Introduction to Theatre Arts
“Hybrid online/in-person activities and assignments will allow students to connect with performers and other theater professionals and to interact with New York’s theater scene.”
—Prof. Debra Caplan
“Hybrid online/in-person activities and assignments will allow students to connect with performers and other theater professionals and to interact with New York’s theater scene.”
—Prof. Debra Caplan
“How can older literary forms be ‘translated’ into an online forum? What new kinds of translation, communication, and writing can emerge out of online collaborative work?”
—Prof. Nicole Zeftel
“Your final project for the course will take the form of an updated, multimedia commonplace book. A commonplace book was a way for Renaissance writers to collect together passages from their reading that they found interesting or worth rereading.”
—Prof. Stephanie Insley Hershinow
“A significant advantage to taking a hybrid course is that you will be able to engage in discussions and debates with your classmates and professor whenever and wherever it is convenient for you. The intention of this is to encourage lively, interactive, informative exchanges about course-related themes that expand your knowledge base. But, it’s up to YOU to make this happen!”
—Prof. Antonietta D’Amelio
“Students will be expected to develop deliverables that focus on analyzing the impact of technology on the environment. Examples of deliverables include business cases, case analyses, and project reports.”
—Prof. Kannan Mohan