
| _______ General Information |
Courses of study (cuinfo.cornell.edu/Academic/Courses/), a catalogue of Cornell University's many academic programs and resources, contains information about colleges and departments, interdisciplinary programs, undergraduate and graduate course offerings, and procedures. Additionally, a student handbook, distributed to all incoming students, describes life at Cornell. The Policy Notebook (http://www.univco.cornell.edu/policy/library.html), also distributed to each new student, summarizes pertinent university policies, including the campus Code of Conduct and the Code of Academic Integrity. Students should consult with their college's advising office for specific information on their college's academic policies and procedures, degree programs, and requirements.
All these publications are also available for viewing on CUinfo the university's electronic information system, and in print at the various university libraries, the Office of the Dean of the University Faculty, the Office of University Counsel, the Office of the Judicial Administrator, and the college offices.
Not included in this publication is information concerning the Medical College and the Graduate School of Medical Sciences, located in New York City.
The following are offices and sources of information about admission to Cornell University.
Undergraduate Admissions Office, 410 Thurston Avenue, Ithaca, NY 14850-2488, 607-255-5241.
Graduate School, B2 Caldwell Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-2602, 607-255-4884.
Law School, Myron Taylor Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-4901, 607-255-5141.
Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management, Office of Admissions, Sage Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-4201, 607-255-4526.
College of Veterinary Medicine, Admissions Office, Cornell University, Schurman Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-6401, 607-253-7000.
Medical College and Graduate School of Medical Sciences. Office of Admissions, 1300 York Avenue, New York, NY 10021, 212-746-1067.
It is not possible to keep this single-volume course list completely up-to-date. The most current information regarding course schedules, sections, rooms, credits, and registration procedures may be found on CUinfo, Cornell's electronic information source, and in the Course and Time Roster and the Course and Room Roster, published each semester by the Office of the University Registrar. You may access CUinfo through the web. The URL is: http://www.cornell.edu. Students are also advised to consult individual college and department offices for up-to-date course information.
The course levels have been assigned as follows:
l00-level course--introductory course, no prerequisites, open to all qualified students
200-level course--lower-division course, open to freshmen and sophomores, may have prerequisites
300-level course--upper-division course, open to juniors and seniors, prerequisites
400-level course--upper-division course, open to seniors and graduate students, 200- and 300-level course prerequisites or equivalent
500-level course--professional level (e.g., management, law, veterinary medicine)
600-level course--graduate-level course, open to upper-division students
700-level course--graduate-level course
800-level course--master's level, thesis, research
900-level course--doctoral level, thesis, research
The list of courses that follows is arranged in two broad groups.
Group 1: Divisions that offer both undergraduate- and graduate-level courses
Agriculture and Life Sciences
Architecture, Art, and Planning
Arts and Sciences
Engineering
Hotel Administration
Human Ecology
Industrial and Labor Relations
Nutritional Sciences
Officer Education
Group 2: Graduate professional divisions
Law
Management
Veterinary Medicine
There are no courses offered by the Graduate School as a unit; graduate-level courses are contained in the various departments that offer the instruction.
Within each division, courses are generally arranged in alphabetical order by department and in numerical order within the departments. All courses, 0-999 are briefly described for those divisions (group 1) offering instruction to both undergraduate and graduate students. Courses in the graduate professional divisions (group 2) are designated by number and title only.
Cornell University is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools.
A copy of the most recent reaffirmation of Cornell's accreditation can be found at http://www.ipr.cornell.edu/Accreditation/Status. Requests to review additional documentation supporting Cornell's accreditation should be addressed to Michael Matier, Director, Institutional Research and Planning, Cornell University, 440 Day Hall, Ithaca, NY 14853-2801, mwm5@cornell.edu.
Advanced Placement
Definition and Purpose of Advanced Placement Credit
Advanced placement credit is college credit that students earn before they matriculate as freshmen. Students may use credit they receive for advanced placement to satisfy degree requirements only as specified by the individual college at Cornell. Although such credit counts toward the bachelor's degree, its primary purpose is to exempt students from introductory courses and to place them in advanced courses. Its value is that it allows students to include more advanced courses in their undergraduate curricula.
Sources of Advanced Placement Credit
Advanced placement credit may be earned from the following:
d. See below for international credentials.
Please note: Cornell University does not accept credit for courses sponsored by colleges but taught in high schools to high school students, even if the college provides a transcript of such work. Students who have taken such courses may, however, earn credit by taking an appropriate exam as described in paragraph a or b above.
The appropriate department of instruction within the university sets the standards of achievement that must be met for advanced placement in its subject, recommends AP credit for those who meet the standards, and determines which Cornell courses the credit places students out of. The final decision for awarding advanced placement credit at Cornell rests with each individual college. For policies governing advanced placement in a specific college, see the academic information section for that college. Students need not accept advanced placement. They may repeat the course they have placed out of, thereby relinquishing the advanced placement credit.
Advanced placement examinations. Entering freshmen should have their scores from CEEB Advanced Placement Examinations sent to their college or school office (see below, "Forwarding of scores and transcripts").
Departmental advanced standing examinations. In certain subjects, students may also qualify for advanced placement or credit, or both, on the basis of departmental examinations given on campus during orientation week. A schedule of these examinations appears in the orientation booklet mailed in late summer to entering students. The departments that award advanced placement and credit on the basis of departmental examinations are shown on pages 5, 6 and 7.
Transfer of credit. Entering freshmen who have completed college courses for which they want to receive credit toward their Cornell degree should send transcripts and course syllabi to their college or school office (see the list at the end of this section). The award of credit or placement for such courses is determined by the appropriate departments according to individual school and college guidelines. Because policy for using advanced placement credit varies according to each college or school's professional and academic goals, students should consult the relevant section of Courses of Study or their college or school office to determine how they may use such credit.
Written inquiries. Students can address questions to departments, schools, or college offices by adding Ithaca, New York 14853 to the addresses given in the following sections.
Forwarding of scores and transcripts. Entering freshmen should have their advanced placement test scores sent to their school or college registrar's office.
College of Agriculture and Life Sciences
140 Roberts Hall
College of Architecture, Art, and Planning
B30 West Sibley Hall
College of Arts and Sciences
172 Goldwin Smith Hall
College of Engineering
158 Olin Hall
School of Hotel Administration
174B Statler Hall
College of Human Ecology
N145 Van Rensselaer Hall
School of Industrial and Labor Relations
101 Ives Hall
The table on pages 6 and 7 provides information on how credit and placement are determined for most subjects. Supplementary information for subjects requiring additional explanation is provided below.
| Subject | Score | Advanced Placement Credit | Placement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Arabic | Department of Near Eastern Studies determines credit and placement based on departmental examination. | ||
| Biology | 5 (majors) | up to 8 credits | Placement out of all introductory courses. |
| 4 (majors) | 4 credits | 4 AP credits awarded after completion of any combination of 4 credits from 101-104 or 105 or 106. Consult Office or Undergraduate Biology to determine which semester to take to complete introductory biology. | |
| 5 (nonmajors) | 8 credits | Placement out of all introductory courses. | |
| 4 (nonmajors) | 6 credits | Placement out of 109-110. Does not always satisfy the prerequisite for second- and third-level courses in biology. | |
| Chemistry | 5 | 4 credits | Department determines placement on basis of exam during fall orientation. No advanced placement credit for students who take 206, 207, or 211; students who take 215 will also receive 4 AP credits. |
| Computer science | 4,5 | 4 credits | Placement out of COM S. 100. Department also offers placement exam during fall orientation. |
| Economics, micro | 4,5 | 3 credits | Placement out of Economics 101. |
| Economics, macro | 4,5 | 3 credits | Placement out of Economics 102. |
| English literature and composition (all students) | 5 | 3 credits | Placement out of one First-year Writing Seminar |
| English language and composition (all except A&S) | 4 | 3 credits | A&S students with 5 on both English Language and Literature exams receive 3 credits total and place out of one First-Year Writing Seminar. |
| Environmental Science | 4,5 | 3 credits | Placement out of GEOL 111 and EAS 111. |
| French language | 4,5 | 3 credits | Department of Romance Studies determines placement. Students take and may earn additional credit by taking the CASE.+ |
| French literature | 4,5 | 3 credits (and proficiency) | Department of Romance Studies determines placement. Students take and may earn additional credit by taking the CASE.+ |
| German | 4,5 | 3 credits (and proficiency) | Department of German Studies determines placement. Students take and may earn additional credit by taking the CASE.+ |
| Government and politics, U.S. | 4,5 | 3 credits | Placement out of GOVT 111. |
| Government and politics, comparitive | 4,5 | 3 credits | Placement out of GOVT 131. |
| Greek, Ancient and Modern | Department of Classics determines credit and placement based on departmental examination. | ||
| Hebrew | Department of Near Eastern Studies determines credit and placement based on departmental examination. | ||
| American history | 4,5 | 4 credits | Students strongly urged to go into advanced courses. |
| European history | 4,5 | 4 credits | Students strongly urged to go into advanced courses. |
| History of art | 4,5 | 3 credits | |
| Italian language | 4,5 | 3 credits | Department of Romance Studies determines placement. Students take and may earn additional credit by taking the CASE.+ |
| Italian literature | 4,5 | 3 credits (and proficiency) | Department of Romance Studies determines placement. Students take and may earn additional credit by taking the CASE.+ |
| Latin | Department of Classics determines credit and placement based on departmental examination. | ||
| Mathematics BC (excluding engineering or ABEN students; see following page for further information) | 4,5 | 8 credits | Placement out of MATH 106, 111-112 and 121-122, and permission to take MATH 221, 223, or 213. Students wishing to take engineering calculus may place out of MATH 190 and 191 (4 credits) and into MATH 192. Placement out of MATH 192 and into MATH 293 is available to students who can demonstrate a mastery of introductory multivariable calculus. |
| 3 | 4 credits | Placement out of all 1st-semester calculus courses (MATH 106, 111, 121, 190, 191). Permission to take any 2nd-semester calculus course (MATH 112, 122, or 192). | |
| Mathematics AB or AB subscore of BC exam (excluding engineering or ABEN students; see following page for further information) | 3,4,5 | 4 credits | Placement out of all 1st-semester calculus courses (MATH 106, 111, 121, 191).Permission to take any 2nd-semester calculus course (MATH 112, 122, or 192). |
| Music | Department determines credit and placement based on departmental examination. | ||
| Physics B | 5 | 8 credits | Placement out of PHYS 101-102. Students who also have a score of 4 or 5 on Mathematics BC may choose to accept 4 AP credits for 207 or 212 and take 208 or 213. |
| 4 | 8 credits | Placement out of PHYS 101-102. | |
| 3 | 4 credits | Placement out of PHYS 101. | |
| Physics C-Mechanics | 4,5 | 4 credits | Placement out of PHYS 112 or 207, or placement into PHYS 116 with no AP credit. For more information, contact department representative. |
| Physics C-Electricity/Magnetism | 5 | 4 credits | Placement out of PHYS 213. |
| Psychology | 4,5 | 3 credits | Placement out of PSYCH 101. |
| Spanish language | 4,5 | 3 credits | Department of Romance Studies determines placement. Students take and may earn additional credit by taking the CASE.+ |
| Spanish literature | 4,5 | 3 credits (and proficiency) | Department of Romance Studies determines placement. Students take and may earn additional credit by taking the CASE.+ |
| Statistics (excluding engineering students) | 4,5 | 3 credits | Placement out of BIOM 200, ILRST 210 or MATH 171. |
+ Cornell Advanced Standing Examination. Contact Callean Hile, 303 Morrill Hall, for French, Italian, and Spanish. Contact Marguerite Mizelle, 183 Goldwin Smith Hall, for German.
Any student who earns a score of 5 on the CEEB Advanced Placement Examination in biology may elect to receive eight credits and be exempted from all introductory biology courses.
Students not majoring in biological sciences who score a 4 may earn six advanced placement credits. This will satisfy the distribution requirement in biological sciences for students in the College of Human Ecology and a portion of the group B distribution requirement for students in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. For students in the College of Arts and Sciences, credits may be applied toward distribution in science and quantitative reasoning as stipulated by the college.
Biological sciences majors who receive a score of 5 may receive eight credits and be exempt from all introductory biology courses or elect to receive four credits and select one of the options allowed for majors with a score of 4. The student receiving a score of 4 must fulfill the introductory biology requirement by taking BIO G 101-102, 101/103, 102/104, or 103-104 or 105 or 106 (Biological Sciences, Lectures and Laboratory). These students should consult information available in the BIO G 101-104 course office (1140 Comstock Hall) and in the Office of Undergraduate Biology (216 Stimson Hall) to determine which semester to complete the introductory biology requirement. For students in doubt, BIO G 101/103 is advised. These students will receive a total of eight introductory biology credits (four advanced placement credits plus four course credits).
The Department of Chemistry offers two sequences that satisfy prerequisites for further work in the department: Chemistry 207-208, an eight-credit sequence that includes qualitative analysis, and Chemistry 215-216, a nine-credit sequence that includes qualitative and quantitative analysis.
Freshmen may qualify for advanced placement and advanced standing credits in chemistry by satisfactory performance on the CEEB Advanced Placement Examination in chemistry or by passing an advanced standing examination offered by the department. A score of 5 on the CEEB examination entitles a student to four credits. A student may earn four or eight credits by suitable performance on the departmental examination. To take the departmental examination students must sign up beforehand in 131 Baker Laboratory.
The specific course in which a student will register after having received a certain advanced placement standing will be decided by consultation between the student, his or her adviser, and the professors teaching the courses. Questions may also be directed to Dr. Stanley Marcus, associate director of undergraduate studies, in 138 Baker Laboratory. Students receiving advanced placement who are interested in a major in chemistry or a related science should consider taking Chemistry 215-216 and should consult the Chemistry 215 instructor or Dr. Stanley Marcus.
For advanced placement and credit in Latin and ancient and modern Greek, students should consult the Department of Classics, 120 Goldwin Smith Hall. Credit and placement are determined on the basis of a departmental examination. A student who is permitted to register in a 300-level course (or, in Modern Greek, is determined to be at an advanced level) will be given six advanced placement credits.
Students who receive a score of 4 or 5 on the CEEB Advanced Placement Examination in computer science will receive four advanced placement credits and may take Computer Science 211. These credits may be used to satisfy the requirement in computer programming for students in the College of Engineering or part of the distribution requirement in science and quantitative reasoning for students in the College of Arts and Sciences.
Freshmen may also earn four credits by suitable performance on a departmental examination to be given during orientation week. To take the departmental examination, students must sign up beforehand in the Undergraduate Office, 303 Upson Hall.
The English department will grant 3 credits to students who score 5 on the CEEB Advanced Placement Examination in English Literature and Composition or English Language and Composition. Students in Arts and Sciences may receive credit for one English AP exam only. The credits are granted automatically: no application to the department is required.
Students who receive scores of 700 or better on the CEEB SAT II examination in English composition, 700 or better on the CEEB SAT II examination in literature, or 4 or 5 on either CEEB Advanced Placement Examination in English are eligible to enroll, space permitting, in the following English freshman writing seminars: 270, 271, 272.
The Cornell calculus sequences discussed below are described under "Basic Sequences" in the Department of Mathematics section of this catalog.
The non-engineering freshman calculus courses at Cornell do not differ substantially from calculus courses given in many high schools, and it is best to avoid repeating material that has already been covered at an appropriate level. Secondary school students who have had the equivalent of at least one semester of analytic geometry and calculus should, if possible, take one of the CEEB's two Advanced Placement Examinations (Calculus AB or Calculus BC) during their senior year.
Students who have been awarded Advanced Placement credit for calculus or statistics may not also receive academic credit for similar courses taken at Cornell. In particular, students who have been awarded AP credit for 1 semester of calculus (4 academic credits) may not also receive academic credit for any first-semester calculus course (MATH 106, 111, 121, 190, 191). Students who have been awarded AP credit for 2 semesters of calculus (8 academic credits) may not also receive academic credit for any first-semester calculus course (MATH 106, 111, 121, 190, 191) nor for any second-semester calculus course (MATH 112, 122, 192). Arts & Sciences students receive a maximum of 8 credits for AP Math AB and BC combined. Finally, students who have been awarded AP credit for statistics (3 academic credits) may not also receive academic credit for any of the introductory statistics courses BIO M 200, ILRST 210, or MATH 171.
The following rules apply to students in all colleges and programs except the College of Engineering and the Agricultural and Biological Engineering (ABEN) program in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Rules applicable to students in these engineering programs are provided near the end of this section.
Students with a score of 4 or 5 on the BC examination may take any of the following third-semester courses (MATH 221, 223, or 213). Students with these scores who wish to take courses in the engineering calculus sequence and who have had no multivariable calculus may give up their AP credit for the second semester and take the second-semester engineering calculus course, Math 192. On the other hand, students with scores of 4 or 5 on the BC examination who can also demonstrate sufficient mastery of introductory multivariable calculus (which is covered in MATH 192 but not on the BC examination) may obtain permission from the Department of Mathematics to take either of the second-year engineering calculus courses, MATH 293 or 294. Students with a 3 on the BC examination, or a 3, 4, or 5 on the AB examination, may take any of the second-semester calculus courses (MATH 112, 122, or 192); however, students in the latter category who take MATH 192 may have to make up some material on techniques and applications of integration. For purposes of advanced placement and credit, AB subscores on the BC examination are regarded as equivalent to the same scores on the AB examination. Students who receive the borderline passing score of 3 on the AB examination or an AB subscore of 3 on the BC examination, who wish to continue with calculus, are strongly advised to take MATH 112 rather than the more demanding courses 122 or 192. Advanced placement credit will be awarded appropriately; however, no credit will be granted for a score of 1 or 2 on the AB examination, nor for a score of 1 or 2 on the BC examination unless the AB subscore on that examination is at least 3.
A placement examination in mathematics for non-engineering students is offered at Cornell only during Orientation Week and should be taken by
The exam covers the material of the AP calculus program. Students are strongly urged to take this departmental placement exam even if they feel that their grasp of the material is uncertain. The grade on this test does not become a part of the student's record. No advance registration for the departmental examination is necessary.
The College of Engineering and the Agricultural and Biological Engineering (ABEN) program in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences will give credit for MATH 191 (4 credits), and permission to take MATH 192, for a score of 3, 4, or 5 on the BC examination, or the score of 5 on the AB examination, or for a satisfactory score on the Engineering Mathematics Placement Examination. Credit for MATH 191 and 192 (8 credits), and permission to take MATH 293 or 294, will be given to students in the Engineering College or ABEN program who achieve a suitably high score on the Engineering Mathematics Placement Examination.
Students will receive academic credit for two semesters of calculus, and permission to take any third-semester calculus course, for scores of A or B on the General Certificate of Education (GCE) Advanced ("A") Level Examination, or scores of 6 or 7 on the International Baccalaureate (IB) Higher Level Examination, in mathematics. They will receive credit for one semester of calculus, and permission to take any second-semester calculus course, for scores of C on the GCE "A" Level Examination. These rules for international credentials in mathematics apply to all students, including those in engineering programs.
Students who have studied a language for two or more years and want to continue study in that language at Cornell must present the results of a placement test. See "Placement Tests and Advanced Placement credit" under "Foreign Language Requirements" in the Arts and Sciences section of this catalog. Students who have had a year of formal study or substantial informal study since they last took a placement test should take the examination again during Orientation Week if they plan to continue course work.
Advanced standing credit may be entered on a student's record as follows:
Information about times and places of placement tests is available in the orientation booklet and from Academic and Career Counseling Services on the web at dml.cornell.edu/html/place/testschedule.html. For more information, see the College of Arts and Sciences section on language course placement, or contact Callean Hile, 303 Morrill Hall for French, Italian, and Spanish; Miriam Zubal, 183 Goldwin Smith Hall, for German; Doreen Silva, 226 Morrill Hall, for Russian; Kim Robinson, 388 Rockefeller Hall, for Asian languages, Nava Scharf, 350 Rockefeller Hall for Hebrew; Munther Younes, 421 Rockefeller Hall, for Arabic.
Advanced placement and credit are awarded only in music theory and only on the basis of a comprehensive examination administered by the Department of Music, normally during orientation week. If special arrangements are made, the examination may be administered at other times during the academic year. Inquiries may be directed to the Department of Music (telephone: 607-255-4097).
Advanced placement and credit are awarded on the basis of the CEEB Advanced Placement Examination in physics (Physics B or Physics C), certain international examinations, or the departmental examination (which may be taken during Orientation Week or at other times as arranged). For information about the departmental examination, students should consult the director of undergraduate studies, 101 Clark Hall, or the department chair, 109 Clark Hall.
Physics B: Students earning a score of 4 or 5 may receive eight credits for noncalculus-based Physics 101 and 102. Those earning a score of 5 in physics B and a score of 4 or 5 in calculus BC may choose to accept four credits in calculus-based PHYS 112 or 207 instead of eight credits in PHYS 101 and 102. Those earning a score of 3 will receive four credits in Physics 101.
Physics C--Mechanics: Students earning a score of 4 or 5 may receive four credits for PHYS 112 or 207, or placement into PHYS 116, a first-semester honors course, with no AP credit.
Physics C--Electricity and Magnetism: Students earning a score of 5 may receive four credits for PHYS 213.
Students may not accept credit for an advanced placement course if they receive credit for a Cornell course with similar content. Students may receive credit for only one of the courses in each group:
PHYS 101, 112, 116, 207
PHYS 102, 208, 213, 217
A student planning a major in Physics or Applied and Engineering Physics and who is eligible for AP credit should consult with his/her adviser or the department representative.
Advanced placement into a next-in-sequence course depends on the completion of the appropriate mathematics prerequisites before enrolling. To qualify for advanced placement credit, it is not necessary to continue the study of physics.
General information and advice may be obtained from the director of undergraduate studies, 101 Clark Hall, or from the Department of Physics, 109 Clark Hall.
Following are the policies currently in effect for G.C.E. "A" Level Examinations and International Baccalaureate Higher Level Examinations. Students may submit results of the French Baccalaureat or German Abitur for possible credit depending on the stream or specialization followed. Accepted students holding any other secondary school credentials are urged to sit for the Advanced Placement Examinations of the College Entrance Examination Board or for the departmental examinations offered during orientation week.
General Certificate of Education (GCE) Advanced ("A") Level Examination passes are awarded advanced standing and credit. Students must present the original or a certified copy of their examination certificate in order to receive credit.
Following is a list of subjects and the marks for which credit will be awarded:
| Subject | Marks | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Biology | A or B | 8 credits (Intro Bio) |
| Chemistry | A | 8 credits (CHEM 207 and 208) |
| B | 4 credits (CHEM 207) | |
| Economics | A | 6 credits (ECON 101 and 102) |
| English Literature | A | 3 credits (placement out of one first-year writing seminar) |
| B | 3 credits (for all students except Arts and Science students) | |
| History | A, B, or C | 4 credits |
| Mathematics | A or B | 8 credits (MATH 111 and 112) |
| C | 4 credits (MATH 111) | |
| Music | subject to departmental review | |
| Philosophy | A or B | 3 credits |
| Physics | A or B | 4 credits for PHYS 101, 112, or 207. 4 additional credits for PHYS 213 are granted for a combination of grades of A or B and a minimum of 8 Advanced Placement or Advanced Standing credits in Mathematics. Students planning to major in physics are encouraged to enroll in PHYS 116. If students take 217, they do not receive credit for 213. |
International Baccalaureate (IB) Higher Level Examination passes are awarded advanced standing and credit on receipt of the original or a certified copy of the examination results.
| Subject | Marks | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Anthropology | subject to departmental review | |
| Biology | 7 | 8 credits (Intro BIO) |
| 6 | 6 credits (BIO 109-110) | |
| Chemical & Physical Systems | 6 or 7 | 8 credits (PHYS 101 and 102) |
| Chemistry | 6 or 7 | 4 credits (CHEM 207) |
| Computer Science | 6 or 7 | 4 credits (CS 100) |
| Economics | 6 or 7 | 6 credits (ECON 101 and 102) |
| English Literature | 7 | 3 credits and placement out of one first-year writing seminar |
| 6 | 3 credits (for all students except A&S students) | |
| History | 6 or 7 | 4 credits |
| Mathematics | 6 or 7 | 8 credits (prospective math, science, and engineering majors must consult with math department to determine prerequisite for placement in third-semester math courses) |
| Music | subject to departmental review | |
| Philosophy | 7 | 3 credits |
| Physical Science | 6 or 7 | 8 credits (4 credits, CHEM 206; 4 credits, PHYS 101) |
| Physics | 6 or 7 | 4 credits (PHYS 101, 112, or 207) |
University Registration
University registration is the official recognition of a student's relationship with the university and is the basic authorization for a student's access to services and education. Completion of registration is essential to enable the university to plan for and provide services and education, guided by the highest standards for efficiency and safety. Unauthorized, unregistered persons who use university services and attend classes have the potential to use university resources inappropriately and to displace properly registered students. In addition, the university assumes certain legal responsibilities for persons who participate as students in the university environment. For example, policy states that New York State health requirements must be satisfied. Because these requirements are intended to safeguard the public health of students, the university has a responsibility to enforce the state regulations through registration procedures.
The policy on university registration is intended to describe clearly the meaning of and the procedures for registration so that students can complete the process efficiently and be assured of official recognition as registered students. With the clear communication of the steps for registration, it is hoped that compliance will occur with a minimum of difficulty.
To become a registered student at Cornell University, a person must
Individuals must become registered students by the end of the third week of the semester or they will be subject to a financial penalty.
Cornell University does not allow persons who are not registered with the university
in a timely manner to attend classes. The university reserves the right to require unauthorized, unregistered persons who attend classes or in other ways seek to exercise student privileges to leave the university premises. The university does not permit retroactive registration and does not record courses or grades for unregistered persons.
Pre-course enrollment for each semester at Cornell takes place partway through the preceding semester. Dates are announced in advance and are posted in school and college offices. Students are expected to meet with their advisers during this period to affirm that the courses they plan to take will ensure satisfactory progress toward a degree.
New students and transfer students may be sent course enrollment instructions by their college offices before they arrive on campus. Procedures vary from college to college.
Students may adjust their schedules during add/drop/change periods. A form is completed by the student and signed by both the student's adviser and an appropriate representative of the department offering the course (an instructor, department staff member, or college registrar, depending on the college). The completed and signed form must be returned to the student's college office to be processed. Professional schools, Continuing Education and Summer Sessions, and the Department of Physical Education and Athletics have different course enrollment and add-drop policies. See the chart below for their course add/drop/change fees.
Late Late
Course Course
Enrollment Add/Drop/
Academic Unit Fee Change Fee
Continuing Education
and Summer Sessions + +
Johnson Graduate
School of Management $100 $100
Law School No fee No fee
Physical education $30 $20*
Veterinary medicine $30* $30*
*Consult the college office for special considerations and requirements.
+Consult the Summer Session catalog and the Division of Extramural Study brochure for fees.
Summer school and extramural students may officially register as visitors (auditors) in courses and have this entered on their permanent records if their attendance is reported as satisfactory. Graduate students may register for courses as auditors but will not have the courses listed on their transcripts. Undergraduates may not register to audit courses.
A leave of absence must be requested from the college in which the student is enrolled. A leave of absence is granted for a specified time, after which the student is expected to return to resume course work. Students should inform their college of intent to return.
A student may withdraw from the university at the student's discretion. In addition, a college may withdraw a student who fails to return at the end of a period of authorized leave.
Medical leaves are granted and processed through University Health Services.
Internal Transfer
Division
Students may not always be satisfied with the original Cornell school or college into which they've been admitted. They may decide to transfer from one college to another, within the university. This process is called internal transfer, and application procedures and deadlines vary by college. It may be possible to be admitted directly into a new program. Students who are uncertain if they immediately qualify for direct transfer, however, should apply to the Internal Transfer Division (ITD).
To apply, candidates must interview with the division's director and submit an essay to the ITD office outlining their reasons for wanting to transfer. Internal Transfer Division applicants must also fulfill the application requirements (e.g., interviews, essays) of their target college as if they were applying for direct transfer. In many cases, colleges formally sponsor students in ITD and essentially guarantee admission if students successfully complete the requirements (taking particular courses, earning a specified grade point average while enrolled in ITD) that are outlined in their letter of sponsorship. Although sponsorship does not guarantee admission to the Internal Transfer Division, it is the most important factor determining acceptance into ITD. Students can apply simultaneously for direct transfer and to ITD, so that if direct transfer is denied they might be offered the option of being sponsored in the Internal Transfer Division.
For more information about transfer requirements, students should contact the admissions office of the college they hope to enter and the office of the Internal Transfer Division, 220 Day Hall (255-4386).
Bursar Information
Undergraduate
Architecture, Art, and Planning
Arts and Sciences
Engineering
Hotel Administration $25,970
Graduate
Graduate School (with major chair
in an endowed division) 25,970
Professional
Law School
Entering students 29,200
2nd year students 28,650
3rd year students 28,150
Management 29,500
Undergraduate
Agriculture and Life Sciences
Human Ecology
Industrial and Labor Relations
New York resident* $11,970
Nonresident* 22,200
Graduate
Graduate School (with major chair
in agriculture, human ecology,
or industrial and labor relations) 13,910
Graduate School--Veterinary Medicine 14,140
Professional
Veterinary Medicine
New York resident 16,540
Nonresident 22,240
Per credit $650
In absentia fees
Graduate $200 per term
Undergraduate 15 per term
Law and Management 75 per term
The amount, time, and manner of payment of tuition, fees, or other charges may be changed at any time without notice.
*Residency status is determined at the time of admission by the college. Change in residency status is determined by the University Bursar.
Undergraduate applicants to Cornell pay a nonrefundable $65 application fee when submitting an application for admission. The graduate application fee is $65. Application to the Johnson Graduate School of Management costs $150.
Amounts personally paid for tuition may be refunded if the student requests a leave of absence or withdrawal from the office of the dean of his or her college of enrollment. The date of this request will determine the tuition liability for the semester. Previously matriculated students who terminate their registration with the university during a fall or spring semester in this manner will be charged tuition from the university registration day through the date of their request as follows: first six days of the semester (including university registration day), no charge; seventh day of the semester, 10 percent; second week, 20 percent; third week, 30 percent; fourth week, 40 percent; fifth week, 60 percent; sixth week, 80 percent; seventh week to the end of the semester, 100 percent.
First-time matriculants will be charged tuition from the university registration day through the date of their request as follows: first six days of the semester (including university registration day), no charge; seventh day of the semester, 10 percent; second and third weeks, 20 percent; fourth week, 30 percent; fifth and sixth weeks, 40 percent; seventh week, 50 percent; eighth and ninth weeks,
60 percent; tenth week to the end of the semester, 100 percent.
Repayment policy. Students receiving financial aid from the university who withdraw during a term will have their aid reevaluated, possibly necessitating repayment of a portion of aid received. Repayment to aid accounts depends on the type of aid received, government regulations, and the period of time in attendance. A partial semester will generally count as one of the eight semesters of financial aid eligibility normally allowed a student.
Percentage Fall 2001 Spring 2002
No charge 8/28-9/2 1/17-1/22
10% charge 9/3 1/23
20% charge 9/4-9/10 1/24-1/30
30% charge 9/11-9/17 1/31-2/6
40% charge 9/18-9/24 2/7-2/13
60% charge 9/25-10/1 2/14-2/20
80% charge 10/2-10/8 2/21-2/27
100% charge 10/9 2/28
No charge 8/28-9/2 1/17-1/22
10% charge 9/3 1/23
20% charge 9/4-9/17 1/24-2/6
30% charge 9/18-9/24 2/7-2/13
40% charge 9/25-10/8 2/14-2/27
50% charge 10/9-10/15 2/28-3/6
60% charge 10/16-10/29 3/7-3/20
100% charge 10/30 3/21
Tuition and room and board charges will be billed in July and December and must be paid prior to registration. The due date for these semester bills will normally be five to ten working days prior to registration day. All other charges, credits, and payments will appear on monthly statements mailed before the twenty-fifth of every month.
It is possible that some charges will not be listed on the first bill and will appear on a subsequent monthly bill. A student must be prepared to pay any charges appearing on a subsequent bill even though the student receives a financial aid stipend before the charges are billed.
All bills are due by the date stated on the bill; all payments must be received by that date to avoid finance charges. Payments are not processed by postmark.
Please inform the Office of the Bursar of any change in billing address. Address changes made at other offices will not change the billing address. The address initially used on billing statements will be the home address as listed on each student's application for admission.
An individual who has outstanding indebtedness to the university will not be allowed to register or reregister in the university, receive a transcript of record, have academic credits certified, be granted a leave of absence, or have a degree conferred. University policy precludes the use of any current financial aid for payment of past-due charges.
The Office of the Bursar acts as a clearinghouse for student charges and credits that are placed directly on a student's bill by several departments and offices of the university. Since the Office of the Bursar does not have detailed records concerning many items that appear on a bill, students should contact the office involved if they have questions.
For further information, students should contact the Office of the Bursar, Cornell University, 260 Day Hall, Ithaca, New York 14853-2801 (telephone: 607-255-2336; fax: 607-255-6442). E-mail UCO-Bursar@cornell.edu
Because of the high cost of medical care, it is Cornell University policy that every full-time registered student must have health insurance coverage.
The Student Health Insurance Plan is developed especially for Cornell students and provides extensive coverage at a reasonable cost for most on- or off-campus medical care. Complete and current details of the SHIP, its cost, and population-specific material for Undergraduates, Graduate Students and Professional Students is mailed to each student with the July bursar bill. Undergraduates, Graduate Students and Professional Students each have separate deadlines and guidelines. Please be sure to check your July bursar bill for complete details.
The Student Health Insurance Plan provides coverage twenty-four hours a day, 365 days a year, anywhere in the world. Students graduating mid-year may be eligible to purchase a five-month plan. Students enrolled in the SHIP may enroll their eligible dependents for an additional cost (fall deadline: September 30). Graduate and professional students who prefer to pay monthly must enroll in the installment payment plan no later than September 30. Because of policy restrictions, the plan is nonrefundable (except for dependents who no longer meet eligibility requirements and students who withdraw from Cornell within the first 30 days of the academic year).
For more information, contact the:
Student Insurance Office
Gannett Health Center
Ho Plaza
Ithaca, NY 14853-3101, USA
Telephone: 607-255-6363
E-mail: SICU@cornell.edu
Web: http://www.gannett.cornell.edu/student_insurance
Class Attendance,
Meeting Times, and Examinations
Students are expected to be present throughout each term at all meetings of courses for which they are registered. The right to excuse a student from class rests at all times with the faculty member in charge of that class.
Absences because of religious beliefs. In accordance with Section 224-a of the New York State Education Law, each student who is absent from school because of his or her religious beliefs must be given an equivalent opportunity to register for classes or make up examinations, study, or work requirements that he or she may have missed because of such absence on any particular day or days. No fees of any kind shall be charged by the university for making available to such student such equivalent opportunity.
Monday/Wednesday
Start Times End Times
50 MIN 08:00 AM 08:50 AM
75 MIN 08:40 AM 09:55 AM
50 MIN 09:05 AM 09:55 AM
50 MIN 10:10 AM 11:00 AM
50 MIN 11:15 AM 12:05 PM
50 MIN 12:20 PM 01:10 PM
50 MIN 01:25 PM 02:15 PM
50 MIN 02:30 PM 03:20 PM
75 MIN 02:55 PM 04:10 PM
50 MIN 03:35 PM 04:25 PM
50 MIN 07:30 PM 08:20 PM
75 MIN 07:30 PM 08:45 PM
50 MIN 08:35 PM 09:25 PM
Tuesday/Thursday
50 MIN 08:00 AM 08:50 AM
75 MIN 08:40 AM 09:55 AM
50 MIN 09:05 AM 09:55 AM
50 MIN 10:10 AM 11:00 AM
75 MIN 10:10 AM 11:25 AM
50 MIN 11:15 AM 12:05 PM
75 MIN 11:40 AM 12:55 PM
50 MIN 12:20 PM 01:10 PM
50 MIN 01:25 PM 02:15 PM
75 MIN 01:25 PM 02:40 PM
50 MIN 02:30 PM 03:20 PM
75 MIN 02:55 PM 04:10 PM
50 MIN 03:35 PM 04:25 PM
NO EVENING CLASSES
Friday
50 MIN 08:00 AM 08:50 AM
50 MIN 09:05 AM 09:55 AM
50 MIN 10:10 AM 11:00 AM
50 MIN 11:15 AM 12:05 PM
50 MIN 12:20 PM 01:10 PM
50 MIN 01:25 PM 02:15 PM
50 MIN 02:30 PM 03:20 PM
50 MIN 03:35 PM 04:25 PM
NO EVENING CLASSES
Laboratories and similar exercises
1 HR 55 MIN 08:00 AM 09:55 AM
10:10 AM 12:05 PM
12:20 PM 02:15 PM
02:30 PM 04:25 PM
(Mon. and Wed.) 07:30 PM 09:25 PM
2 HR 25 MIN 07:30 AM 09:55 AM
10:10 AM 12:35 PM
02:00 PM 04:25 PM
(Mon. and Wed.) 07:30 PM 09:55 PM
3 HR 08:00 AM 11:00 AM
10:10 AM 01:10 PM
01:25 PM 04:25 PM
(Mon. and Wed.) 07:30 PM 10:30 PM
No classes or laboratory exercises are to be held between the hours of 4:25 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday, after 4:25 p.m. on Friday, after 12:20 p.m. on Saturday, and all day Sunday.
Evening preliminary examinations that will be given outside of normal class hours may be scheduled on Tuesday and Thursday evenings only, beginning at 7:30 p.m. All room assignments are scheduled by the Office of the University Registrar. The dates and times of these examinations are listed in the course rosters for each term.
Evening academic activities commencing at 7:30 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays, other than regularly scheduled courses and prelims previously approved by the office of the university faculty, are not permitted. Violation of these rules interferes with other university activities (athletic, musical, theatrical, employment, etc.).
Any exception to the above regulations, other than those for evening preliminary examinations, will require permission of the dean or director of the college or school offering the course. Exceptions to the regulations on evening preliminary examinations require approval of the dean of the university faculty. All such exceptions must include provision of special arrangements for the students for whom conflicts are generated by such an exception.
Final examinations for undergraduate courses are scheduled by the Office of the University Registrar. Examinations may be one, two, or two and one-half hours in length at the discretion of the department concerned. The schedule of final examinations is available in the Course and Time Roster and the Course and Room Roster, both of which are published through the Office of the University Registrar each semester and on the web at http://www.cornell.edu/Academic/class.html.
Legislation of the university faculty governing study periods and examinations is as follows:
The most convenient times and places for "prelims" are the normal class times and classrooms. In cases where the only alternative is to hold evening preliminary examinations, they may be scheduled only on Tuesday and Thursday evenings and only after 7:30 p.m.
An alternative time to take the examination must be provided for those students who have academic, athletic, or employment conflicts at the time scheduled.
Note that instructors holding evening examinations are strongly urged to indicate this in the course descriptions listed in Courses of Study and must notify students of the dates of such examinations as early as possible in the semester, preferably when the course outline is distributed. For more information on the policy governing evening examinations, contact the office of the dean of the faculty, 315 Day Hall.
Grading Guidelines
The official university grading system is composed of letter grades with pluses and minuses. Passing grades range from A + to D-; F is failing. INC denotes a grade of incomplete, and R is the grade given at the end of the first semester of a year-long course. The grades of INC and R do not have quality-point equivalents attached. These are the quality-point equivalents:
A+ =4.3 B+ =3.3 C+ =2.3 D+ =1.3
A =4.0 B =3.0 C =2.0 D =1.0
A- =3.7 B- =2.7 C- =1.7 D- =0.7
F =0.0
This is how a term average is computed:
Quality
Course Grade Points Credits Product
Chemistry 103 B+ 3.3 x 3 = 9.9
English 151 C- 1.7 x 3 = 5.1
DEA 145 B 3.0 x 4 = 12.0
CEH 100 B 3.0 x 3 = 9.0
DEA 111 C 2.0 x 3 = 6.0
Total 16 42.0
To arrive at the term average, add the products (credits x quality points) and divide by the number of credits taken. Here, 42 divided by 16 equals 2.63.
The cumulative average (an average of grades from two or more terms) equals the sum of the products of all the grades at Cornell divided by the total number of credits taken.
On September 6, 1972, the Faculty Council of Representatives passed the following legislation:
"Resolved, that:
The rules for the S-U option are further defined by each of the academic units. They are as follows:
Agriculture and Life Sciences. (a) Must have 100 credit hours with A, B, C, D grades. (b) The S-U option is available only in those courses so designated in the course catalog after approval by the Educational Policy Committee. (c) Freshmen may not exercise the S-U option.
Architecture, Art, and Planning. (a) All courses specifically required for a degree excluded. Various departments may designate specific required courses where S-U will be permitted. (b) In a course designated as S or U, the entire class is so graded. The instructor must announce this decision within the first two weeks of class. (c) Where the option for S or U exists, both student and instructor must agree on the option. This agreement must be made by the end of the third week of classes on the appropriate form in the college office. Once agreed upon, this grade option will be used for the final grade.
Arts and Sciences. (a) Courses that count toward satisfaction of major requirements should not be taken for an S or U grade unless the department grants permission. (b) Permission of instructor. (c) A minimum of 80 of the 120 hours required for the A.B. degree must be in courses for which the student has received letter grades.
Engineering. (a) May take one Humanities and Social Sciences, Approved, or Free Elective per term after completing first semester. (b) This option may be elected during Pre-Course Enrollment or with the written permission of the instructor and adviser on an add/drop form in the first
3 weeks of classes. (c) Decision is irrevocable after first three weeks of term.
Graduate School. (a) Seminars and Thesis Research courses are usually graded S-U, and should be registered accordingly or a grade error results at semester's end. Other courses may be registered as S-U only if offered as S-U option.
Hotel. (a) Maximum of four free-elective credit hours per term. (b) Exceptions are by petition only.
Human Ecology. (a) Not part of student's major. (b) May be used in the 19 hours required outside the major in Human Ecology courses. (c) Not part of hours required in humanities, natural sciences, and social sciences. (d) A department may approve S-U grading in specific courses if approved by Educational Policies Committee. (e) Freshmen enrolled in ENGL 137 and 138, which are only offered for S-U credit, are permitted to apply these courses to the freshman seminar requirements. (f) Total of 12 credits in S-U courses (not counting PE) may be counted towards degree requirements during a student's college career.
Industrial and Labor Relations. (a) This option may be elected, if available in I&LR electives, or in out-of-college electives but not including directed studies. (b) Degree requirements include a minimum of 105 lettergrade (A+ to D-) credits. (c) Student must also be in good academic standing. (d) A "U" is considered the equivalent of an "F" in determining a student's academic status. (e) Limited to two courses per term, not to exceed four hours in any one course.
Internal Transfer. (a) S-U grades permitted only when it is the only option or (b) when specifically approved by an admissions officer in the school or college to which the student plans to transfer.
Veterinary Medicine. (a) There is one foundation course in the verterinary curriculum that is offered on an S-U basis only. All other required core courses must be taken for a letter grade. (b) Elective courses for veterinary students may be offered on an S-U basis at the option of the professor.
The grade of incomplete is appropriate only when two basic conditions are met:
A grade of incomplete may not be given merely because a student fails to complete all course requirements on time. It is not an option that may be elected at the student's own discretion.
While it is the student's responsibility to initiate a request for a grade of incomplete, reasons for requesting one must be acceptable to the instructor, who establishes specific make-up requirements. The instructor has the option of setting a shorter time limit than that allowed by the student's college for completing the course work. Several colleges require that a statement signed by the instructor be on file indicating the reason for the grade of incomplete and the restriction, if any.
It is the responsibility of the student to see that all grades of incomplete are made up within the deadline and that the grade has been properly recorded with the student's college registrar.
Changes in a grade may be made only if the instructor made an error in assigning the original grade.
An official transcript is one that bears the official signature of the university registrar, sent in a sealed envelope directly from the Office of the University Registrar to another institution or agency as directed by the student. Transcripts can be obtained through the Office of the University Registrar, B7 Day Hall.
University Requirements for Graduation
The university has only two requirements for graduation that must be fulfilled: the swim test and physical education courses. A student's college determines degree requirements such as residency, number of credits, distribution of credits, and grade averages. See the individual requirements listed by each college or school or contact the college registrar's office.
Classes
All undergraduate students must complete two terms of work in physical education unless exempted from this requirement for medical or other special reasons or by virtue of advanced standing on admission. For transfer students the requirement is reduced by the number of terms satisfactorily completed, not necessarily including physical education, in a college of recognized standing before entering Cornell.
Credit in physical education may be earned by participating in courses offered by the Department of Athletics and Physical Education, participating on an intercollegiate athletic team as a competitor or manager, or performing in the marching band.
Physical education is a requirement of the first two terms at Cornell. Students must register for it in each term, except those in which postponements are granted, until the requirement is satisfied.
Temporary postponements may be granted on the basis of physical disability, schedule conflicts, or excessive work load (employment exceeding 20 hours a week). The Gannett Health Center can provide certifications based on health, and the financial aid office can provide certifications of employment. Students should see the director or assistant director of Physical Education to establish postponements or waiver of the requirement. Questionable or unusual cases may be resolved by petition to the Faculty Advisory Committee on Athletics and Physical Education.
Swim Test
The University Faculty Committee on Physical Education has established a basic swimming and water safety competency requirement for all entering freshman undergraduate students. Normally, the test is given for women in the Helen Newman pool and for men in the Teagle pool as part of their orientation process. The test consists of a feet-first entry into the deep end of the pool and a continuous 75-yard swim using front, back, and optional strokes. Any student who cannot pass the swim test is required to include the course Basic Swimming and Water Safety in his or her program of physical education before electives can be chosen. Students will receive a grade of incomplete in Physical Education until they have passed the swim test or fulfilled the requirement by satisfactory attendance in two terms of Basic Swimming and Water Safety. Students unable to meet the swim requirement because of medical, psychological, or religious reasons must petition the University Faculty Committee on Physical Education for a waiver of the requirement. When a waiver is granted by the Faculty Committee on Physical Education, an alternate requirement is imposed. The alternate requirement substitutes a course in either Advanced First Aid (Emergency Response) or Wellness and Fitness for the original swimming requirement.
Students are responsible for meeting all requirements for the courses in which they are enrolled, as defined by the faculty members teaching the courses. It is also the student's responsibility to be aware of the specific major, degree, distribution, college, and graduation requirements for completing his or her chosen program of studies. Students should know how far they have progressed in meeting those requirements at every stage of their academic career.
Student Records Policy
Under the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA), Cornell University is required to advise students of their rights concerning their education records. Education records include records directly related to a student and maintained by an educational institution or party acting on its behalf. The law gives students the right to
*Directory information is a category of personally identifiable information that includes name, home address, local address, local telephone listing, dates of attendance at Cornell, major field of study and college attended, previous educational agency or institution attended, participation in officially recognized activities (in athletics, the weight and height of members of athletic teams), degrees earned, and awards. Directory information may be released unless the student indicates otherwise at the time of registration. Students who wish no release of their directory information must inform the office of the university registrar in writing within 10 days of the date of official university registration. Students may rescind their no release request at any time in writing to the office of the university registrar.
**"Cornell University Policy on Access to and Release of Student Education Records" is available on the web at URL: http://www.univco.cornell.edu/policy/ASI.html.
In compliance with the university's policy on student educational records, and the U.S. Department of Education's Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act of 1974 (FERPA), restricted student information may not be posted.
Accordingly, the following student information is considered restricted and therefore may not be posted:
Student social security number
Student identification number
Courses elected
Grades earned
Grade point average
Class rank
Date of birth
Place of birth
Home telephone listing
Academic and disciplinary actions
Student or administrative committees
The most recent student educational records from previous educational agency or institution
Financial arrangements between the student and the university
Any other education record containing personally identifiable information
For further information, please refer to the revised Policy on Access to and Release of Student Education Records on the web at http://www.univco.cornell.edu/policy/asi.html.
Academic Integrity
Absolute integrity is expected of every Cornell student in all academic undertakings. Any fraudulent act by a student to advance his or her academic status merits a severe penalty and such cases are governed by the Code of Academic Integrity. A pamphlet entitled the Code of Academic Integrity and Acknowledging the Work of Others is distributed to new and transfer students and is also available from the office of the dean of faculty. The policy is published in the Policy Notebook, available free of charge from the office of the dean of students.
The University Committee on Human Subjects is the official review board of all university projects that use humans as research subjects. Projects affected by this restriction include, but are not limited to, surveys, questionnaires, studies of existing data, documents, records in which there are no identifiers, as well as mental and physical tests of human subjects. Requests for student information must be submitted in writing to the Assistant Vice President for Academic Programs and Campus Affairs, 311 Day Hall. All proposals involving human subjects in any category must be submitted to the committee for review. Inquiries, communications, and requests for guidelines should be directed to the committee's Executive Secretary, 120 Day Hall (255-2945). The guidelines are also available at the web address http://www.osp.cornell.edu
Vertebrate animals serve as an invaluable aid in instruction. It is recognized, however, that some students have ethical objections to the use of vertebrate animals in this manner. Courses that use vertebrate animals are identified as such in the course descriptions. Students who have concerns about the use of animals in these courses should consult the course instructor for more information about the precise ways in which the animals are used. A set of university guidelines on the use of vertebrate animals in teaching for faculty and students is printed below and is available from departments in which the courses are offered.
Background: On December 8, 1987, the Cornell University Institutional Animal Care and Use Committee approved a series of guidelines recommended to them by the University Animal Welfare Committee. These guidelines were prepared by a subcommittee of faculty members, after they had the opportunity to evaluate the use of animals in undergraduate teaching (and student concerns for the same) from a representative sample of instructors.
Guidelines
Interdisciplinary
Centers, Programs,
and Studies
726 University Avenue (255-0832)
The program has its origins in Cornell's early history. Andrew D. White, the first president of Cornell University, inaugurated the position of nonresident professor, to be held by eminent scholars, scientists, and intellectuals who periodically visit the university for the stated purpose of "contributing to the intellectual and cultural life of the university." Toward this end, Professors-at-Large engage in a variety of activities including public lectures, participation in ongoing courses, and collaborative research, as well as holding office hours for undergraduate and graduate students. Professors-at-Large serve for a six-year term and are full members of the faculty when in residence.
To commemorate their 40th reunion, the Class of 1956 initiated an endowment to create the Frank H. T. Rhodes Class of '56 University Professorship in honor of Cornell's ninth president (1977-1995). The purpose of the Rhodes Class of '56 Professorship is to strengthen the undergraduate experience by bringing to the university individuals from every walk of life who represent excellence of achievement and to create opportunities for interaction with undergraduates. The endowment also makes it possible to create public events related to the professorship such as lectures, performances, films, art exhibits, or conferences. Rhodes Class of '56 Professors are full members of the faculty while in residence. Appointments are awarded for a period of one to five years. During each year of their appointment, Rhodes Class of '56 Professors visit the campus for a minimum of two weeks to engage in a variety of activities including public lectures, participations in ongoing courses, and collaborative research.
657 Frank H. T. Rhodes Hall (255-4335)
The Center for Applied Mathematics administers a broadly based interdepartmental graduate program that provides opportunities for study and research over a wide range of the mathematical sciences. Each student develops a solid foundation in analysis, algebra, and methods of applied mathematics. The remainder of the graduate student's program is designed by the student and his or her Special Committee. For detailed information on opportunities for graduate study in applied mathematics, students should contact the director of the Center for Applied Mathematics, 657 Frank H. T. Rhodes Hall.
There is no special undergraduate degree program in applied mathematics. Undergraduate students interested in an application-oriented program in mathematics may select an appropriate program in the Department of Mathematics, the Department of Computer Science, or some department of the College of Engineering.
Graduate students in the center take courses related to their program of study that are offered by various departments. Below are listed selected courses in applied mathematics in the main areas of research interest of the center's members. Detailed descriptions of these courses can be found in the listings of the individual departments.
Rice Hall (255-7535)
The Cornell Center for the Environment (CfE) coordinates interdisciplinary research, teaching, and outreach programs on environmental issues. CfE's overarching goal is to continuously advance an intellectual community for the environment at Cornell University, with the objective of promoting a sustainable future. To meet this goal CfE:
The CfE web page http://www.cfe.cornell.edu) is the principal source of environmental information for Cornell students, faculty, and staff. Check it frequently for the latest updates on funding, seminars, courses, lectures, events, research opportunities, and new educational programs.
EDUCATION
Undergraduates and graduates can study the environment through programs in Cornell departments, centers, and institutes. Cornell has a strong tradition in environmental studies, with over 200 faculty across campus from the natural, biological, and social sciences working on various environmental issues.
Undergraduate Education
For undergraduate students, a listing of environmental course offerings is posted on the CfE web page http://www.cfe.cornell.edu) along with a listing of majors for students interested in the environment. Students are also encouraged to review the Courses of Study section on "Cornell's Undergraduate Environmental Programs."
Graduate Study
Graduate level environmental concentrations are found in many of Cornell's "Major Fields of Study," from Agricultural and Biological Engineering to Zoology. Similarly, there are opportunities for further study through graduate minors. The Center for the Environment administers several graduate programs, including the Masters Program in Environmental Management, the Environmental Toxicology Graduate Field, and the Conservation and Sustainable Development minor.
Master's Program in Environmental Management (MPS-EM). Resolving complex environmental problems requires more than technological solutions and technical expertise. Environmental professionals also need broad-based administrative, analytical, and managerial skills to make cost effective decisions, perform impact analyses, effectively engage stakeholders, and work in a fluctuating legal, political, and regulatory arena. The MPS-EM Program is organized with these demands in mind.
Students take common core courses including: Science and Technology of Environmental Management (ABEN 425); Managing Local Environmental Systems: Social Perspectives and Research Bases (Rural Sociology 560); Legal Aspects of Environmental Management (CRP 551 or NTRES 408); and Environmental and Resource Economics (ARME 651). An interdisciplinary problem-solving project and 15-18 additional credit hours round out the program. For more information, contact CfE's education coordinator (607-255-7535 or cucfe@cornell.edu).
Environmental Toxicology. CfE is the administrative home of the Environmental Toxicology Graduate Field. The field offers a multidisciplinary science program leading to an M.S. or Ph.D. degree. The three major areas of concentration in the program are cellular and molecular toxicology; food and nutritional toxicology; and ecotoxicology and environmental chemistry. The graduate program prepares students for professional opportunities in academia, industry, private research institutes, and governmental agencies.
Conservation and Sustainable Development Minor (CSD). The minor was formed in response to the challenges facing society to provide for the health, safety, and welfare of people while maintaining the ecological integrity of natural ecosystems and the long-term sustainability of food, forage, and fiber production systems. Solutions to today's conservation and sustainable development problems will continue to elude a single disciplinary approach. These challenges must be met by a new kind of specialist that has holistic perspectives and is capable of working on interdisciplinary research and development teams. Hence, the Conservation and Sustainable Development Minor is oriented to graduate students desiring interdisciplinary approaches to real world problems.
Requirements for the minor include: (1) the CSD core course, Critical Issues in Conservation and Sustainable Development (NTRES 618); (2) at least two electives in subject areas outside the student's primary academic focus; and (3) an interdisciplinary problem-solving research or development project. Elective courses are chosen in consultation with the student's graduate committee that includes one representative from the CSD minor.
BEYOND THE CLASSROOM
Students interested in the environment will find many organizations, resources, and activities beyond the classroom setting, both on campus and in the regional area. CfE sponsors guest lectures and co-hosts conferences with groups from across the campus. In addition, CfE organizes the annual Cornell Environmental Film Festival, the Jill and Ken Iscol Distinguished Environmental Lectures, and the Environmental Career Fair.
RESEARCH AND OUTREACH
CfE is home for several environmental institutes offering students opportunities for study, project work, research, and outreach. These programs are focused on a variety of issues from watershed management to sustainable economic development to environmental risks. CfE programs include:
For additional information contact:
Center for the Environment
Cornell University
Rice Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853-5601
Tel: 607/255-7535
Fax: 607/255-0238
Email: cucfe@cornell.edu
Web: http://www.cfe.cornell.edu
Listserv: Environment-L@cornell.edu
170 Uris Hall (255-6370)
The Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies, established in 1961 to encourage and support comparative and interdisciplinary research on international subjects, is one of the largest and most diverse centers of its kind in the United States. Currently, it includes four U.S. Department of Education Title VI National Resource Centers and 16 other area, development, topical, and educational programs. More than 500 faculty members voluntarily collaborate in the center's programs with well over 300 graduate students involved directly in its international programs. Undergraduate students may choose concentrations in International Relations, Latin American Studies, Modern European Studies, East Asian Studies, South Asian Studies, or Southeast Asian Studies. (See also Africana Studies and Research Center, Asian Studies, and International Agriculture for related majors and concentrations.)
Cornell's international programs are poised to anticipate and respond to changing global circumstances and perspectives. While some programs offer study of geographic regions, others focus on such topics as international agriculture, nutrition, population, law, planning, politics, rural development economics, and world peace. As programs gain momentum and recognition to attract their own resources, the center applies its resources to new pilot activities that bring faculty and students together across traditional disciplines and departmental boundaries.
Each year the center brings an eminent world leader to campus as the Henry E. and Nancy Horton Bartels World Affairs Fellow to deliver a public lecture, meet with classes, and interact informally with faculty and students. Together with the Peace Studies Program, the center hosts a Current Events Roundtable each June that enables Cornell alumni to join faculty in discussion of key world events.
Besides the educational and research opportunities the Einaudi Center makes available on the Ithaca campus, it also provides foreign study options for undergraduate students through the Cornell Abroad Program. The Center promotes graduate students' overseas field research through an annual competition for travel grants and assistance with other fellowship programs. The Fulbright fellowship program, administered by the center, is available to graduating seniors as well as graduate students. The center also is the administrative home of the International Students and Scholars Office, the principal campus resource serving Cornell's large international community.
Cornell is committed to the study of the global community in all its complexity--through a faculty of preeminent scholars and teachers, outstanding research facilities, instruction in more than 40 languages, and a library system with 2,500,000 volumes related to international and comparative studies.
For additional information on current programs, publications, and courses, contact:
The Mario Einaudi Center for International Studies
Cornell University
170 Uris Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853-7601
USA
Phone: 607-255-6370
FAX: 607-254-5000
http://www.einaudi.cornell.edu
The Einaudi Center Programs Center Administration:
Ron Herring, director
David Lelyveld, executive director
170 Uris Hall
East Asia Program (formerly China-Japan Program):
Vivienne B. Shue, director
140 Uris Hall
Latin American Studies Program:
Billy Jean Isbell, director
190 Uris Hall
South Asia Program:
Christopher Minkowski, director
170 Uris Hall
Southeast Asia Program:
Thak Chaloemtiarana, director
180 Uris Hall
Institute for African Development:
David Lewis, director
170 Uris Hall
Institute for European Studies:
Davydd Greenwood, director
120 Uris Hall
International Agriculture:
Norman Uphoff, director
B31 Warren Hall
Berger International Legal Studies:
John Barceló, director
309 Myron Taylor Hall
International Political Economy:
Jonathan Kirshner, director
B2 McGraw Hall
Gender and Global Change:
Lourdes Beneriá, director
391 Uris Hall
International Studies in Planning:
Barbara Lynch, director
106 West Sibley Hall
Population and Development Program:
Douglas Gurak, director
200 West Sibley Hall
Comparative Societal Analysis:
Mary Brinton, director
348 Uris Hall
Participatory Action Research:
David Pelletier, director
378 Martha Van Rensselaer Hall
Peace Studies Program:
Barry Strauss, director
130 Uris Hall
Program in International Nutrition:
Jean Pierre Habicht, director
218 Savage Hall
Program on Comparative Economic Development:
Kaushik Basu, director
458 Uris Hall
Cornell International Institute for Food, Agriculture, and Development:
Norman Uphoff, director
B31 Warren Hall
Cornell Food and Nutrition Policy Program
David Sahn, director
308 Savage Hall
Program on International Relations:
Matthew Evangelista, director
160 Uris Hall
Cornell Abroad:
Richard Gaulton, director
474 Uris Hall
International Students and Scholars:
Brendan O'Brien, director
B50 Caldwell Hall
282 Uris Hall (255-6431) (cogst@cornell.edu)
Cognitive Studies focuses on the nature and representation of knowledge. It approaches the study of perception, action, language, and thinking from several perspectives--theory, experiment, and computation--with the aim of gaining a better understanding of human cognition and the nature of intelligent systems. The comparison between human and artificial intelligence is an important theme, as is the nature of mental representations and their acquisition and use. Cognitive Studies draws primarily from the disciplines of computer science, linguistics, neuroscience, philosophy, and psychology. The field of cognitive studies is primarily represented by faculty in the following departments: Communication, Computer Science, Design and Environmental Analysis, Economics, Education, Human Development, Linguistics, Mathematics, Neurobiology and Behavior, Philosophy, Psychology, and Sociology, as well as the Johnson Graduate School of Management.
An undergraduate concentration in cognitive studies in the College of Arts and Sciences provides a framework for the design of structured, individualized programs of study in this growing interdisciplinary field. Such programs of study are intended to serve as complements to intensive course work in a single discipline as represented in an individual department. For further information on the undergraduate program, see "Cognitive Studies Concentration" in the College of Arts and Sciences section. Contact Linda LeVan (255-6431 or cogst@cornell.edu).
Cornell offers a graduate field minor in cognitive studies. Cornell's unique program of graduate training, which seeks to tailor an optimal program of study and research for each individual, fosters interdisciplinary committees. It is the norm for students interested in cognitive studies to combine faculty members from such fields as Philosophy, Computer Science, Linguistics, Psychology, or Neurobiology and Behavior on common committees. For further information on the graduate Field of Cognitive Studies, contact Shimon Edelman and Ron Hoy, directors of graduate studies, (255-6365 or 254-4318, se37@cornell.edu or rrh3@cornell.edu), or Linda LeVan, executive staff assistant, 282 Uris Hall, Office of Cognitive Studies (255-6431, cogst@cornell.edu).
Courses from across the university that are relevant to the Cognitive Studies program are listed in this catalog under Arts and Sciences in the section "Special Programs and Interdisciplinary Studies."
474 Uris Hall 607/255-6224, fax 607/255-8700, e-mail: CUAbroad@cornell.edu
web homepage: http://www.einaudi.cornell.edu/cuabroad
Study abroad is an integral part of a Cornell education. We live in an increasingly global society in which knowledge, resources, and authority transcend national and regional boundaries. To help students develop the knowledge, skills, and attitudes necessary for global citizenship in the twenty-first century, Cornell Abroad offers a wide range of international study opportunities that reflect the fundamental educational goals and objectives of the university. Study abroad is a continuous experience with study on campus, enabling students to make regular progress toward the degree.
Qualified students study abroad through programs administered by Cornell and other American institutions, and by enrolling directly in foreign universities. Among the many study abroad programs available, students select programs with thoughtful planning and apply with the approval of their colleges and faculty advisers. To earn credit for overseas study during the fall and/or spring semester(s), students must apply through Cornell Abroad, whose staff services the planning and application process.
Cornell students majoring in a broad array of fields in all seven undergraduate colleges regularly study in more than 40 countries. The following list includes programs chosen frequently by students with college approval; those locations preceded by an asterisk (*) are programs run directly by Cornell.
AFRICA
Botswana, Cameroon, Kenya, Madagascar, Tanzania, Uganda: School for International Training;
Ghana: University of Ghana (through the Council of International Educational Exchange, CIEE);
Kenya: Wildlife Management (School for Field Studies);
South Africa: Universities of Cape Town and Natal
ASIA
China: Chinese University of Hong Kong; *Cornell FALCON for the spring semester or full year at the Inter-University Program for Chinese Language Studies at Tsinghua University, Beijng; Peking, Nanjing and Fudan Universities (CIEE); International Chinese Language Program at National Taiwan University; IES Beijing
India: School for International Training; St. Stephen's College Delhi (through Brown or Rutgers Universities);
Indonesia: Institut Keguruan Dan Ilmu Pendidikan (IKIP) in Malang (CIEE);
Japan: *Kyoto Center for Japanese Studies; various university programs; IES Tokyo;
Korea: Yonsei University;
Nepal: *Cornell-Nepal Study Program (Samyukta Adhyayan Karikam Nepal) at Tribhuvan University;
Thailand: Khon Kaen University (CIEE);
Vietnam: University of Hanoi (CIEE);
AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND
Australian National University, Canberra; University of Sydney; University of Melbourne; University of New South Wales, Sydney; University of Queensland, Brisbane; University of Western Australia, Perth; School for International Training; Sydney Internship (Boston University); Otago and Lincoln Universities in New Zealand;
EUROPE
Denmark: *Denmark's International Study Program (DIS);
France: *EDUCO (Cornell, Duke, and Emory in Paris) at Université de Paris VII, Paris I, Institut d'Études Politiques de Paris ("Sciences Po"); Critical Studies Program at the University of Paris (CIEE); Paris Internship (Boston University); IES Dijon Business Program
Germany: *Berlin Consortium for German Studies at the Free University of Berlin; Wayne State University in Munich and Freiburg;
Greece: College Year in Athens;
Ireland: Trinity College Dublin and the National University Colleges of Dublin, Galway, and Cork;
Italy: *Cornell College of Art, Architecture, and Planning Program in Rome; Bologna Cooperative Studies Program; Boston University Program in Padova; IES Milan; Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies in Rome; Syracuse University program in Florence;
Netherlands: University of Amsterdam; Leiden University;
Russia: St. Petersburg University (CIEE); Moscow International University and other universities (American Council of Teachers of Russian);
Spain: *Cornell-Michigan-Penn program at the University of Seville; various language and culture programs;
Sweden: *Swedish Child Care and Family Policy Practicum at the University of Göteborg; The Swedish Program at the University of Stockholm;
United Kingdom: *Direct enrollment at: the University of Birmingham; University of Bristol; Cambridge University; University of East Anglia; University of Edinburgh; University of Glasgow; University of Manchester; Oxford University; University of St. Andrews; University of Sussex; University of Warwick; University of York; University of London: King's College, University College (including the School of Slavonic and East European Studies), Imperial College of Science and Technology, the London School of Economics and Political Science, and the School of Oriental and African Studies, as well as other universities of choice.
Externally sponsored programs in the UK include the British American Drama Academy, the Beaver College, Boston, and Rochester University internships, the Marymount College Program at the London College of Fashion, and the Hansard Parliamentary Internship Programme.
Students studying in the United Kingdom enjoy a variety of services, and cultural activities, provided by the Cornell-Brown-Penn UK Centre in London.
LATIN AMERICA, CENTRAL AMERICA, AND THE CARIBBEAN
Argentina and Chile: various university-based study abroad programs, through the Cooperating Programs in the Americas (COPA) of Butler University and the University of Illinois;
Belize, Brazil, Chile, Ecuador: School for International Training;
Costa Rica: Organization for Tropical Studies (OTS) Undergraduate Semester Abroad in tropical biology; School for Field Study; Universidad National (Heredía);
Cuba: the University of Havana through COPA; School for International Training;
Ecuador and Jamaica: Partnership for Service Learning;
Honduras: Escuela Agrícola Panamericana (Zamorano);
Mexico: Instituto Tecnológico y de Estudios Superiores de Monterrey (ITESM); Universidad de las Americas-Puebla (UDLA); Universidad Iberoamericana; School for Field Studies in Baja California;
MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA
Egypt: American University in Cairo;
Israel: Ben-Gurion University; Haifa University; Hebrew University of Jerusalem; Tel Aviv University;
Jordan: University of Jordan (CIEE);
Morocco: School for International Training
Cornell students are by no means limited to the locations listed above or to the programs identified for particular countries. In recent years, they have also studied in Austria, Croatia, Czech Republic, Dominican Republic, Finland, the Philippines, Poland, Portugal, Switzerland, Turkey, Venezuela, and elsewhere.
Students from all seven undergraduate colleges and from all major fields study abroad; they are generally expected to have a cumulative grade point average of 3.0 or above. More than 500 undergraduates studied abroad last year. Because the colleges usually require that students complete at least 60 hours of undergraduate credit on the Ithaca campus, students who transfer to Cornell as juniors are usually unable to count study abroad credit toward their Cornell degree.
Students may study abroad their sophomore, junior, or senior year. Junior year is the traditional choice, but second semester sophomore year or first semester senior year is increasingly popular. To ensure preparation, it is important to begin planning for study abroad in the freshman year. Although semester-long programs are usually available, academic year programs are highly recommended.
Applications for all study abroad programs--Cornell programs, as well as those administered externally by other institutions--are available at Cornell Abroad, 474 Uris Hall, where students are encouraged to consult the library of study abroad materials, talk with staff, and attend information meetings. The Cornell Abroad web site is a good place to browse through program offerings and to explore links to universities and programs worldwide. Students meet with the study abroad advisers in their colleges to discuss how they will meet college degree requirements. Each applicant completes a written statement of academic purpose outlining goals for study abroad and the program of study that will be followed. Applications are signed by both the faculty adviser and the college study abroad adviser. Arts and Sciences, Human Ecology, and Industrial and Labor Relations students submit applications to their college for forwarding to Cornell Abroad; Agriculture and Life Sciences, Architecture, Art, and Planning, Engineering and Hotel Administration students submit applications directly to Cornell Abroad. Cornell Abroad reviews all applications and forwards them to programs and universities as necessary. All students who wish to receive academic credit for study abroad must apply through Cornell Abroad and their undergraduate college.
The application deadline for study abroad in the fall 2002 semester and the 2002-2003 academic year is February 15, 2002, for all programs except Oxford and Cambridge, for which the deadline to study at those universities for the full year in 2002-2003 is November 1. Many universities and programs admit on a rolling basis before and after these dates. Students planning to study abroad in the spring semester should initiate the application process during the preceding spring. Early application may improve your chances of admission. In all cases, it is a good idea to check with Cornell Abroad.
Students who apply through Cornell Abroad to programs approved by their colleges, as outlined above, remain registered at Cornell during study abroad. They are eligible for financial aid and receive full academic credit for pre-approved courses of study completed with satisfactory grades. Students enroll for a full load of courses abroad, according to the standards of the institution or program overseas, and normally receive 30 credits per year, or 12 to 20 credits per semester. The colleges review coursework taken abroad and make the final decisions concerning credit transfer and distribution. When study abroad credit has been transferred, the transcript will indicate the names of the courses taken, the grades received, and the total credits earned for each semester. The foreign grades are not translated into the Cornell/American grading system, nor are they averaged into the Cornell grade point average.
Study abroad programs in non-English-speaking countries that offer direct enrollment in universities generally require at least two years, or the equivalent, of college-level language study. Students should make firm plans for any requisite language courses early in their freshman year. English-language study abroad programs are increasingly available in non-English-speaking countries--for example, Belgium, Denmark, Egypt, France, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Italy, Japan, Korea, Netherlands, People's Republic of China, and Sweden. Cornell students who participate in programs in a non-English-speaking country with English-language course work are required to take at least one language course as part of their program of study and are strongly encouraged to take more. Students are advised to consult with their college study abroad advisers about relevant language preparation, and students in the College of Arts and Sciences should note that they are required to have studied the host country language, if taught at Cornell, prior to study abroad.
Study abroad programs generally provide housing in the homes of local residents, in halls of residence for university students, or in rental apartments. Cornell Abroad will advise students of the arrangements that are available and most appropriate to their individual needs.
Students studying abroad on Cornell programs pay a uniform Cornell Abroad Tuition per semester, which covers tuition, housing, orientation, some field trips, and excursions. Some or all meals may be included also. Cornell Abroad staff are always available to discuss study abroad costs on all programs.
In 2001-2002, The Cornell Abroad Tuition for students participating in the Berlin Consortium for German Studies, the Cornell Nepal Study Program, EDUCO (Emory, Duke and Cornell in Paris), the Michigan-Cornell-Penn Program in Seville, and the Swedish Child Care Practicum at the University of Goteborg is $15,600. For the following affiliate universities in the United Kingdom, the Cornell Abroad tuition is also $15,600: Cambridge and Oxford, St. Andrews, Imperial College, King's College, London School of Economics, School of Oriental and African Studies, and University College London (including the School of Slavonic and East European Studies).
At the following affiliate universities in the United Kingdom, the Cornell Abroad program tuition will be $13,100 per semester: The Universities of Birmingham, Bristol, East Anglia, Glasgow, Manchester, Sussex, Warwick and York. For Denmark's International Studies Program (DIS), the Cornell Abroad program tuition will be $14,800. For the Kyoto Center for Japanese Studies (KCJS) the tuition will be $18,700 per semester.
Students studying abroad on all other programs in 2001-2002 pay the tuitions and other costs charged by their programs, and a Cornell International Program Tuition of $3,600 per semester. The International Program Tuition covers the direct and indirect costs of study abroad to the university, including financial aid for all study abroad students.
Students who are accepted for study abroad during the academic year or semester, having applied through Cornell Abroad, are eligible for two semesters of financial aid, consistent with general university aid policy; this applies to all programs, whether run directly by Cornell or not. Students who have transferred into Cornell with 60 or more credit hours are not likely to receive aid for study abroad assuming they would thereby need more than eight semesters to earn the undergraduate degree. Some programs abroad offer need-based and merit-based scholarships.
The decision to study in a particular region of the world must be made by each student and his or her family in light of their own interpretation of current events. The director, associate director, and staff stay in regular contact with representatives abroad and receive information regarding rapidly changing political situations worldwide through the U.S. Department of State Office of Citizens Emergency Services and other agencies. As long as the State Department does not restrict travel by U.S. citizens, Cornell Abroad does not recommend limitations on student plans for study abroad. Cornell Abroad will do everything possible to notify students immediately that they should defer plans when official travel restrictions are issued. Nothing is as important as student security and well-being.
Responsibility for a decision to withdraw from a program or return home early rests with the individual and his or her family. There can be no guarantee of credit for students who withdraw from programs sponsored by colleges and universities other than Cornell; they are advised to inquire about those institutions' policies regarding the completion of academic work and the potential financial implications of a premature departure. In the event of a disrupted semester, refunds of tuition and fees, and the appropriate number of credits to be awarded will be reviewed by Cornell and affiliated institutions on a case-by-case basis. Most institutions sponsoring study abroad programs strive to facilitate student completion of academic programs even under unusual circumstances and have tuition refund policies based on prorated formulas.
Cornell Abroad (474 Uris Hall): Richard Gaulton Ph.D., director; Beatrice B. Szekely Ph.D., associate director; Libby Okihiro, student services coordinator; Kathy Lynch, financial services coordinator. The Cornell Abroad library contains an extensive collection of university catalogs and study abroad program brochures, files of course syllabi and evaluations, books, videotapes, and some information on travel, summer study, and work abroad. Comprehensive information is provided on the Cornell Abroad web site which incorporates linkages to universities, programs, and resources worldwide. In the early weeks of every semester, faculty, students, and staff discuss programs in a series of information meetings announced in the Cornell Daily Sun and on the Cornell Abroad web homepage http://www.einaudi.cornell.edu/cuabroad).
Agriculture and Life Sciences: Bonnie Shelley, 140 Roberts Hall; Architecture, Art, and Planning: Jane Worden, 129 Sibley; Arts and Sciences: Dean Pat Wasyliw, 55 Goldwin Smith Hall; Engineering: Dan Maloney Hahn and Tammy Bennington, 167 Olin Hall; Hotel Administration: Cheryl Farrell, 174B Statler Hall; Human Ecology: Paul Fisher, 172 Martha Van Rensselaer; Industrial and Labor Relations: Laura Lewis, 101 Ives Hall.
311 Caldwell Hall (255-4090)
Cornell-in-Washington is a program that offers students from all colleges in the university an opportunity to earn full academic credit for a semester of study in Washington, D.C. The aim of the program is to give students a chance to take advantage of the rich resources of the national capital. Washington, as the center of much of the nation's political energy, is an ideal place to study American public policy and the institutions and processes through which it is formulated and implemented. At the same time, Washington's rich collection of libraries, museums, theaters, and art galleries, offers an opportunity to explore American history, literature, art, and the full range of the American humanistic tradition. The Cornell-in-Washington Program offers two study options: (1) studies in public policy; and (2) studies in the American experience. Students take courses from Cornell faculty, conduct individual research projects, and work as externs in the Washington community.
The program is housed at the Cornell Center, 2148 O Street, NW, Washington, D.C. 20037. The academic and adminstrative space is located on the first floor and 27 residential units for approximately 60 students and faculty are on the upper floors.
The Cornell-in-Washington program is open to qualified juniors and seniors from all colleges, schools, and divisions of the university. Students enroll in one core course, which involves a major research project often carried out in conjunction with an externship. Students also select one or two other seminars from such fields as government, history, economics, history of art, and social policy. All seminars are taught by Cornell faculty and carry appropriate credit toward fulfillment of major, distribution, and other academic requirements. In addition, students work as externs with congressional committee offices, executive-branch agencies, interest groups, arts and research institutions, and other organizations involved in public policy and American culture.
Students are registered as full-time students, earn Cornell credit, pay full tuition, and remain eligible for financial aid.
Apartments are rented at the Cornell Center during the academic year. All are fully furnished (except for dishes, cookware, towels and bedding) and reasonably priced by both Washington and Cornell standards. Two students are assigned to each efficiency and three to each one-bedroom apartment. Because of the limited number of spaces and the need for accurate planning, a non-refundable deposit of $150 is required to reserve a space. Students are discouraged from bringing automobiles. The public transportation system, consisting of both bus and subway service, is extensive and convenient to the Center and street parking is not available.
Application forms are available from the Cornell-in-Washington office at 311 Caldwell Hall. Applications should be submitted the semester prior to participation.
The Cornell-in-Washington website is located at ciw.cornell.edu. Regular information meetings are held on campus in early October and March. These meetings are advertised in the Cornell Daily Sun and on campus bulletin boards. Additional information concerning externships, courses, housing and other features of the program may be obtained at either the Cornell-in-Washington office at 311 Caldwell Hall (607) 255-4090, or in Washington at the Cornell Center, 2148 O Street, NW, Washington, DC 20037, (202) 466-2184.
473 Hollister Hall (255-8018)
The Cornell Institute for Public Affairs (CIPA) is a university-wide institute that offers a two-year graduate professional program leading to a Master of Public Administration. Our mission is to develop professionals who can be effective, ethical, and creative leaders in government and in the private sector's interface with government.
CIPA emphasizes the interactions between public and private interests for the benefit of all sectors of society. At CIPA, we utilize Cornell's cutting-edge strengths as a major research university to understand rapidly evolving public interests, technological opportunities, ecological constraints, individual aspirations, and political possibilities. Examples of Cornell's extraordinary breadth of policy-related specialties include science and technology; health, education, and social services administration; agricultural, food, and nutrition policy; international development; environmental studies; peace studies; labor relations; city and regional planning; and ethics in public life. These areas of expertise provide a diverse base for the CIPA Fellows (our students) to pursue the study of public affairs. Thus, CIPA Fellows take courses and work with faculty from all of Cornell's Colleges as well as the Cornell Law School, with whom a joint M.P.A./J.D. degree is offered, and the Johnson Graduate School of Management.
The CIPA program has been developed to offer both a sound foundation in the principles, tools and techniques for a career and leadership in public policy either in the public or private sector. CIPA also offers the flexibility to accommodate and encourage the specialized policy-related interests of our students.
The two-year curriculum is structured into three parts: five interdisciplinary core courses taken by all CIPA Fellows; "competency" area requirements to develop the wide variety of skills and professional perspectives necessary for the practice of public policy; and sectoral specialization through additional courses and the completion of a thesis in the area of the fellow's policy focus.
The Core Courses
These courses have been developed specially for CIPA Fellows to provide a common, hands-on experience in employing the latest analytical techniques to guide the formulation of programs, their supporting institutions, and their effective administration. They will also provide strategies for implementing change in complex heterogeneous societies.
CIPA I: Quantitative Techniques for Policy Analysis and Program Management (CRP 621)
Provides students with the basic management tools essential for the contemporary career in public affairs. It includes hands-on practice with formal management techniques, including investment analysis and linear and dynamic programming.
CIPA II: Public Political Economy (ECON 539) Uses techniques of economic analysis to understand the need for various public programs, to estimate the value of new programs and policies, to forge desirable institutional structures for service delivery, and to anticipate and evaluate outcomes.
CIPA III: Administration, Politics, and Public Affairs (GOVT 621) Explores the processes and institutional context of public affairs and analyzes the political and administrative structure and dynamics of policy development and implementation.
CIPA IV: Social Policy (526) Integrates a variety of analytic methods, especially statistics and simulation models, to explore the structure of public programs and to assess their direct and indirect consequences.
CIPA V: Models and Quantitative Methods (CRP 528) Demonstrates the use and limits of models and quantitative techniques in forming and administering policy.
The Area Requirements
In addition to the five core courses, fellows must also complete satisfactorily a series of foundation subject or "competency" area requirements that are essential to the training of public policy professionals. These competency areas are: administration, politics, and policy; economics; math and statistics; finance; regulation; and ethics and public law.
The Sectoral Specialty
At least three courses taken by individual fellows will be in their sectoral specialty or "concentrations." These are widely divergent and depend on the unique interests and background of the individual student.
The CIPA Thesis
Each fellow must complete a thesis, which applies the conceptual tools, theories, and analytical techniques to a problem in the fellow's area of sectoral expertise. As the culmination of each M.P.A. course of study, this thesis must be both critical and creative, reflecting the fellow's ability to identify, analyze, and generate supportable solutions to important public policy questions.
Additional Requirements
All M.P.A. candidates must spend four semesters in residence to complete the degree.
The Faculty
In addition to our five core faculty members (Richard E. Schuler, director, economics and civil and environmental engineering; Steven Caldwell, sociology; Arch Dotson, government; David Lewis, city and regional planning; and Peter Stein, physics) who offer the five core courses and advise the fellows in the development of their programs of study, over 100 faculty members at Cornell participate in the graduate field of public affairs and policy. All field faculty members are available to supervise the theses of individual Fellows whose policy interests coincide with faculty expertise.
Special Programs
The combined four-year M.P.A./J.D. and M.P.A./M.B.A. degree programs are available for interested applicants. For selected Cornell undergraduates who are accepted by the end of their junior year, a combined five-year bachelor's/M.P.A. program can be arranged.
Student Organization
The Cornell Public Affairs Society, governed by the fellows, conducts a weekly colloquium with guest speakers, a bi-weekly television program, "Point-Of-View", aired on the local public access channel, and publishes, edits, and sponsors student authors for its annual public policy journal, "The Current," as well as arranging regular social events.
Application. Applicants are required to submit GRE general test scores. CIPA has a policy of rolling admissions. Students requesting aid, however, must submit applications by February 15 for consideration. For an application or more information, contact Cornell Institute for Public Affairs, 472 Hollister Hall (phone: 607 255-8018; fax: 607 255-5240; e-mail: cipa@cornell.edu; web site: http://www.cipa.cornell.edu).
Financial Support. As a professional program, the financial aid resources of CIPA are extremely limited. Students of unusual merit and documented need will be considered for support, but CIPA is unable to provide any one student full support. Therefore, applicants are encouraged to explore and take advantage of all available sources of external funding.
For an application or more information, contact Cornell Institute for Public Affairs,
472 Hollister Hall (phone: 607-255-8018; fax: 607-255-5240; e-mail: cipa@cornell.edu).
One Plantations Road (255-3020)
Internet homepage: http://www.plantations.cornell.edu
e-mail: plantations@cornell.edu
A place of exceptional diversity and learning opportunities, Cornell Plantations comprises the university's botanical garden, arboretum, and natural areas. Its 3,000+ acres include the woodlands and gorges on and around campus, as well as specialized gardens and a 150-acre arboretum that features a field flower meadow and trees and shrubs hardy in central New York State. Cornell Plantations provides unique outdoor laboratories and plant collections for Cornell's academic programs and research in disciplines such as ecology and systematics, floriculture, ornamental horticulture, and bioengineering. While many of Cornell Plantations' resources are on or near campus, several thousand acres in and around Tompkins County preserve quality examples of native vegetation and rare plants and animals. The lands include bogs, fens, glens, swamps, wet and dry forests, vernal ponds, and meadows. Arrangements to use these areas for classes and research can be made by calling Cornell Plantations.
Cornell Plantations also offers relaxation, rejuvenation, and inspiration. The vast open spaces provide room to breathe; while the intimate gardens provide respite from the busy campus. Visitors always discover surprises and learn something new in the gardens, which feature herbs, flowers, vegetables, international crops, rock garden plants, peonies, poisonous plants, ground covers, rhododendrons, wildflowers, and a winter garden.
Students are encouraged to volunteer as photographers, tour guides, computer assistants, gardeners and writers for our magazine and newsletter. A number of student internships are also offered each summer. Maps, information, publications, and class brochures (for noncredit classes and workshops) are available in the Garden Gift Shop in the Lewis Headquarters Building at the botanical garden. Noncredit courses in horticulture, landscape design, botanical arts, and natural history are offered throughout the year. A one-credit seminar series (HORT 480) is offered each fall; a three-credit Public Garden Management course, (HORT 485) is offered every other spring semester.
240 Goldwin Smith Hall (255-8515)
The critical issues of public life are inescapably ethical issues. In the economy, we face questions of equity and justice and questions about the relation between prosperity, the environment, and the quality of individual lives. In constitutional law, we confront dilemmas about civil rights, freedom of speech, privacy, and abortion. In politics and government, we wrestle with questions about campaigning, character, and compromise. And in international affairs, we encounter the complexities of war and peace, human rights, multilateral aid, and climate change.
The university-wide Program on Ethics & Public Life (EPL) is Cornell's initiative in the systematic study of the ethical dimension of specific public issues. EPL grew out of a conviction that these questions need something more than abstract philosophical discussion. In addition to the general study of values and principles that goes on in theoretical ethics, universities need to foster ways of thinking about the complex, uncertain, and urgent problems of the real world, ways of thinking that are realistic without sacrificing their ethical character.
EPL does not intend to create either an undergraduate major or a graduate field in Ethics & Public Life. On the contrary, we seek to enhance and facilitate the discussion of ethical issues by students whose central educational interests lie elsewhere, but whose work and lives will nevertheless confront them with dilemmas and responsibilities for which a university education should prepare them. EPL aims to enrich existing departments with courses that are intellectually and practically fruitful at the same time. It offers a concentration in Law and Society (see separate listing under "Special Programs and Interdisciplinary Studies").
EPL Core Courses
PHIL 194/GOVT 294 Global Thinking
PHIL 242/GOVT 260 Social and Political Philosophy
PHIL 246 Ethics and the World Environment
PHIL 247 Ethics and Public Life
PHIL 294/GOVT 294 Global Thinking
PHIL 342 Law, Society, and Morality
PHIL 343 Political Obligation and Civil Disobedience
GOVT 469/PHIL 369 Limiting War: The Morality of Modern State Violence
GOVT 412 Voting and Political Participation
GOVT 466/WOMNS 466/LAW 648 Feminism and Gender Discrimination
GOVT 468/PHIL 368 Global Climate and Global Justice
GOVT 491/691 Normative Elements of International Relations
Related Courses
AN SC 414 Ethics and Animal Science
B&SOC 206/S&TS 206 Ethics and the Environment
CEH 356 Economics of Welfare Policy
CRP 549 Ethics and Practical Judgment in Planning Practice
ENGR 360/S&TS 360 Engineering Ethics
GOVT 474/PHIL 446 Topics in Social and Political Philosophy
HSS 658 Ethics, Public Policy, and American Society
ILRHR 366 Women at Work
ILRCB 401 My Brother's Keeper
ILRCB 482 Ethics at Work
ILRCB 488 Liberty and Justice For All
ILRCB 604 Theories of Equality and Their Application in the Workplace
LAW 655 International Human Rights
LAW 667 Law and Ethics of Lawyering
LAW 718 Ethnic Conflict and International Law
NBA 578 Business Ethics
NTRES 407 Religion, Ethics, and the Environment
NTRES 411 Seminar in Environmental Ethics
PHIL 145 Contemporary Moral Issues
PHIL 241 Ethics
PHIL 245 Ethics and Health Care
PHIL 246 Ethics and the Environment
PHIL 341 Ethical Theory
PHIL 344 History of Ethics: Ancient and Medieval
PHIL 345 History of Ethics: Modern
PHIL 346 Modern Political Philosophy
Michele M. Moody-Adams, director, 240 Goldwin Smith Hall, 255-8515; Michele M. Moody-Adams, Wyn and William Y. Hutchinson Professor of Ethics & Public Life and Professor of Philosophy; Henry Shue, Professor of Ethics & Public Life and Professor of Philosophy; Kathryn Abrams, Professor of Ethics & Public Life and Professor of Law.
114 West Sibley Hall (255-7110)
The two-year Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S.) degree in Real Estate is an interdisciplinary degree program that combines courses from nearly every college at Cornell University. The degree is designed for aspiring real estate professionals who are in the initial or early stages of their careers. Two entities provide support for the degree program. The Program in Real Estate exists at Cornell University to serve as the integrating organizational unit for financial management and administration of academic real estate activities on and off campus. The Field of Real Estate is a committee of faculty members from several different colleges that is directly involved in the design and administration of the real estate curriculum.
The professional study of real estate is concerned with the finance, exchange, development, management, marketing, and many other aspects of the real estate business. Real estate professionals also bring an understanding of the long-range social, political, ethical, and environmental implications of decisions about real estate. The 62 credit hours of course work needed to earn the degree provide a comprehensive and lasting foundation for professional careers in real estate.
Students take core courses in principles of real estate, real estate development process, real estate finance and investment, managerial finance, residential development, real estate law, construction planning and operations, and real estate marketing and management, along with weekly industry seminars and elective courses in their chosen areas of concentration. Many concentration options are possible and may be structured from the hundreds of related courses taught at Cornell University (e.g., development, finance, investments, real estate consulting, substainable development, property and asset management, real estate marketing and market analysis or international real estate concentrations). Students complete a real-world, semester long project workshop during their final semester.
Admissions procedures for the M.P.S. (Real Estate) program are supervised by the Graduate School and Real Estate Field. Applicants to the program must have completed a bachelor's degree with a good academic record. They must achieve Graduate Management Admission Test (GMAT) or Graduate Record Examination (GRE) scores that are at the level required in other Cornell graduate professional degree programs; and at least two letters of recommendation from undergraduate college faculty members (and if appropriate, from employers) familiar with the student's academic and professional work must be submitted. There is no work experience requirement for admission (although work experience is preferred). Foreign students, for whom English is a second language, will need to achieve acceptable TOEFL scores.
For more information, contact C. Bradley Olson, director of the Program in Real Estate (607-255-7110) or e-mail real_estate@cornell.edu.
During the past several decades, with the increasing concern about air and water pollution, nuclear waste disposal, the ozone hole, and global climate change, the scientific community has gained considerable insight into how the biosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere, and lithosphere systems interact. It has become evident that we cannot understand and solve environmental problems by studying these individual systems in isolation. The interconnectedness of these systems is a fundamental attribute of the Earth system, and understanding their various interactions is crucial for understanding our environment.
The Science of Earth Systems (SES) major emphasizes the rigorous and objective study of the Earth system as one of the outstanding intellectual challenges of modern science and as the necessary foundation for the future management of our home planet. In this program, Cornell's strengths across a broad range of earth and environmental sciences have been coalesced to provide students with the tools to engage in what will be the primary challenge of the twenty-first century.
Graduates of Cornell's SES program are well prepared for several career and advanced study options:
The SES major is available for students in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and the College of Arts and Sciences. In the College of Engineering, the SES curriculum may be completed by choosing the SES option in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. The SES major has its home in the Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, but relies on the collaboration of several departments across the university.
The SES curriculum provides strong preparation in mathematics, physics, chemistry, and biology during the freshman and sophomore years. In the junior and senior years, students take a set of common SES core courses and an additional set of advanced disciplinary or interdisciplinary courses that build on the basic sequences.
The requirements for the major are as follows:
EAS 201 Physics and Chemistry of the Earth
BIOEE 261 Ecology and the Environment
Other examples are MATH 293 and MATH 294, biochemistry, organic chemistry, PHYS 214, and introductory statistics. With the exception of an introductory statistics course, the additional basic courses should require at least one of the classes listed in a-d above as a prerequisite.
(2) Science of Earth Systems Core Courses
EAS 302 Evolution of the Earth System
EAS 331/ASTRO 331 Climate Dynamics
EAS 321/NATRES 321 Introduction to Biogeochemistry
(3) Concentration Courses
Four intermediate to advanced-level courses (300-level and up) that build on the core courses and have prerequisites in the "Basic Math and Sciences" courses listed in (1). These classes build depth and provide the student with a specific expertise in some facet of earth system science. Possible areas of concentration include Climate Dynamics, Biogeochemistry, Ecological Systems, Environmental Geology, Ocean Sciences, Environmental Biophysics, Hydrological Systems, and Soil Science
For more information contact Professor Kerry H. Cook, Department of Earth and Atmospheric Science, khc6@cornell.edu and visit the web site: http://www.geo.cornell.edu/ses/
301 Malott Hall (255-8066)
B. W. Turnbull (chair); M. T. Wells (director of graduate studies); J. A. Bunge (director of professional programs); N. Altman, K. Athreya, T. Berger, G. Casella, C. Castillo-Chavez,
M. Contreras, T. DiCiccio, R. Durrett,
E. Dynkin, T. Fine, A. Hadi, Y. Hong,
J. T. G. Hwang, H. Kesten, N. Kiefer,
R. Nielson, M. Nussbaum, P. Protter,
S. Resnick, D. Ruppert, G. Samorodnitsky,
S. Schwager, R. Strawderman, P. Velleman,
T. Vogelsang.
The university-wide Department of Statistical Science at Cornell coordinates activities in statistics and probability at the undergraduate, graduate, and research levels.
Students interested in graduate study in statistics and probability can apply to the Graduate Field of Statistics or to one of the other graduate fields of study that offer related course work. Students in the Field of Statistics plan their graduate program with the assistance of their Special Committee. For detailed information on opportunities for graduate study, students should contact the Director of Graduate Studies, 301 Malott Hall.
The department also offers an undergraduate program through the Biometrics Unit in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences and an Engineering Statistics minor in the College of Engineering. Undergraduate majors and certificate programs are currently under development for other colleges. For information, contact the Undergraduate Coordinator, (301 Malott Hall, 255-8066). Statistics courses offered by the departments listed below will fill distribution requirements in many of the colleges.
A free consulting service is offered through the Biometrics Unit in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences. Statistical computing consulting is available through the Office of Statistical Consulting, B21 Savage Hall, 255-1926.
The department is organized into four units; Biometrics, Engineering Statistics, Mathematical Statistics and Probability, and Social Statistics. The areas covered include agricultural statistics, biostatistics, economic and social statistics, epidemiology, manufacturing statistics, quality control and reliability, probability theory, sampling theory, statistical computing, statistical design, statistical theory, and stochastic processes and their applications.
Course designations
The following course identifiers are used to designate the courses offered by the separate units: Biometrics Unit (CALS), STBTRY; Engineering Statistics Unit (ENGR), STENGR; Mathematical Statistics Unit (ARTS), STMATH; Social Statistics Unit (ILR), STSOC. To enroll in one of the courses, see the listing for the appropriate college.
Descriptions of undergraduate and graduate courses are listed below.
ST 501-502 Applied Statistical Analysis
This is the two-semester core course for students in the Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S.) degree program in applied statistics in the Department of Statistical Science. Enrollment is limited to students enrolled in the M.P.S. program. The course consists of a series of modules on various topics in applied statistics. Some modules will include guest lectures from practitioners. Parallel with the course, students complete a year-long, in-depth data analysis project.
ST 501: Applied Statistical Analysis. Letter only. Topics include, but are not limited to: statistical computing systems, statistical software packages, data management, statistical graphics, and simulation methods and algorithms.
ST 502: Applied Statistical Analysis. Letter only. Topics include, but are not limited to: sample surveys and questionnaire design, data sources, experimental design, and data mining.
Biometrics Unit STBTRY 100 Statistics and the World We Live In (enroll in BTRY 100) STBTRY 261 Statistical Methods I (enroll in BTRY 261) STBTRY 302 Statistical Methods II (enroll in BTRY 302) STBTRY 400 Biometry Seminar (enroll in BTRY 400) STBTRY 408 Theory of Probability (enroll in BTRY 408) STBTRY 409 Theory of Statistics (enroll in BTRY 409) STBTRY 494 Undergraduate Special Topics in Biometry and Statistics (enroll in BTRY 494) STBTRY 495 Statistical Consulting (enroll in BTRY 495) STBTRY 497 Undergraduate Individual Study in Biometry and Statistics (enroll in BTRY 497) STBTRY 498 Undergraduate Supervised Teaching (enroll in BTRY 498) STBTRY 499 Undergraduate Research (enroll in BTRY 499) STBTRY 600 Statistics Seminar (enroll in BTRY 600) STBTRY 601 Statistical Methods I (enroll in BTRY 601) STBTRY 602 Statistical Methods II (enroll in BTRY 602) [STBTRY 603 Statistical Methods III (enroll in BTRY 603)] STBTRY 604 Statistical Methods IV: Applied Design (enroll in BTRY 604) [STBTRY 652 Computationally Intensive. Statistical Inference] STBTRY 662 Mathematical Ecology (enroll in BTRY 662) [STBTRY 672 Topics in Environmental Statistics (BTRY 672)] STBTRY 682 Statistical Methods for Molecular Biology (enroll in BTRY 682) STBTRY 694 Graduate Special Topics in Biometry and Statistics (enroll in BTRY 694) STBTRY 697 Individual Graduate Study in Biometry and Statistics (enroll in BTRY 697) [STBTRY 717 Linear and Generalized Linear Models (enroll in BTRY 717)] STBTRY 795 Statistical Consulting (enroll in BTRY 795) STBTRY 798 Graduate Supervised Teaching (enroll in BTRY 798) Engineering Statistics Unit STENGR 270 Basic Engineering Probability and Statistics (enroll in ENGRD 270) STENGR 310 Introduction to Probability and Random Signals (enroll in ELE E 310) STENGR 360 Engineering Probability and Statistics II (enroll in OR&IE 360) STENGR 361 Introductory Engineering Stochastic Processes I (enroll in OR&IE 361) STENGR 411 Random Signals in Communications and Signal Processing (enroll in ELE E 411) STENGR 467 Telecommunication Systems I (enroll in ELE E 467) STENGR 473 Empirical Research Methods in Financial Engineering (enroll in OR&IE 473) STENGR 474 Statistical Data Mining (enroll in OR&IE 474) STENGR 476 Applied Linear Statistical Models (enroll in OR&IE 476) STENGR 512 Fundamental Information Theory (enroll in ELE E 562) STENGR 517 Artificial Neural Networks (enroll in ELE E 577) STENGR 523 Introductory Engineering Stochastic Processes I (enroll in OR&IE 523) STENGR 560 Engineering Probability and Statistics II (enroll in OR&IE 560) STENGR 561 Queuing Theory and Its Applications (enroll in OR&IE 561) STENGR 577 Quality Control (enroll in OR&IE 577) STENGR 581 Simulation Modeling (enroll in OR&IE 581) STENGR 582 Simulation Analysis (enroll in OR&IE 582) STENGR 650 Applied Stochastic Processes (enroll in OR&IE 650) STENGR 651 Probability (enroll in OR&IE 651) STENGR 670 Statistical Principles (enroll in OR&IE 670) STENGR 671 Intermediate Applied Statistics (enroll in OR&IE 671) STENGR 768 Selected Topics in Applied Probability (enroll in OR&IE 768) STENGR 769 Selected Topics in Applied Probability (enroll in OR&IE 769) Mathematical Statistics and Probability Unit STMATH 171 Statistical Theory and Application in the Real World (enroll in MATH 171) STMATH 311 Introduction to Analysis (enroll in MATH 311) STMATH 471 Basic Probability (enroll in MATH 471) STMATH 472 Statistics (enroll in MATH 472) STMATH 474 Basic Stochastic Processes (enroll in MATH 474) STMATH 621 Measure Theory and Lebesgue Integration (enroll in MATH 621) STMATH 671-672 Probability Theory (enroll in MATH 671-672) STMATH 674 Introduction to Mathematical Statistics (enroll in MATH 674) STMATH 771-772 Seminar in Probability and Statistics (enroll in MATH 771-772) STMATH 774 Asymptotic Statistics (enroll in MATH 774) STMATH 777-778 Stochastic Processes (enroll in MATH 777-778) Social Statistics Unit STSOC 210 Statistical Reasoning I (enroll in ILRST 210) STSOC 211 Statistical Reasoning II (enroll in ILRST 211) STSOC 310 Statistical Sampling (enroll in ILRST 310) STSOC 311 Practical Matrix Algebra (enroll in ILRST 311) [STSOC 312 Applied Regression Methods (enroll in ILRST 312)] [STSOC 313 Design and Analysis of Experiments (enroll in ILR 313)] [STSOC 314 Graphical Methods for Data Analysis (enroll in ILRST 314)] [STSOC 315 Statistical Analysis of Legal Data (enroll in ILRST 315)] STSOC 410 Techniques of Multivariate Analysis (enroll in ILRST 410) STSOC 411 Statistical Analysis of Qualitative Data (enroll in ILRST 411) STSOC 499 Directed Studies (undergraduate) (enroll in ILRST 499) STSOC 510 Statistical Methods for the Social Sciences I (enroll in ILRST 510) STSOC 511 Statistical Methods for the Social Sciences II (enroll in ILRST 511) [STSOC 610 Seminar in Modern Data Analysis (enroll in ILRST 610)] [STSOC 611 Statistical Consulting (enroll in ILRST 611)] STSOC 612 Statistical Classification Methods (enroll in ILRST 612) [STSOC 613 Bayesian and Conditional Inference (enroll in ILRST 613)] STSOC 614 Structural Equations with Latent Variables (enroll in ILRST 614) [STSOC 615 Expert Systems and Probabilistic Network Models (enroll in ILRST 615)] STSOC 619 Special Topics in Social Statistics (enroll in ILRST 619) STSOC 630 Econometrics II (enroll in ECON 620) STSOC 639 Econometrics I (enroll in ECON 619) [STSOC 711 Robust Regression Diagnostics (enroll in ILRST 711)] [STSOC 712 Theory of Sampling (enroll in ILRST 712)] [STSOC 713 Counting Processes with Statistical Applications (enroll in ILRST 713)] [STSOC 714 Topics in Modern Statistical Distribution Theory (enroll in ILRST 714)] [STSOC 715 Likelihood Inference (enroll in ILRST 715)] [STSOC 716 Statistical Consulting (enroll in ILRST 716)] [STSOC 717 The Analysis of Discrete Data (enroll in ILRST 717)] STSOC 730 Advanced Topics in Econometrics II (enroll in ECON 720) [STSOC 731 Time Series Econometrics (enroll in ECON 721)] STSOC 739 Advanced Topics in Economics I (enroll in ECON 719) STSOC 799 Directed Studies (Graduate) (enroll in ILRST 799) Related Courses in Other Departments ARME 410 Business Statistics ARME 411 Introduction to Econometrics ARME 417 Decision Models for Small and Large Business ARME 710 Econometrics I ARME 713 Quantitative Methods I BTRY 90 Introduction to Biomathematics BTRY 101 Introduction to Biometry I BTRY 102 Introduction to Biometry II BTRY 421 Matrix Computations BTRY 498 Undergraduate Supervised Teaching CEE 594 Engineering Management Methods II: Managing Uncertain Systems CEE 621 Water-Resources Systems II: Stochastic Hydrology CHEM 794 Quantum Mechanics CHEM 796 Statistical Mechanics COM S 522 Computational Tools and Methods for Finance COM S 624 Numerical Solution of Differential Equations COM S 626 Computational Molecular Biology CRP 321 Introduction to Quantitative Methods for the Analysis of Public Policy CRP 632 Methods of Regional Sciences and Planning I ECON 321 Applied Econometrics GOVT 602 Field Seminar in Political Methodology GOVT 605 Comparative Methods H ADM 371 Hospitality Quantitative Analysis HD 401 Empirical Research NS 637 Epidemiology of Nutrition NS 639 Epidemiology Seminar NS 641 Applied Regression PAM 205 Research Methods PAM 230 Introduction to Policy Analysis PAM 423 Risk Management and Policy PAM 613 Program Evaluation and Research Design PAM 617 Qualitative Methods for Program Evaluation PHYS 316 Modern Physics I PHYS 562 Statistical Physics PHYS 574 Quantum Mechanics II PSYCH 472 Multiple Regression PSYCH 473 General Linear Model R SOC 619 Research Design II SOC 502 Basic Problems in Sociology II SOC 506 Research Methods in Sociology II T&AM 310 Advanced Engineering Analysis I T&AM 311 Advanced Engineering Analysis II VETPMD 665 Study Design213 Rice Hall (255-8008)
The Cornell Program in Comparative and Environmental Toxicology is a broadly based inter-college program facilitated by the Institute for Comparative and Environmental Toxicology (ICET). ICET serves as a focal point for all research, teaching, and cooperative extension activities in the broad interdisciplinary area of environmental toxicology at Cornell and encourages the development of collaborative programs between faculty members in many university departments.
The graduate Field of Environmental Toxicology provides training leading to the M.S. or Ph.D. degrees. There is both breadth and depth in many facets of environmental toxicology and related disciplines. The program offers a combination of research and didactic training that is designed to prepare students for solving the problems of modern toxicology. Concentrations include cellular and molecular toxicology; nutritional and food toxicology; ecotoxicology and environmental chemistry; and a minor concentration of risk assessment, management, and public policy. Research by the faculty associated with the program focuses on the interactions of drugs, pesticides, and other potentially hazardous environmental agents with a wide variety of living organisms (including humans) as well as the ecosystems with which these organisms are associated.
Courses in environmental toxicology are cosponsored by the university's academic departments and are open to all graduate students and to undergraduates who have permission of the instructor. The titles and numbers of these courses are listed below. Details of course content are provided in the catalog under the listings of the cosponsoring department. Further information concerning the program and the development of new courses may be obtained through the director of graduate studies, 213 Rice Hall, telephone: 255-8008, e-mail: envtox@cornell.edu.; http://www.cfe.cornell.edu/icet/.
TOX 370 Pesticides and the Environment (ENTOM 370) TOX 437 Eukaryotic Cell Proliferation (BIO S 437) TOX 490 Insect Toxicology and Insecticidal Chemistry (ENTOM 690) TOX 607 Ecotoxicology (Natural Resources 607) TOX 610 Introductory Chemical and Environmental Toxicology (Natural Resources 610) TOX 611 Molecular Toxicology TOX 625 Nutritional Toxicology (Animal Science 625) TOX 698 Current Topics in Environmental Toxicology (Nutritional Sciences 700, NatRes 698, Ag & Bio Eng 698) TOX 702 Seminar in Toxicology TOX 750 Cancer Cell Biology (Biological Sciences 750, Vet. Pathology 750) TOX 899 Master's Thesis and Research TOX 999 Doctoral Thesis and ResearchExciting opportunities are available at Cornell University for students interested in environmental study and research. Environmental curricula and courses are found in many parts of the university including the biological, physical, and social sciences, engineering, the humanities, and the design professions. Each of the majors and concentrations/specializations listed below provide opportunities for environmental study. Information can be found in each Department's Courses of Study section, on departmental web pages, or by contacting each department directly. The following information is also available on the Center for the Environment's web page http://www.cfe.cornell.edu/cfe/education.
* Agricultural and Biological Engineering offers environmental study opportunities through a combination of engineering sciences, biology, and applications courses. Within the ABEN major, there are several concentrations including Environmental Systems Engineering and Environmental Systems Technology.
* Within the Department of Applied Economics and Management students can select a specialization in Environmental and Resource Economics, which provides training in the application of economic concepts to environmental and resource use problems.
* Biometry and Statistics majors learn to use quantitative methods to solve problems in the biological, physical, and social sciences.
* Communication offers a curriculum for Communication in the Life Sciences that deals with the impact of communication on environmental, health, science, and agricultural issues, and with public perceptions of risk.
* Crop and Soil Sciences provides instruction in four specializations: agronomy, crop science, science of earth systems (see multi-college opportunities below), and soil science. The department also has strong programs in the environmental information sciences including geographic information systems and remote sensing.
* Earth and Atmospheric Sciences is a new department that offers majors in atmospheric sciences and geological sciences, as well as the Science of Earth Systems major. Students in the Colleges of Agriculture and Life Sciences, the College of Arts and Sciences, and the College of Engineering can choose from a variety of options, depending on their interests.
* Entomology provides students with a basic background in biological and environmental sciences, with a special emphasis on the study of insects.
* Environmental Science is a new major in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences that is pending approval. The proposed major provides an integrative and broad-based program in the physical, biological, and social sciences. The major consists of foundation courses and environmental core courses in earth, biotic, human, and economic systems. Students focus their upper-level study in a concentration or "environmental track," which provides expertise in a particular area. For more information about this new major, contact the Center for the Environment cfe.cornell.edu or (607)255-7535.
* Landscape Architecture focuses on the art of landscape design as an expression of cultural values combined with the natural processes of the ambient environment. The program promotes interaction among the areas of horticulture, architecture, and city and regional planning.
* Natural Resources has four concentrations that focus on systems that yield renewable natural resources such as wildlife, forests, fish, and water.
* Plant Sciences students can specialize in plant biology, plant genetics and breeding, plant pathology, plant protection, or horticultural sciences including floriculture and ornamental horticulture, and fruit and vegetable science.
* Rural Sociology is a major that includes interrelated foci: development sociology; population, environment, and society; and applied social data analysis.
* General Studies provides opportunities for motivated students--with their faculty adviser--to plan a sequence of courses suited to their individual interests, abilities, and objectives in an area not encompassed by existing programs.
* Biology majors are enrolled in either the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences or the College of Arts and Sciences. Students can concentrate in a number of areas including biochemistry, ecology and evolutionary biology, marine biology and oceanography, general biology, microbiology, plant biology, plant biotechnology, and systematics and biotic diversity. Students can also enroll in the interdisciplinary Biology and Society major (see "Multi-College Majors" below).
* Chemistry and Chemical Biology offers a full range of courses in physical, organic, inorganic, analytical, theoretical, bioorganic, and biophysical chemistry.
* Science and Technology Studies is a major that focuses on the important roles of science and technology in society. Students select a concentration that draws together a group of related courses. Current concentrations include science, technology, and public policy; technology, culture, and society; environment, science, and society; and history and philosophy of science. Science and Technology Studies also offers the Biology and Society major (see "Multi-College Majors" below).
* Civil and Environmental Engineering offers an accredited undergraduate program in civil engineering and permits students to pursue one of two options leading to a Bachelor of Science degree, one of which is environmental engineering. This option emphasizes study of environmental engineering, water resource systems, and fluid mechanics and hydrology.
* Urban and Regional Studies is offered by the Department of City and Regional Planning and is focused on the problems of human communities and regions.
* Design and Environmental Analysis is concerned with planning, designing, and managing interior environments to satisfy human needs. The department offers concentrations in interior design, facility planning and management, and human factors and ergonomics.
* Science of Earth Systems is designed to educate students across the breadth of the earth sciences without sacrificing the depth of understanding that is needed to face the environmental challenges of the twenty-first century. Students can focus on environmental science, climate dynamics, oceanography, hydrological science, geophysics, and environmental biophysics. The Science of Earth Systems major is open to students in the Colleges of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Engineering, and Arts and Sciences.
* Biology and Society is offered as a major by both the College of Arts and Sciences and the College of Human Ecology. Additionally, students in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences can develop an approved sequence of courses under the College's general studies option. Students in the Biology and Society major combine training in biology with exposure to perspectives from the social sciences and humanities on the social, political, and ethical aspects of modern biology.
At Cornell, environmental experiences are not limited to classroom work or studies in a major field. There are many other ways to learn about the environment including formal experiences like the Undergraduate Research Programs or environmental courses such as the annual Seminar on Sustainable Development. Another course, Environmental Stewardship in the Cornell Community, was organized by undergraduate students to address new strategies for improving the University's overall environmental performance.
Students can also study abroad in over 40 countries or gain valuable public policy experience by spending a semester in the Cornell-in-Washington program. To enhance their learning experience, students can connect with a variety of campus resources including Cornell Plantations, Laboratory of Ornithology, Agricultural Experiment Station, Center for the Environment, Ecology House, or the Center for Religion, Ethics, and Social Policy.
Opportunities to associate with like-minded student colleagues can be found in many student-run organizations with environmental themes including the Cornell Greens, Cornell Students for Composting, Dillmun Hill Organic Farm, United Progressives, Entomaniax, Cornell Hookbill Association, Wildlife Society, and the International Association of Camel Breeders. Students also publish Ursus, a magazine forum for environmental issues at Cornell.
Environmental lectures, seminars, and conferences are a Cornell specialty. At Cornell a student might hear a lecture by one of the University's notable A. D. White Professors-at-Large, which include among others Jane Goodall, international expert on African primates, and William McDonough, a Time Magazine "Hero for the Planet." Also, in April of each year, the Jill and Ken Iscol Distinguished Environmental Lecture features a prominent scientist or policymaker.
The surrounding Ithaca community offers Cornellians a range of environmental activities-from outdoor recreation to an organic farmers market to local activism-which most college towns cannot match. Local organizations like EcoVillage at Ithaca, Finger Lakes Land Trust, Cayuga Lake Watershed Network, and the various Finger Lakes State Parks are terrific local resources for the environmentally inclined. The area's unique natural beauty is a haven for outdoor enthusiasts and casual observers of nature.
For more information on Cornell's environmental programs contact:
Center for the Environment
Attn: Education Coordinator
200 Rice Hall
Ithaca, NY 14853
Tel: 607/255-7535
Fax: 607/255-0238
E-mail: cucfe@cornell.edu
Business and Preprofessional Study
Undergraduate preparation for business is found in many schools and colleges at Cornell. Students most frequently take courses in more than one area, as well as in related fields, to construct a program to suit their interests and career objectives. Each of the following areas provides a different focus for application and use of business study and training, and students should consider carefully the implications of each program when making a choice. (Graduate study is available in the Johnson Graduate School of Management as well as in graduate fields following each of the undergraduate options.)
The areas most often pursued include applied economics and management (soon to be only the second accredited undergraduate business program in the Ivy League; College of Agriculture and Life Sciences), economics (College of Arts and Sciences), engineering, hotel administration, policy analysis and management (College of Human Ecology), industrial and labor relations, and sociology.
Applied economics and management. This is the undergraduate business degree program at Cornell whose requirements are consistent with the AACSB-International Association for Management Education, the accrediting body for university business programs. Here students gain a general business degree, with courses spanning the fields of marketing, finance, management, accounting, business law, and human resources. Students also participate in specialized programs focusing on entrepreneurship, small business, food industry management, and agribusiness.
Economics. This program provides a broad view of that social science concerned with the description and analysis of the production, distribution, and consumption of goods and services, the understanding of monetary systems, and the comprehension of economic theories and models. It is viewed more often as preprofessional than as training for immediate practice in business or economics.
Engineering. This area provides much of the management personnel of modern industry. Engineers frequently climb the ladders of technological management that lead to more general management responsibilities; more than half of the management-level personnel of major corporations such as General Electric, Xerox, IBM, and Du Pont have engineering degrees. In addition to becoming managers by being effective technical supervisors, many students enter engineering explicitly anticipating graduate business education, judging that an engineering background is particularly appropriate for management in a technology-oriented society.
Hotel administration. The undergraduate program in hotel administration prepares individuals to be mid- to upper-level managers and entrepreneurs for the hospitality industry (lodging, food service, and travel) and allied fields. Instruction is provided in the areas of administration and general management, human-resources management, accounting and financial management, food and beverage management, law, properties management, communication, science and technology, economics, and marketing.
Policy analysis and management. Study in the department develops an understanding of the market economy from both buyers' and sellers' perspectives. The focus is on the economic behavior and welfare of consumers in the private, public, and mixed sectors of the economy. An understanding of economics, sociology, and government policy provides the basis for an analysis of consumers' rights and responsibilities.
Industrial and labor relations focuses on the interactions among human beings, organizations, and institutions. It encompasses not only the relationships between employer and employee but the political, economic, social, and psychological factors that affect those relationships. It includes the study of the hiring, training, and motivating of individual workers; negotiation and conflict resolution; and the economic and technological changes that affect the jobs that people perform. Finally, it embraces the many regulations and regulatory agencies created by our society to protect and help both employer and employed.
Sociology. The program provides disciplined understanding of society and social issues. The insights and analytical skills you will acquire are applicable to corporate, government, and
nonprofit settings, and the department's focus on social organization and institutions will prepare you well for graduate or professional programs in business schools. (Also see the description of the Society and Economy Concentration in the Department of Sociology section of Arts and Sciences.)
Courses in areas directly related to these business programs are found in many of the university departments. For example, quantitative methods may be studied in the departments of Mathematics and Computer Science, and courses in public administration are found in the departments of Government and City and Regional Planning. There are additional programs that allow students with an interest in business to focus on a particular geographic area. Examples are the Latin American Studies Program, the South Asia Program, and the Africana Studies and Research Center. Such interdisciplinary programs as the Program on Science, Technology, and Society and the various programs in international agriculture provide additional opportunities for study of interest to business students.
Because Cornell has the Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management, special opportunities exist for highly qualified undergraduates to combine their undergraduate programs with graduate study in that school. Students in the double-registrant program generally receive a bachelor's degree after four years of study and a Master of Business Administration (M.B.A.) degree after the fifth year of study, rather than the usual sixth year. Students in all Cornell undergraduate colleges and schools are eligible to explore this option. There is also a program with the College of Engineering that allows qualified students to earn a B.S., M.B.A., and Master of Engineering degree in six years. Admission to these combined degree programs is limited to particularly promising applicants. Careful planning is required for successful integration of the work in the two schools.
Law schools do not prescribe any particular prelaw program, nor do they require any specific undergraduate courses as do medical schools. Law touches nearly every phase of human activity, and there is practically no subject that cannot be considered of value to the lawyer. Therefore, no undergraduate course of study is totally inappropriate. Students contemplating legal careers should be guided by certain principles, however, when selecting college courses.
Medical and dental schools, while not requiring or recommending any particular major course of study, do require that a particular selection of undergraduate courses be completed. These courses usually include general chemistry and organic chemistry, biology, physics, and a year of English composition (or a first-year writing seminar). In addition, many medical schools require or recommend mathematics and at least one advanced biological science course, such as biochemistry, genetics, embryology, histology, or physiology.
There is no major program that is the best for those considering medical or dental school, and students are therefore encouraged to pursue their own intellectual interests. Students are more likely to succeed at, and benefit from, subjects that interest and stimulate them, and there is no evidence that medical colleges give special consideration to any particular undergraduate training beyond completion of the required courses. In the past, successful Cornell applicants to medical and dental schools have come from the Colleges of Arts and Sciences, Agriculture and Life Sciences, Human Ecology, and Engineering. The appropriate choice depends to a great extent on the student's other interests.
Exceptionally qualified students in the Colleges of Agriculture and Life Sciences, Arts and Sciences, and Human Ecology may apply for acceptance to the Medical College through a double registration procedure arranged between Cornell University and Cornell's Weill Medical College in New York City. This procedure allows registered students to save one year in pursuit of the bachelor's and M.D. degrees. This is not a traditional "seven year program"; separate application to the Medical College is required. Further information about this procedure is available from the Health Careers Program office at Cornell Career Services, 103 Barnes Hall, Ithaca, New York, 14853-1601.
There is no specific preveterinary program at Cornell, and students interested in veterinary medicine as a career should select a major area for study that fits their interests while at the same time meeting the entrance requirements for veterinary college as listed below. Most preveterinary students at Cornell are enrolled in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, which offers several applied science majors, including animal science, that can lead to related careers if the student does not go to veterinary college. Some enter other divisions of the university, especially the College of Arts and Sciences, because of secondary interests or the desire for a broad liberal arts curriculum.
The college-level prerequisite courses for admission to the College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell are English composition, biology or zoology, physics, inorganic chemistry, organic chemistry, biochemistry, and microbiology. All science courses must include a laboratory. These requirements, necessary for admission to the College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell, may vary at other veterinary colleges.
For information on additional preparation, including work experience and necessary examinations, students should consult the brochure, Admissions Information, obtained by writing to the Office of DVM Admissions, College of Veterinary Medicine, Cornell University, S2-009 Schurman Hall, Ithaca, New York 14853-6401. Information on the Guaranteed Admissions Program is available from the same address.
Qualified students in the College of Agriculture and Life Sciences may apply for acceptance in a double-registration program arranged between Cornell University and the College of Veterinary Medicine at Cornell. This program allows registered students to save one year in pursuit of the bachelor's and D.V.M. degrees. Further information about this program is available from the Health Careers Program office at the Career Center, Cornell University, 103 Barnes Hall, Ithaca, New York 14853-1601.
1 Adopted by the Faculty Council of Representatives, May 24, 1976, Records, pp. 4525-27C, Appendix A; March 11, 1981, Records pp. 5298-5303C; May 12, 1982, Records, pp. 5505-06C; April 10, 1985, Records pp. 5991-6002C and May 15, 1985, Records, pp. 6073-84.
2 "Arbitrary and Capricious" describes actions which have no sound basis in law, facto, or reason are grounded solely in bad faith or personal desires. A determination is arbitrary and capricious only if it is one no reasonable mind could reach.
3 "Clear and convincing" as a standard of proof refers to a quantum of evidence beyond a mere preponderance but below that characterized as "beyond a reasonable doubt" and such that it will produce in the mind of the trier of fact a firm belief as to the facts sought to be established.
4 See the definition at section II.B.4.c.
Hunter R. Rawlings III, president
Carolyn A. (Biddy) Martin, provost
Antonio M. Gotto Jr., provost for medical affairs
Harold D. Craft Jr., vice president for administration and chief financial officer
James J. Mingle, university counsel and secretary of the corporation
Carolyn N. Ainslie, vice president for budgeting and planning
Henrik N. Dullea, vice president for university relations
Polley Ann McClure, vice president for information technologies
Susan H. Murphy, vice president for student and academic services
Mary George Opperman, vice president for human resources
Inge T. Reichenbach, vice president for alumni affairs and development
vacant, vice president for financial affairs and university controller
J. Robert Cooke, dean of the university faculty
Walter I. Cohen, vice provost
Cutberto Garza, vice provost
Robert L., Harris, Jr., vice provost
Robert C. Richardson, vice provost
Mary J. Sansalone, vice provost
John Silcox, vice provost
It is the policy of Cornell University actively to support equality of educational and employment opportunity. No person shall be denied admission to any educational program or activity or be denied employment on the basis of any legally prohibited discrimination involving, but not limited to, such factors as race, color, creed, religion, national or ethnic origin, sex, sexual orientation, age, or handicap. The university is committed to the maintenance of affirmative action programs that will assure the continuation of such equality of opportunity. Sexual harassment is an act of discrimination and, as such, will not be tolerated. Inquiries concerning the application of Title IX may be referred to Cornell's Title IX coordinator (assistant director, gender equity) at the Office of Workforce Diversity, Equity and Life Quality, Cornell University, 160 Day Hall, Ithaca, New York 14853-2801 (telephone: 607 255-3976; TDD: 607 255-7665).
Cornell University is committed to assisting those persons with disabilities who have special needs. A brochure describing services for persons with disabilities can be obtained by writing to the Office of Workforce Diversity, Equity and Life Quality, Cornell University, 160 Day Hall, Ithaca, New York 14853-2801. Other questions or requests for special assistance can also be directed to that office. Students with disabilities should contact the Office of Student Disability Services, Cornell University, 424 Computing and Communications Center, Ithaca, New York 14853-2601 (telephone 607 254-4545; TDD: 607 255-7665).