COURSE DETAIL
Jazz music is one of the 20th century's most important and enduring art forms.
It is an original American musical art form which emerged around the beginning of the 20th century in African American communities in the Southern United States. It developed out of the interchange between African and European music traditions. Jazz has also evolved into many styles while absorbing the elements of other music genres and has also influenced other cultures, such as theater, dance, and literature.
One of the basic elements that sets jazz apart from other types of music is improvisation, which is the instant composition of a new melody.
This course addresses the basic theory and foundation for jazz improvisation, through playing, singing, listening, writing, analyzing, and tapping. Through performance practices, the course aims to teach how to apply the theory and how to build a jazz vocabulary. Upon completion of the course, students will have the basic tools to create jazz melodies at a simple harmonic level.
Admission is by audition only, which is held on the first class. The audition will comprise of the following:
(1) All applicants except the drummer will be required to play the major scale and the harmonic minor scale in a few keys; eighth notes at a tempo of 120 BPM.
(2) Playing session: medium up tempo swing blues in the key of Bb
For the horn player and stringed instrument player: improvised solo
For the pianist and guitarist: accompaniment with reading chord symbols and improvised solo
For the bassist: walking bass line with reading chord symbols
For the drummer: swing beat accompaniment
COURSE DETAIL
This course is designed for students who are able to write around 100 basic kanji characters to study around 100 kanji characters and to practice reading and writing sentences using these characters.
The course is designed for students who have already learned the first half of elementary-level grammar. The aim of this course is to enhance reading and writing skills as well as to acquire the ability to use elementary-level vocabulary and grammar. The course is designed based on the sentence structures and grammatical patterns learned in the textbook, Elementary Japanese for Academic Purposes Vol. 2 (Lesson 13 to 18).
COURSE DETAIL
<Level IV>
Target Students: Those who have completed and mastered elementary level studies.
Course Goals: To develop understanding and command of the 100 important intermediate sentence patterns for further improvement of the four skills of reading, listening, speaking, and writing. To master the 4,000 basic words and 800 basic Chinese characters.
<Reading Comprehension A>
Goal: To understand slightly complex passages and sentence structures.
Contents: Reading of passages on current topics such as simple newspaper articles.
COURSE DETAIL
This advanced-level lecture course covers standard topics of microeconomics. The first half looks at basic price theory and market efficiency, and the second half focuses on market failures (such as market power and asymmetric information) and analyzes whether or not the basic properties of competitive markets are continuing to hold. The course will also introduce game theory and its application as a basic tool.
COURSE DETAIL
This course provides a survey of environmental policy from the perspective of economics. Topics include principles of environmental economics, air pollution, and waste management. It focuses on the application of economic concepts to the analysis of environmental policy and the consequences of economic behavior on the environment. The main aim of the course is to learn how basic economic concepts can be applied to the analysis of economic and social incentives concerning individual and collective decision-making in the context of the environment. Prerequisite: Principle of Microeconomics.
COURSE DETAIL
This is a special studies course involving an internship with a corporate, public, governmental, or private organization, arranged with the Study Center Director or Liaison Officer. Specific internships vary each term and are described on a special study project form for each student. A substantial paper or series of reports is required. Units vary depending on the contact hours and method of assessment. The internship may be taken during one or more terms but the units cannot exceed a total of 12.0 for the year.
COURSE DETAIL
Target Students: Those who have partially completed elementary level studies.
Course Goals: To master the grammatical expressions learnt at the elementary level, as well as to develop understanding and command of upper elementary and intermediate level grammar and to improve the four skills of reading, listening, speaking and writing. To master the 2,000 basic words and 500 basic Chinese characters.
Contents: Mastering the elementary level grammar and developing understanding and command of grammar using an upper elementary level textbook, followed by introduction of basic sentence patterns of the intermediate level using an intermediate level textbook. Improving the four skills of listening, speaking, reading and writing through various class activities designed for developing each skill. Mastering the 2,000 basic words and 500 basic Chinese characters.
COURSE DETAIL
This course provides an introduction to the field of cognitive psychology. Cognitive psychology is defined as the study of all processes by which sensory input is transformed, reduced, elaborated, stored, recovered, and used (Neisser, 1967). The course aims to scientifically explore and gain insight into human cognitive mechanisms and processes. The information processing of the mind as a cognitive system is modeled and explained based on experimental data.
COURSE DETAIL
Information is a fundamental concept in the world around us that can be investigated from several perspectives. The mathematical theory of information provides a framework for a formal description and interpretation of information. In many ways, this mathematical framework (its applications and the interpretations it provides) is based on concepts from probability theory and statistics. This course provides students with an introduction to the field of information theory. Students will learn to apply and interpret a wide range of concepts from statistics and probability theory to develop, model, and understand the concept of information, as well as related ideas, in a structured and organized way. Many of the tools of statistics and probability theory students encounter in the course should be familiar to them from introductory or intermediate statistics courses, while other concepts might be new.
COURSE DETAIL
This course is designed for students learning Japanese for the first time and aims to enhance basic listening and speaking skills. The course design is based on the sentence structures and grammatical patterns learned in the course “Essential Japanese 1H-1 & 1H-2." It is recommended to take “Essential Japanese 1H-1 & 1H-2” together with this course.
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