersections between feminist science and technology studies, critical race and ethnic studies, and reproductive health.
Barnard Students register here!
ENGL BC1021: Feminist Life Writing
Meredith Benjamin, Lecturer. TR 9:00-12:10pm.
Feminists have famously claimed that "the personal is political." Accordingly, life writing--in various genres--has been an important form for feminists across generations. In this class, we will explore the different ways in which feminists have used these modes to create visions of the self, to challenge the roles and self-images given to them, and to imagine new narratives. In particular, we'll explore questions of genre: so many of these writers have developed hybrid genres or challenged the boundaries of genre in order to write their lives. Looking at examples of life writing including letters, diaries and journals, graphic memoirs, and "traditional" autobiographies, we will examine these forms through the lens of gender, race, sexuality, class, and disability. Readings are subject to change, but may include: Audre Lorde, Zami; Alison Bechdel, Fun Home; Cherrie Moraga, Loving in the War Years; Maggie Nelson, The Argonauts; Maxine Hong Kingston, Woman Warrior; poems by Adrienne Rich; Carmen Maria Machado, In the Dream House; This Bridge Called My Back: Writings by Radical Women of Color; Janet Mock, Redefining Realness, and selected shorter pieces. Additionally, we will read critical and theoretical works that will urge us to consider our primary texts from various critical approaches: including sexuality studies, critical race studies, disability studies, and transgender studies.
Barnard Students register here!
BIOL BC2342: Functional Human Anatomy
Jordan Balaban, Lecturer. TR 1:00pm-4:10pm.
Careers in health care require an in depth knowledge of the anatomy of the human body. However, anyone can gain from an appreciation of the complexity of their own body. With this class, students will gain an understanding of how anatomical form and function are intertwined from the microscopic to macroscopic levels. Though any anatomy course necessarily involves the memorization of structures, this course has a strong focus on the functions of those structures as applied to everyday life! Rather than rote memorization, students will work to understand the anatomical, biomechanical, and physiological principles that govern how we move, feel, and think.
Barnard Students register here!
AHIS BC2901: Contemporary Latin American Art
Dorota Biczel, Term Assistant Professor. TR 1:00-4:10pm.
Focusing on South America, this course examines contemporary art produced in the region known as Latin America and its diasporas, roughly since mid-1940s to the present. The first half of the class attends to two tendencies of the 1940s–1970s, abstraction and conceptualism, lionized through a slew of acclaimed group and solo exhibitions organized across the hemisphere in the last twenty years. We will analyze these two tendencies in the distinct social, political, and economic contexts of their emergence in various “centers” of the continent paying special attention to the ideologies of modernization, progress, and economic development; political upheavals including violent dictatorships and other crises; artists’ relationship to Western European and U.S. cultural centers, and transnational circulation networks; and the role of art institutions. To this end, we will pay special attention to how these trends have been historicized to date, and to what ends. The second half of the class will examine practices since the mid-1970s to the present in a comparative perspective: one, through the lens of identity politics and, two, analyzing the dynamics of the increased global dissemination of works from Latin America and by Latin-American descendants. Several visits to art institutions in NYC will be required as a part of the course.
Barnard Students register here!
Columbia Students register here!
Visiting Students register here!
EDUC BC3043: Making Change: Activism, Social Movements and Education
Fawziah Qadir, Term Assistant Professor. MW 1:00pm - 5:00pm.
Making Change: Activism, Social Movements and Education will look at the ways people power has pushed for change in the United States educational landscape. We will study historical and current social political education movements to answer questions such as: What does education/teacher activism look like? Who engages in educational social activism, and why? What do different models for organizing look like, past to present? We will learn from the examples of the Freedom Schools, the Chicago Teachers Union, the Tucson Unified School District fight for ethnics studies, BLM at Schools, Teacher Activist Groups and more. We will engage in readings, watch documentaries and hear from education activist guest lecturers.
Barnard Students register here!
NSBV BC2006: Mind/Brain Disorders
Luca Iemi, Term Assistant Professor. TR 1:00-4:10pm.
Mental disorders have historically been distinguished from other medical illnesses because they affect the higher cognitive processes that are referred to as the “mind”. Neuroscience offers one way for understanding mental disorders, asserting that the mind is a manifestation of brain activity, thereby categorizing these disorders as essentially brain disorders. This course explores the ongoing search for the brain correlates of mental disorders and the significant impact this search has had on our contemporary understanding of mental health. Engaging with review and research papers on schizophrenia, autism spectrum, and mood disorders, students will learn to interpret experimental evidence in Neuroscience and to evaluate known theories through both supporting and non-supporting evidence. While the course acknowledges neuroscience's progress in understanding mental disorders, it also considers some of the problems encountered in viewing them as essentially biological phenomena: Can brain-based explanations capture the lived experience of mental disorders? Could these disorders also originate from outside the brain? How should they be treated, and should they be always treated?
Barnard Students register here!
ENGL1902BC: Global Queer Cinema
Duygu Ula, Lecturer. MW 1:00 - 4:30pm.
In this class, we will focus on contemporary queer cinema from around the world to explore how filmmakers create new visual modes of representing queerness, and how these queer cinematic narratives are informed by various local, national, cultural and political contexts. Through a comparative, transnational and intersectional approach that takes into consideration the particularities of each filmmaker’s context, we will aim to answer the following questions: How do the particularities of various cultural, national, linguistic, religious contexts affect the way queer identities are defined and depicted visually? How do these filmmakers and artists create a visual aesthetic based on their local contexts that is distinct from westernized visual narratives of queerness? How do images of queerness circulate globally and how might queer visual cultures of the Global South push back against existing paradigms of queerness in the Global North? All films for the course are subject to change, but may include titles such as Rafiki, A Fantastic Woman, Happy Together, The Wound, Portrait of a Lady on Fire. Additionally, we will read critical and theoretical works that will urge us to consider these films from a range of perspectives, such as queer studies, feminist film studies, disability studies, and transgender studies.
Barnard Students register here!
POLS BC3049: Race, Gender, and Medicine: Social Justice and the Politics of Health.
Roberto Sirvent, Adjunct Visiting Associate Professor. MW 1:00- 4:10pm.
Why is racism so prevalent in hospitals and other health care settings? What unique challenges do trans and gender-diverse youth face as a result of recent transphobic laws and policies? How are community organizers advocating for the end of medical neglect, abuse, and torture in prisons and migrant detention facilities? How do efforts to decolonize museums connect with grassroots struggles for environmental justice? In a (largely) seminar format, we will explore these questions and many others. By centering issues of gender, race, and sexuality, political approaches to medicine and public health challenge and expand contemporary debates in the medical humanities. This class provides an overview of the theoretical landscape and social movements that ground recent developments in the field, especially as it engages feminist theory, disability justice movements, critical race theory, queer theory, anti-colonial thought, and trans liberation movements. Special attention is paid to the structuring force of anti-Blackness in various clinical and research settings, the development and racialization of transgender medicine, and what it means to view state violence as an issue in public health and the medical humanities. The course will feature a key experiential learning component that includes visits to the American Museum of Natural History, the Sylvia Rivera Law Project, the Black Alliance for Just Immigration, and key sites where the Young Lords and Black Panther Party engaged in community health organizing.
Barnard Students register here!
PSYC BC1101: Statistics Lecture & Recitation
Mariel Roberts, Term Assistant Professor. MW 1:00pm-5:00pm.
Prerequisite (or co-requisite): PSYC BC1001. Lecture course and associated recitation section introducing students to statistics and its applications to psychological research. The course covers basic theory, conceptual underpinnings, and common statistics. The following Columbia University courses are considered overlapping and a student cannot receive credit for both the BC course and the equivalent CU course: STAT UN1001 Introduction to Statistical Reasoning; STAT UN1101 Introduction to Statistics; STAT UN1201 Introduction to Statistics.
Barnard Students register here!
ENGL BC3304: The Art of the Essay
Wendy Schor-Haim, Senior Lecturer. TR 9:00-12:10pm.
What makes the essay of personal experience an essay rather than a journal entry? How can one's specific experience transcend the limits of narrative and transmit a deeper meaning to any reader? How can a writer transmit the wisdom gained from personal experience without lecturing her reader? In The Art of the Essay, we explore the answers to these questions by reading personal essays in a variety of different forms. We begin with Michel de Montaigne, the 16th-century philosopher who popularized the personal essay as we know it and famously asked, “What do I know?,” and follow the development of the form as a locus of rigorous self-examination, doubt, persuasion, and provocation. Through close reading of a range of essays from writers including Annie Dillard, George Orwell, Jamaica Kincaid, and June Jordan, we analyze how voice, form, and evidence work together to create a world of meaning around an author's experience, one that invites readers into conversations that are at once deeply personal and universal in their consequences and implications.
Barnard Students register here!
ANTH UN3665: The Politics of Care
Lesley Sharp, Professor. MW 9:00-1:00 pm.
What do we mean when we speak of “care”? How might we (re)imagine practices of care as political and moral projects? What promises, paradoxes, or failures surface amid entrenched inequalities? And what hopes, desires, and fears inform associated utopic and dystopic visions of daily survival? These questions will serve as a scaffolding of sorts for this course, and our primary goals are fourfold. First, we will begin by interrogating the meaning of “care” and its potential relevance as a political project in medical and other domains. Second, we will track care’s associated meanings and consequences across a range of contents, communities, and geographies of care. Third, we will remain alert to the temporal dimensions of care, as envisioned and experienced historically, in the here-and-now, and in the futuristic world of science fiction. Finally, we will consider the moral underpinnings of intra-human alongside interspecies care.
Barnard Students register here!
THRT UN3303: Unusual Stories - Clubbed Thumb Playwriting
Andy Bragen, Adjunct Lecturer. MW 9:00-12:10pm.
Clubbed Thumb commissions, develops and produces funny, strange and provocative new plays by living American writers. Clubbed Thumb’s plays vary in style and content, but are always 90 minutes or under. They feature substantial and challenging roles for all genders, are questioning, formally inventive, theatrical, and exhibit a sense of humor. Since its founding in 1996, the company has presented over 100 productions, and has been awarded 5 Obies, including the Ross Wetzsteon award for sustained excellence.
This playwriting course will use Clubbed Thumb’s work and aesthetic as a launching point. The students will see all three of the plays in the 2023 Summerworks Festival, and will read several published scripts from previous Clubbed Thumb festivals. We will look at the stylistic and aesthetic choices of these plays, and students will engage in a series of writing assignment inspired by Clubbed Thumb’s work, culminating in a “Clubbed Thumb bakeoff” (a longer play written in a short period of time). The students will have the opportunity to engage with Clubbed Thumb artists, including the artistic leadership of Clubbed Thumb: Maria Striar and Michael Bulger.
Barnard Students register here!
DNCB BC2665: World Dance History
Paul Scolieri, Professor. MW 9:00-12:10pm.
A survey of the major dance traditions of Africa, Asia, Europe, India, the Middle East, and the Americas. Lectures and discussions address primary written and visual sources, ethnographic and documentary films, workshops, and performances.
Barnard Students register here!
Summer Session B: July 1st - August 9th
ENGL BC1022: Bad Love
Ross Hamilton, Professor. MW 1:00- 4:10pm.
This seminar reads stories of love gone bad, of romances that end catastrophically, that damage lovers or leave victims along the way. We will illuminate the consuming fantasy of the romance genre in its quest for “true love,” as well as a range of emotions – rage and revenge, narcissism and self-protection, obsession and oblivion – that surface in its wake. We will also look at shifting interpretations of “bad love,” from Plato, to the Galenic theory of the humors, to the sociology of court-culture, to Freudian and finally contemporary neurobiological explanations of feelings. Students are welcome to propose texts of their own interests to open this course to the widest range of interests. In addition to seminar discussion, there will be weekly individual tutorials with Professor Hamilton as well as zoom interviews with a neurobiologist and a psychologist if it can be arranged.
Barnard Students register here!
AHIS BC2903: Cookbook: Food as Art
Irena Haiduk, Associate Professor. MW 1:00 - 5:00pm.
This course examines food as a medium in contemporary art. To nourish by providing healthful food experiences creates communities and a sense of belonging, care and pleasure. This course and part take in vibrant community of artist chefs in New York City and the Hudson Valley. We will start by tracing the histories of representation of food as well as collaborations between artists, chefs and food growers and proceed to visit kitchens and farms led by artists. The class will cook, bake, pickle and taste food, grow food, serve food and develop its own community of curious Epicureans. Each student will develop, design, print and bind their own cookbook/travelogue, based on their culinary heritage and experiences in class.
No prior knowledge of any medium is required.
Barnard Students register here!
ENG BC1903: Dead Mothers, Wicked Stepmothers
Wendy Schor-Haim, Senior Lecturer. TR 9:00 -12:10pm.
You know them well: on one side, the scheming, jealous stepmother, obsessed with her fading youth. On the other, her husband’s virginal, naive, and beautiful daughter – whose own mother is usually dead. The conflict between them is so familiar that it feels inevitable. Where, though, did these nearly universal figures come from? Why are they so ingrained in the imaginations of people around the world and across the millennia? In this course, we’ll explore the roots of the maternal in folk and fairy tales. We’ll analyze a variety of stories and films to investigate the “absent mother,” “virginal daughter,” and “wicked stepmother” from different critical perspectives, paying special attention to analytical psychology and feminist psychoanalytic theories, to try to figure out why these figures are so compelling, so ubiquitous, and so hard to shake.
Barnard Students register here!
PSYC BC2152: Industrial Organizational Psychology
Joshua Feinberg, Adjust Associate Professor. TR 5:30-8:40pm.
Study of behavior in organizational and business-related settings. Examination of such topics as employee motivation and satisfaction, communication patterns, effective leadership strategies, and organization development.
Barnard Students register here!
PSYC BC1001: Introduction to Psychology
Kathleen M Taylor, Lecturer. TR 1:00pm-4:10pm
Why do people act the way they do, feel the way they do, think the way they do? We will explore different answers to this question ranging from the biological theories (it’s all in the brain) to the social theories (it’s all about the influences around us). We’ll examine successes (learning, memory, intelligence, consciousness) failures (psychopathologies) and ways of changing unhealthy behaviors (biomedical and psychotherapies, stress and health) and changing attitudes (racism). Emphasis is placed on scientific analysis of behavior, understanding theories, and interpreting research findings, with the ultimate goal of understanding more about human behavior from a scientific perspective.
Barnard Students register here!
FILM BC1020 : NYC in Film
Ross Hamilton, Professor. MW 5:30-8:40pm.
This course will explore the representation of New York City in film. We will examine the way that film portrays social problems and either creates or responds to “social panics.” We will also examine the way in which film actively creates an idea of “New York” through cinematography, directing, acting and other aspects of filmmaking. Some topics to be considered are utopia/dystopia, race, ethnicity, class, gender, sexuality, art, immigration, houselessness, and gentrification. The course follows three main themes: 1. How the filmmaking process (camera movements, lighting, dialogue, acting, etc.) is used as a method to describe space (filmmaking as a geographic method). 2. How various genres of film have been used to portray the social geography of New York City (the geography of film). 3. The relationship between the viewer’s “place” and the places portrayed in the film (communication geography). Finally, we will also consider how our personal sense of place towards New York City has altered throughout the course.
Barnard Students register here!
NSBV BC3398: Psychobiology of Sleep
Ari Shechter, Associate Professor. TR 1:00 - 5:00pm.
This seminar will explore sleep and circadian rhythms, emphasizing how these factors and their disruption influence human health, disease, function, and well-being. Topics will include the physiologic and neurobiological generation of sleep and circadian rhythms, and the interaction between these systems with cognitive, behavioral, endocrine, metabolic, and mood/psychiatric variables in humans, as well as sleep disorders and their treatment.
Barnard Students register here!
CLCV BC3121 : Studying New York Museums
Kristina Milnor, Professor. TR 1:00-4:10pm.
In this course, we will use some of New York City’s many museums to introduce students to museum studies, a field of inquiry which looks at the process and politics of publicly displaying objects for “educational” purposes. We will use individual museums as case studies of particular issues in museology, from antiquities and the art market at the Metropolitan Museum of Art to racism and cultural appropriation at the American Museum of Natural History. We will also look at “alternative” museums, such as the Mmuseumm and the Treasures in the Trash Museum to consider how they resist and rewrite traditional museum narratives. Class time will be divided between class discussions, museum visits, student presentations, and digital workshops.
Barnard Students register here!
CHEM BC1050: The Jazz of Chemistry
Meena Rao, Senior Lecturer. MW 1:00- 4:10pm
The contribution of chemistry to everyday life is immense. The applications of chemistry in medicine, petrochemicals, cosmetics, and fertilizers are readily apparent. However, the knowledge and applications of chemistry come in handy in many other fascinating fields, some of which may be less than obvious. Examples of areas in which chemistry plays a key role include forensic science; art restoration and forgery detection; and flavors and fragrances in food, beverages and other consumer products. The goal of this course is to provide insights and spur discussion of several areas and applications of chemistry, while gaining hands-on experience in techniques used in these fields.
Barnard Students register here!
Summer 2024 Dates & Basic Information
During Summer Session at Barnard, students can complete 3-credit or 4-credit courses in 6-week periods (Summer A and/or Summer B).
- Summer Session A: May 20th - June 28th is for Undergraduate Students
- Summer Session B: July 1st - August 9th is for Undergraduate & Pre-Baccalaureate Students
Students have the opportunity to take advantage of small class size; foster close relationships with faculty and students; and live on campus (limited housing available) or commute to Barnard.
Courses may only be taken for credit; auditors are not permitted in Summer Session courses. Summer enrollment registrations will be processed as received (no seats saved for majors or class years). Registered students will receive access to Courseworks, our designated course portals (where students will find course materials), will be granted at the start of the summer course. *Students with no prior affiliation to Columbia University will receive login credentials directly from the Summer at Barnard Team.
Registration Procedures
BARNARD STUDENTS & COLUMBIA STUDENTS
- Barnard and Columbia students will register in SSOL.
- All Barnard students must register for Section 001 of the corresponding course.
- All Columbia students must register for Section 002 of the corresponding course.
- Columbia students taking Barnard classes must follow Barnard Academic & Billing Policies during Summer 2024.
HIGH SCHOOL STUDENTS (rising juniors/seniors & students beginning Barnard in the Fall of 2024):
- Credit-bearing classes are open to pre-baccalaureate students in Summer Session B.
- Commuter and residential options are available.
- Additional details, program eligibility, and application requirements/deadlines are posted on the Pre-College website
VISITING STUDENTS (students not enrolled at Barnard or Columbia)
- Visiting students will register for classes here!
- Once the registration request has been received, you will be asked to submit a $500 non-refunable deposit for each course. After the deposit is received, you will then be registered for the course.
International Students: Please note that international students from Columbia or those visiting from other undergraduate institutions may only register if they currently hold an F-1 or other visa allowing them to study in the U.S. Those currently in the U.S. on an F-1 visa should contact their Designated School Official (DSO) to clarify any visa questions or issues.
Questions? Email summersession@highw.net
Housing
Barnard students can use the Summer Housing application opening in the Spring of 2024. Housing cannot be guaranteed for all participants. Questions? Email summersession@highw.net.
Pre-Baccalaureate students intending to apply to participate in courses for credit will do so through the Pre-College website. Questions? Email pcp@highw.net.
Tuition & Fees
Summer Session Tuition is $6,408 per 3-credit course and $8,544 per 4-credit course.
Housing Rates: Housing fees are set by the Office of Residential Life and Housing and will be posted in late Spring.
Health Services Fees: students who live on campus at Barnard during Summer Session will be required to pay the Health Services Fee (granting access to PCHS). Students participating in Summer Session who are not living on campus may pay the fee for access to PCHS as well (but will not be required to pay this fee).
Financial Assistance for Current Barnard Students Enrolling in Summer Session Courses
Limited financial assistance is available for Barnard students who received a financial aid award during the academic year. Barnard students will be assessed for summer financial assistance to enroll in a Barnard course automatically upon course registration for Barnard summer session classes (that is: there is no formal application to complete).
Please note that financial aid is not available for costs associated with summer housing and meals.
Financial aid is not avaiable to students visiting from other institutions. Please check with your home institution to see if they offer financial assistance for summer courses.
Students who received a financial aid award during the academic year are eligible for the following assistance per the details below. Financial assistance is based on family contribution for the academic year. If students have questions about their family contribution, they should refer to their financial aid award letter or email finaid@highw.net.
Family Contribution between $0,000-$20,000
- Student will receive a $3,024.00 credit per 3-credit Barnard course. Tuition student pays is $3,024.00
Family Contribution between $20,001-$50,000
- Student will receive a $1,512.00 credit per 3-credit Barnard course. Tuition student pays is $4,536.00
Family Contribution above $50,001
- $604.80 credit per 3-credit Barnard course. Tuition student pays is $5,443.20.
Questions about tuition can be directed to summersession@highw.net.
Accessibility Resources & Disability Services
The Center for Accessibility Resources & Disability Services (CARDS) serves students with permanent and temporary disabilities (examples of various disability types include visual, mobility, hearing, chronic medical illnesses, learning, ADD/ADHD, psychological, and cognitive conditions).
CARDS works to support students with disabilities and ensure that reasonable accommodations are made to provide programmatic and physical access. CARDS encourages all students with visible or invisible disabilities to self-identify and register with their office. Specific information about requesting accommodation during Summer at Barnard is available on the CARDS website. Questions? Contact cards@highw.net.
Health Insurance
All Barnard Summer Session students are required to have U.S. health insurance that covers major illnesses and accidents within the United States.
COVID-19 Protocols
Barnard continues to implement campus and community safety measures in accordance with decisions made by the institution's Public Health Response Team. Courses in Summer 2024 will be fully in person.
Eating on Campus
Barnard Dining operates two dining locations during the summer, each offering a different dining experience.
Where to Eat On Campus
- Liz’s Place: Looking for a beverage, snack or grab-and-go item? Visit Liz’s Place in the Diana Center, opening June 1. Open Monday-Friday, 8:30 am - 2pm, there is a wide selection of beverages including made to order coffee and tea specialities, along with grab-and-go items. A curated assortment of toiletries are available for those items you may need!
- Hewitt Dining: Stop by Hewitt Dining, open June 25 (starting with dinner) through August 26. Summer session students are able to pay at the door–no meal plan needed. This all-you-care-to-eat dining facility provides hearty and delicious meals for breakfast, lunch and dinner Monday through Saturday. Sunday offers brunch and dinner.
Dietary Considerations
- Barnard Dining offers food options for a variety of tastes and diets.
- Liz’s Place has a selection of grab-and-go and snacks ready to meet your dietary needs.
- Vegan, vegetarian, gluten-avoidance selections are available in Hewitt Dining. Look for the icons at each station and visit Barnard Dining Dine on Campus Vegetarian/Vegan/Gluten Avoidance for more information.
- Hewitt Dining uses only Halal meats, is a pork-free and reduced-nut facility and offers a certified Kosher in-house dining program.
Dedicated Dietician
Have questions or concerns? Contact Barnard Dining’s dedicated dietitian Erika DeMinno to help you navigate Liz’s Place, Hewitt Dining or answer any dietary questions. Erika is available before you arrive on campus or anytime during your stay at erika.deminno@compass-usa.com.
FAQs
For all current undergraduate students at Barnard College and Columbia University, as well as visiting students from other colleges and universities, registrations will be processed as received (no seats saved for majors or class years). Questions? Email summersession@highw.net.
Pre-baccalaureate students must apply through the Pre-College Program. Questions? Emai summersession@highw.net
Once the summer session begins, you cannot drop your only class on SSOL. Please email the Barnard registrar at registrar@highw.net, to request the drop or withdrawal from a summer course. We will process it according to the date it was sent. Please see the academic calendar for dates and deadlines.
Incoming first-year students (class of 2028) who will begin at Barnard in the Fall Semester must apply to take a class through the Pre-College Program. Questions can be directed to pcp@highw.net.
Incoming transfer students can register as a non-Barnard visiting student. Questions can be directed to summersession@highw.net.
Students currently on a leave of absence should reach out to Dean Rebecca Grabiner if they are interested in taking a summer course. Refer as well to the Leaves of Absence and Returns webpage.
Contact Dean Grabiner: schedule an appointment or email leavesandreturns@highw.net.
No. Recent graduates or those who plan to have their degree conferred in May are not eligible to register for a summer course.
Please refer to the Registrar’s webpage that details information about taking summer classes elsewhere. For policies related to credit for Columbia summer classes, please check here.
No. All students will be charged on a per-credit basis and will be billed separately from Fall and Spring tuition.
Access to Courseworks, our designated course portals (where students will find course materials), will be granted at the start of the summer courses in which you enroll. *Students with no prior affiliation to Columbia University will receive login credentials from the Office of Summer Session and Continuing Studies
Contact Us
All students interested in Summer Session should email summersession@highw.net for assistance.