College of Architecture, Art, and Planning Distribution Requirement Course List

Arts, Literature, and Culture (ALC-AAP)

Courses in this area examine arts, literature, and culture in various contexts. Students gain insights into the interplay of individual or collaborative creativity and social practice, and understand the complexities of the expression of the human condition. Topics include the analysis of artworks and literary texts, and the belief systems of social groups, cultures, and civilizations; they also focus on artistic expression itself (in creative writing, performing arts, and media such as film and video). AAP will recognize ALC classification by any college at Cornell as long as the class is taken for three or more credits and a letter grade.

ARCH 3820The Topography and Urban History of Rome in Antiquity and the Middle Ages3
ARCH 3823Urban Design, Architecture, and Art in Renaissance and Baroque Rome3
ART 1101Art as Experience3
ART 1102Art as Experience: TransMedia3
ART 1103Art as Experience: Sculpture3
ART 1104Art as Experience: Photography3
ART 1201Painting for Non-Majors3
ART 1500Summer Drawing I3
ART 1501Drawing for Non-Majors3
ART 1503Summer Drawing II3
ART 1504Introduction to Drawing in Rome3
ART 1601Photography for Non-Majors3
ART 1602Introduction to Photography in Rome3
ART 1901Studio Art for Non-Majors3
ART 2201Painting: Language of Painting4
ART 2301Print Media: The Cultures of Print4
ART 2401Introduction to Sculpture4
ART 2601Photography: Introduction to Photography4
ART 2701Media Arts, Performance, and Sound: Intersections4
ART 3099Special Topics Studio4
ART 3199Theory and Criticism: Special Topics4
ART 3201Painting: Spatial Transpositions in Painting4
ART 3202Painting: Painting Intent and Context4
ART 3203Painting: Painting Film4
ART 3299Painting: Special Topics4
ART 3301Print Media: Belonging and Representation: Relinking to Site and Unfolding the Dynamics of Display4
ART 3305Print Media: Hybridity and Syncretism in Print4
ART 3307Print Media: To Publish is to Make Publics4
ART 3399Print Media: Special Topics4
ART 3404Sculpture: Installation4
ART 3499Sculpture: Special Topics4
ART 3501Drawing: Pictorial Languages4
ART 3502Drawing: The Body4
ART 3599Drawing: Special Topics4
ART 3699Photography: Special Topics4
ART 3705Media Arts, Performance, and Sound: Sound4
ART 3707Media Arts, Performance, and Sound: Interaction4
ART 3708Media Arts, Performance, and Sound: Experimental Moving Image4
ART 3799Media Arts, Performance, and Sound: Special Topics4
ART 3803Art History: Italian Cinema4
ART 3804Black Sound and Visual Culture3
ART 5899Art History: Special Topics3
PMA 2701Media Arts, Performance, and Sound: Intersections4
PMA 3804Black Sound and Visual Culture3

Mathematics and Quantitative Reasoning (MQR-AAP)

Courses in this area study mathematics and quantitative reasoning. AAP will recognize the MQR classification by any college at Cornell as long as the class is taken for three or more credits and a letter grade.

ARCH 3702Visual Imaging in the Electronic Age4
ART 2907Visual Imaging in the Electronic Age4
CRP 3500Urban Data Analytics3
CRP 4080Introduction to Geographic Information Systems (GIS)4
CRP 4680Introduction to Urban Data Science: Theory, Applications, and Practice4
CRP 5500Urban Data Analytics3
CRP 5680Introduction to Urban Data Science: Theory, Applications, and Practice4
CS 1620Visual Imaging in the Electronic Age4
DESIGN 4680Introduction to Urban Data Science: Theory, Applications, and Practice4
DESIGN 5680Introduction to Urban Data Science: Theory, Applications, and Practice4
ENGRI 1620Visual Imaging in the Electronic Age4

Statistics and Data Science (SDS-AAP)

Courses in this area develop data literacy, essential to be an informed citizen in today's world. Students learn and apply statistical and computational techniques to effectively collect, visualize, analyze and interpret data, and present conclusions. Applications span a wide variety of contexts: providing a better understanding of the communities in which we live, guiding and enriching our lives, and driving forward scientific inquiry. Students gain an appreciation of how to ask the right questions, and how statistics can depend on the context, assumptions, and limitations of data.

CRP 4680Introduction to Urban Data Science: Theory, Applications, and Practice4
CRP 5680Introduction to Urban Data Science: Theory, Applications, and Practice4
DESIGN 4680Introduction to Urban Data Science: Theory, Applications, and Practice4
DESIGN 5680Introduction to Urban Data Science: Theory, Applications, and Practice4

Social Sciences (SSC-AAP)

Courses in this area examine social, economic, political, psychological, demographic, linguistic, and relational processes. Topics include understanding how different social contexts, for example neighborhoods, families, markets, networks, or political organizations, shape social life. Students learn to identify, describe, and explain the causes and consequences of social phenomena using quantitative and/or qualitative evidence based on systematic observation of the social world. They also learn to link evidence to theory through rigorous and transparent reasoning, and/or reflect critically on the concepts through which people make sense of the social world.

CRP 1104Introduction to Global Urban Studies3
CRP 3545Urban Adaptation to Climate Change3
CRP 3840Green Cities3