11.041
11.401

Introduction to Housing, Community, and Economic Development

Provides a critical introduction to the shape and determinants of political, social, and economic inequality in America, with a focus on racial and economic justice. Explores the role of the city in visions of justice. Analyzes the historical, political, and institutional contexts of housing and community development policy in the US, including federalism, municipal fragmentation, and decentralized public financing. Introduces major dimensions in US housing policy, such as housing finance, public housing policy, and state and local housing affordability mechanisms. Reviews major themes in community economic development, including drivers of economic inequality, small business policy, employment policy, and cooperative economics. Expectations and evaluation criteria differ for students taking graduate version. 

Fall
3-0-9
Undergraduate
Schedule
TR 9:30 - 11:00AM
Location
9-451
HASS
S
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
11.129
CMS.591

Educational Theory and Practice I

Concentrates on core set of skills and knowledge necessary for teaching in secondary schools. Topics include classroom management, student behavior and motivation, curriculum design, educational reform, and the teaching profession. Classroom observation is a key component. Assignments include readings from educational literature, written reflections on classroom observations, practice teaching and constructing curriculum. The first of the three-course sequence necessary to complete the Teacher Education Program.

G. Schwanbeck
Fall
3-0-9
Undergraduate
Schedule
TR 4:00 - 5:30PM
Location
56-154
Prerequisites
Co-req: CMS.586
HASS
S
Preference Given To
juniors and seniors
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
11.122
IDS.066J
11.422, 15.655, IDS.435

Law, Technology, and Public Policy

Examines how law, economics, and technological change shape public policy, and how law can sway technological change; how the legal system responds to environmental, safety, energy, social, and ethical problems; how law and markets interact to influence technological development; and how law can affect wealth distribution, employment, and social justice. Covers energy/climate change; genetic engineering; telecommunications and role of misinformation; industrial automation; effect of regulation on technological innovation; impacts of intellectual property law on innovation and equity; pharmaceuticals; nanotechnology; cost/benefit analysis as a decision tool; public participation in governmental decisions affecting science and technology; corporate influence on technology and welfare; and law and economics as competing paradigms to encourage sustainability. Students taking graduate version explore subject in greater depth. 

Nicholas Ashford
Fall
3-0-9
Undergraduate
Schedule
TR 3:30 - 5:00PM
Location
E51-057
HASS
S
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
11.002J
17.30J

Making Public Policy

Examines how the struggle among competing advocates shapes the outputs of government. Considers how conditions become problems for government to solve, why some political arguments are more persuasive than others, why some policy tools are preferred over others, and whether policies achieve their goals. Investigates the interactions among elected officials, think tanks, interest groups, the media, and the public in controversies over global warming, urban sprawl, Social Security, health care, education, and other issues. 

Andrea Campbell
Fall
4-0-8
Undergraduate
Schedule
TR 11:00 - 12:30PM (lecture)
R 7:00 - 8:00PM (R1)
R 8:00 - 9:00PM (R2)
F 10:00 - 11:00AM (R3)
F 11:00AM - 12:00PM (R4)
F 12:00 - 1:00 PM (R5)
F 1:00 - 2:00 PM (R6)
Location
4-163 (Lecture)
9-450 (Recitation Sessions 1-6)
HASS
CI
S
Can Be Repeated for Credit
No
11.165J
1.268J
11.477

Urban Energy Systems and Policy

Examines efforts in developing and advanced nations and regions. Examines key issues in the current and future development of urban energy systems, such as technology, use, behavior, regulation, climate change, and lack of access or energy poverty. Case studies on a diverse sampling of cities explore how prospective technologies and policies can be implemented. Includes intensive group research projects, discussion, and debate.

    Fall
    3-0-9
    Undergraduate
    Schedule
    TR 11:00AM - 12:30PM
    Location
    9-451
    HASS
    S
    Can Be Repeated for Credit
    No
    11.164J
    17.391J
    11.497

    Human Rights at Home and Abroad

    Cancelled

    Provides a rigorous and critical introduction to the history, foundation, structure, and operation of the human rights movement. Focuses on key ideas, actors, methods and sources, and critically evaluates the field. Addresses current debates in human rights, including the relationship with security, democracy, development and globalization, urbanization, equality (in housing and other economic and social rights; women's rights; ethnic, religious and racial discrimination; and policing/conflict), post-conflict rebuilding and transitional justice, and technology in human rights activism. No prior coursework needed, but work experience, or community service that demonstrates familiarity with global affairs or engagement with ethics and social justice issues, preferred. Students taking graduate version are expected to write a research paper.

    Fall
    2-0-10
    Undergraduate
    Schedule
    W 3:00 - 5:00PM
    Location
    9-450A
    Prerequisites
    Permission of Instructor
    HASS
    S
    Can Be Repeated for Credit
    No
    11.142
    11.442

    Geography of the Global Economy

    Analyzes implications of economic globalization for communities, regions, international businesses and economic development organizations. Uses spatial analysis techniques to model the role of energy resources in shaping international political economy. Investigates key drivers of human, physical, and social capital flows and their roles in modern human settlement systems. Surveys contemporary models of industrialization and places them in geographic context. Connects forces of change with their implications for the distribution of wealth and human well-being. Look backward to understand pre-Covid conditions and then moves to the present to understand how a global pandemic changes the world we now live in. Class relies on current literature and explorations of sectors.

    Fall
    3-0-9
    Undergraduate
    Schedule
    M 2:00 - 5:00PM
    Location
    9-450A
    HASS
    S
    Can Be Repeated for Credit
    No
    11.138
    11.458

    Crowd Sourced City: Civic Tech Prototyping

    Investigates the use of social medial and digital technologies for planning and advocacy by working with actual planning and advocacy organizations to develop, implement, and evaluate prototype digital tools. Students use the development of their digital tools as a way to investigate new media technologies that can be used for planning. Students taking graduate version complete additional assignments.

    Fall
    3-0-9
    Undergraduate
    Schedule
    MW 9:30 - 11:00AM
    Location
    4-149
    HASS
    S
    Can Be Repeated for Credit
    No
    11.124J

    Introduction to Education: Looking Forward & Looking Back on Education

    One of two introductory subjects on teaching and learning science and mathematics in a variety of K-12 settings. Topics include education and media, education reform, the history of education, simulations, games, and the digital divide. Students gain practical experience through weekly visits to schools, classroom discussions, selected readings, and activities to develop a critical and broad understanding of past and current forces that shape the goals and processes of education, and explores the challenges and opportunities of teaching. Students work collaboratively and individually on papers, projects, and in-class presentations.

    Eric Klopfer
    Fall
    3-6-3
    Undergraduate
    Schedule
    TR 2:30 - 4:00PM
    Location
    56-154
    HASS
    S
    Can Be Repeated for Credit
    No
    11.025J
    11.472J

    D-Lab: Development

    Issues in international development, appropriate technology and project implementation addressed through lectures, case studies, guest speakers and laboratory exercises. Students form project teams to partner with community organizations in developing countries, and formulate plans for an optional IAP site visit. (Previous field sites include Ghana, Brazil, Honduras and India.) Recitation sections focus on specific project implementation, and include cultural, social, political, environmental and economic overviews of the target countries as well as an introduction to the local languages. Enrollment limited by lottery; must attend first class session. 

    Libby Hsu
    Fall
    3-2-7
    Undergraduate
    Schedule
    MW 3:30 - 5:00PM (lecture)
    F 3:30 - 5:00PM (lab)
    Location
    N51-310
    HASS
    S
    Can Be Repeated for Credit
    No