AIR: Interrater Reliability Group 1
N-227Gen Ed Competencies Inquiry Analysis Integrative Learning Intercultural Knowledge Venue: Faculty Commons Main room (N-227) By invitation only.
Gen Ed Competencies Inquiry Analysis Integrative Learning Intercultural Knowledge Venue: Faculty Commons Main room (N-227) By invitation only.
YOU ARE INVITED As part of the college’s commitment to multidisciplinary and because Interdisciplinary courses are required for students enrolled in B.A/S programs—the Interdisciplinary Committee is hosting a Spring workshop: “Cross-Pollinating Ideas: Figuring Out Your ID Course.” Join Us! Monday, April 24th, 10am-12pm in Faculty Commons, N227 Benefits to teaching an interdisciplinary course include collaboration,
All office hours take place in the conference room of the Faculty Commons, N227. Questions: OpenLab@citytech.cuny.edu
RSVP by Tuesday, March 14, 2017
Ms. Eleanor Bergonzo (sponsoredprograms@citytech.cuny.edu)
Learn how alt / open educational resources (OERs) are sustainable, accessible, and engaging to students. Find out how to locate and adopt dynamic course materials to supplement or replace textbooks. We’ll cover all the basics!
This workshop will cover how to create tests and set up Blackboard's grade center for quizzes and assignments. To register, email itec@citytech.cuny.edu
Time Presenter Topic 11 a.m. Robin Michals Washing Away: Florida and Louisiana 12 p.m. Jenna Spevack Treetones Tour: Governors Island 2 p.m. Shauna Vey The Last Vaudevillian: Recovering Baby Peggy's Stage Years 3 p.m. Adam Wilson factorOracle: an Extensible Max External for Investigating Applications of the Factor Oracle Automaton in Real-Time Music Improvisation
Don’t sign away your rights! Your decisions today regarding your scholarship can affect you in the future. Learn how to better understand publisher contracts and how you can keep key rights to your scholarship by using the SPARC Author Addendum, a legal instrument that modifies the publisher’s agreement. RSVP to Prof. Monica Berger
Presented by Prof. David Reichman of Columbia University Abstract: Advances in light sources and time-resolved spectroscopy have made it possible to excite specific atomic vibrations in solids and to observe the resulting changes in electronic properties, but the mechanism by which phonon excitation causes qualitative changes in electronic properties has remained unclear. Here we show