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MIT Subject Listing & Schedule
IAP/Spring 2021 Search Results

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3 subjects found.

4.001 Where Is and What Is Architecture and Design?
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Undergrad (Fall)
Prereq: Permission of instructor
Units: 1-1-1 [P/D/F]
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Introduces Architecture and Design through conversations and presentations with MIT architecture and design faculty and MIT alumni. Discusses the two undergraduate majors, two undergraduate minors, and two HASS concentrations offered through Course 4 along with careers in architecture and design. Subject can count toward the 9-unit discovery-focused credit limit for first year students. In person not required. Preference to first-year students.
P. Pettigrew

15.233 Global Health Lab
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Graduate (Spring)
Not offered regularly; consult department
Prereq: None
Units: 3-0-9
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Pairs faculty-mentored student teams with enterprises on the front lines of health care delivery in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. Custom-designed projects in strategy, business model innovation, operations, marketing, and technology designed to tackle specific barriers identified by each partnering organization. Interactive cases, practical exercises, and conversations with experts, all designed to support project work before, during, and after an intensive two-week onsite collaboration with entrepreneurs, leaders, staff, and stakeholders. Assignments include a portfolio of host deliverables, a foundational toolkit designed to support each project, and a distillation of learning from the field. Enrolled students must be available to work on site in Africa or South Asia for the entire weeks of SIP and Spring Break. Preference to students who have taken 15.232. Admission by application and interview in the prior November and December. Graduate students only.
Staff

CC.012 Continuing Conversations
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Undergrad (Fall, Spring) Can be repeated for credit
Prereq: None
Units: 2-0-1 [P/D/F]
Lecture: F3-5 (VIRTUAL)
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Close reading and vigorous discussion of an important book or theme, chosen to explore philosophical, ethical, and political questions that span the ages and disciplines. Readings and themes vary by term. Past examples include Aristotle's Physics, Plato's dialogue on knowledge, the Theaetetus, and a variety of writings that exemplify liberalism and conservatism in the American tradition. Preference to Concourse students.
Fall: L. Rabieh
Spring: L. Rabieh
No textbook information available