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  1. Mar 18, 2024 · Session III: Begins July 1, 2024. Enroll in a Summer Session class at Harvey Mudd College. This summer, Harvey Mudd students, other college students, ambitious high school students (including rising juniors), visiting scholars and other lifelong learners can take advantage of Harvey Mudd’s exceptional faculty to study selected courses in ...

    • Art179r Hm – Outdoor Watercolor and Mixed Media
    • Asam125 Aa – Introduction to Asian American History, 1850-Present
    • Csci005 Hm – Introduction to Computer Science
    • Csci035 Hm – Computer Science For Insight
    • Csci060 Hm – Principles of Computer Science
    • Engr086 Hm – Materials Engineering
    • Geog125 Hm – Geographies of Disease and Health Justice
    • HIST150 Hm – Technology and Medicine
    • Lit035 – Fiction Workshop
    • Math055 Hm – Discrete Mathematics

    Instructor: Suzanne Fontaine – 3 credits

    This is a hands-on studio course that will introduce you to basic watercolor materials and techniques useful for painting any subject matter. It will also provide a sampling of other media you can mix into your watercolor compositions. Geared to students with limited to no painting/watercolor experience, the course will develop your skill in observation, drawing, and watercolor painting, using a range of processes. Assignments will develop students’ technical and conceptual skills in visual m...

    Instructor: Alfred Flores – 3 credits

    This survey course examines the history of Asian immigrant groups and their American-born descendants as they have settled and adjusted to life in the United States since 1850. We will explore issues such as the experience of immigration, daily life in urban ethnic enclaves, and racist campaigns against Asian immigrants. In addition, this course utilizes an ethnic studies framework that requires students to critically explore other themes such as class, community, empire, gender, labor, race,...

    Instructor: Zach Dodds – 3 credits

    Introduction to elements of computer science. Students learn computational problem-solving techniques and gain experience with the design, implementation, testing, and documentation of programs in a high-level language. In addition, students learn to design digital devices, understand how computers operate, and learn to program in a small machine language. Students are also exposed to ideas in computability theory. The course also integrates societal and ethical issues related to computer sci...

    Instructor: Zach Dodds – 3 credits

    This course extends CSCI005 HM in developing software-composition skills. Pairing lectures and lab sessions, the experience will deepen foundations in algorithms and data structures, introduce machine learning and its mindset, weigh tradeoffs between human- and machine-efficiency, and build sophistication in software, both assembling existing software packages and from-scratch design. Students will deploy and assess computing projects of their own design – with substantive application beyond...

    Instructor: Jim Boerkoel – 3 credits

    Introduction to principles of computer science: Information structures, functional programming, object-oriented programming, grammars, logic, correctness, algorithms, complexity analysis, and theoretical limitations. Prerequisite:CSCI005 HM or CSCI005GR HM or equivalent background Runs May 20, 2024 through June 7, 2024 (3-week course). Class meets online Monday through Friday from 9:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Note: HMC students can register on the portal by searching for session SU H1 2024

    Instructor: Albert Dato – 3 credits

    Introduction to the structure, properties, and processing of materials used in engineering applications. Topics include: material structure (bonding, crystalline and non-crystalline structures, imperfections); equilibrium microstructures; diffusion, nucleation, growth, kinetics, non-equilibrium processing; microstructure, properties and processing of: steel, ceramics, polymers and composites; creep and yield; fracture mechanics; and the selec­tion of materials and appropriate performance indi...

    Instructor: David Seitz – 3 credits

    This course examines the uneven geographical distribution of disease and health, the spatial, social, and political processes that shape that uneven distribution, and some of the ways in which differently marginalized people contest health inequalities and the power relations that generate them. The course introduces a set of core concepts and theories around economic, racial, environmental and reproductive (in)justice, which help to put disease and health into geographical, historical, and p...

    Instructor: Vivien Hamilton – 3 credits

    This course explores the increasingly technological nature of medicine in the 19th and 20th centuries, investigating the impact of new technologies on diagnostic practices, categories of disease, doctors’ professional identities, and patients’ understanding of their own bodies. Technologies studied include the stethoscope, electrotherapy devices, X-rays, ultrasound, and MRI. Satisfies HMC HSA writing-intensive requirement. Prerequisite: HSA010or equivalent. Course not open to high school stud...

    Instructor: Salvador Plascencia – 3 credits

    This course is designed as an introductory workshop focusing on the writing of fiction and the discourse of craft. Through the examination of a variety of literary traditions, stylistic and compositional approaches, and the careful reading and editing of peer stories, students will strengthen their prose and develop a clearer understanding of their own literary values and the dynamics of fiction. Satisfies HMC HSA writing-intensive requirement. Prerequisite:None. Runs May 20, 2024 through Jun...

    Instructor: Dagan Karp – 3 credits

    Topics include combinatorics (clever ways of counting things), number theory, and graph theory with an emphasis on creative problem solving and learning to read and write rigorous proofs. Possible applications include probability, analysis of algorithms, and cryptography. Corequisites:MATH073 HM or equivalent. Course not open to high school students unless approved by the instructor. Runs from May 20, 2024 through June 7, 2024 (3-week course). Class meets online Monday through Friday from 1:1...

  2. The HSA requirement encourages students to pursue their interests in philosophy, psychology, political science, sociology, literature, music, photography, media studies and many other fields. With dynamic professors at Harvey Mudd and the other Claremont Colleges, you will be able to take courses in a wide range of topics of interest to you.

  3. 4 days ago · Course Descriptions - Harvey Mudd College - Modern Campus Catalog™. Home. 301 Platt Blvd. Claremont, 91711 909.621.8000 info@hmc.edu.

    • (909) 621-8000
  4. 4 days ago · For the catalog: The Harvey Mudd College Course Catalog contains information on academic programs and policies. For the handbook: The Harvey Mudd College Student Handbook describes the Honor Code and commitment to creating an inclusive community, details programs and resources, and defines College policies.

  5. 5 days ago · Specific sport and activity course offerings are announced on the Portal prior to registration each semester. For the catalog: The Harvey Mudd College Course Catalog contains information on academic programs and policies. For the handbook: The Harvey Mudd College Student Handbook describes the Honor Code and commitment to creating an inclusive ...

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  7. At Summer Session at Harvey Mudd College, Harvey Mudd students, other college students, ambitious high school students (including rising juniors), visiting scholars and other lifelong learners can take advantage of Harvey Mudd’s exceptional faculty to study selected courses in computer science, engineering, the humanities, the social sciences, the arts and mathematics.

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