Courses
Geography and Urban Studies
0406. Geographic Methodology (3
s.h.)
Critical review of current concepts and methods used in geographic
and urban interdisciplinary research.
0408. Special Topics
Seminars (3 s.h.)
A faculty member offers special seminars in research specialty.
Recent topics have included current perspectives on development,
the information and technology needs of low resource community
organizations, and information systems design and management.
0409. Special Topics
Seminars (3 s.h.)
A faculty member offers special seminars in research specialty.
Recent topics have included current perspectives on development,
the information and technology needs of low resource community
organizations, and information systems design and management.
0410. Modern Urban Analysis (3
s.h.)
An introduction to the social-scientific literature in urban
studies. Emphasis will be on developing an interdisciplinary
and comparative perspective. Topics include urbanization, urban
form, the political economy of cities, and current models in
urban policy and planning.
0411. Community Based
Research (3 s.h.)
Applied, empirical research experience on issues affecting
urban communities in the Philadelphia area. Students conduct
research projects in collaboration with local community organizations
working for community change. Course includes the study of
contemporary urban issues and training in research methods,
applied research techniques, report writing, and negotiating
client-driven research.
0414. Urban Social Geography (3
s.h.)
Analysis of interaction between social and physical space in
the U.S. city. Urban social travel, migration, and neighborhood
organization are emphasized.
0415. Land Use Planning (3
s.h.)
An examination of the forces that influence land use planning
in and around American metropolitan regions. Considers economic
perspectives (land values), public interest perspectives (zoning
subdivision, housing and building codes, redevelopment and
renewal programs, etc.) and social perspectives of land use.
Also examines separately housing, commercial locations, and
industrial development.
0425. Regional Development
in the Third World (3 s.h.)
A geographical approach to the issues of economic development
with emphasis on food production, environmental problems, spatial
and regional planning, the provision of services (especially
health and education), and integrated rural development.
0430. Government Program
Evaluation (3 s.h.)
Political and technical problems of evaluating public policy
for urban areas. Emphasis on problems of implementation, equity
in service delivery, and measuring the success or failure of
public policies.
0432. Seminar in Economic
Models (3 s.h.)
This course uses basic economic theory to understand the dynamics
of the growth and decline of cities and regions in a national
and global framework. Topics covered include land use theory,
transportation and housing, public services, suburbanization,
segregation and inequality, public policy, and regional development.
0433. Geography of Urban
Services (3 s.h.)
Analysis of concepts basic to understanding spatial service
patterns. Emphasis is on use of models in service area delineation.
0439. Medical Geography (3
s.h.)
An analysis of the factors responsible for the geographic patterns
of disease, mortality, and health care services: the role of
the environment in evaluating mortality and disease patterns.
0440. Economic Development
Planning for Cities (3 s.h.)
Causes of economic decline in American cities, history of governmental
policies to promote urban economic development, and major tools
available to local economic planners, with special emphasis
on the political issues of who controls the programs and who
reaps the benefits.
0444. Urban Housing (3
s.h.)
On overview of the economic, social, physical, and political
forces that have molded the present urban housing stock. Examination
of the implications of present urban housing stock. Examination
of the implications of present trends for the future and the
development of rational housing policies, emphasizing the Philadelphia
metropolitan area.
0445. Poverty and Employment (3
s.h.)
Examines the relationships among the globalization of the economy,
economic restructuring, metropolitan labor markets, and poverty
focusing on contemporary U.S. cities. The course will evaluate
theoretical and public policy debates about employment and
poverty. Particular attention will be paid to how class, gender,
and racial inequities are reproduced in the urban economy.
0447. Comparative Urban
History (3 s.h.)
Review of methodological tools for comparative readings and
research on the history of cities, across cultural and chronological
boundaries.
0448. Urban Development:
Race, Class and Gender (3 s.h.)
Research seminar that examines the spatial dimensions of metropolitan
inequality, focusing on how inequality is perpetuated along
class, race, and gender lines. Topics include urban growth
politics, zoning and land use planning, domestic architecture,
racial segregation, poverty, and homelessness. Students will
design a research proposal based on course materials.
0449. Seminar on Homelessness
in America (3 s.h.)
Explores various issues relating to homelessness, with a focus
on public policy and research. A dominant theme is how public
policy decisions have contributed to this problem. Topics are
the experience of being homeless, the epidemiology of homelessness,
structural and individual theories of homelessness, the history
of homelessness in the U.S., substance abuse and mental illness
among the homeless, homeless women and children, homelessness
in Philadelphia, and public policies needed to address the
problem.
0452. Problems of Environmental
Quality (3 s.h.)
Local urban environmental problems are considered by members
of the class in research teams, with a view toward seeking
possible solutions to them.
0455. Seminar in Environmental
Studies (3 s.h.)
Consideration of geography of critical environmental problems.
0456. Seminar in Environmental
Studies (3 s.h.)
This course is designed to provide an understanding of the
ecological consequences of contemporary economic development.
The focus is on countries at the low end of the developmental
scale countries of Latin America, Africa and South Asia. The
course illustrates through case studies how changes in the
relations of production give rise to increasing degradation
of resources.
0461. Cartographic Production (3
s.h.)
Advanced approaches to design and production of thematic maps.
0462. Fundamentals of
Geographic Information Systems (3
s.h.)
Introduction to the use of Geographic Information Systems to
analyze spatial data sets that are available from sources like
the U.S. Census, environmental monitoring networks, and satellite
remote sensing.
0465. Advanced Geographic
Information Systems (3 s.h.)
Assumes basic familiarity with Geographic Information Systems.
Focuses on applying G.I.S. techniques to the study of such
processes as urban sprawl, socio-economic change, and ecological
functioning of urban regions.
0466. Cartographic Design (3
s.h.)
Practical work with photographic and related processes to produce
a map printed in color.
0467. Mapping Practicum (3
s.h.)
Students are assigned cartographic projects and encouraged
to plan, design, and execute them for faculty and those from
outside firms and planning agencies.
0468. Mapping Practicum
II. (3 s.h.)
Description same as 467.
0471. Readings in Geography (1
s.h.)
Open to graduate students with permission of adviser and instructor.
0472. Advanced Readings
in Geography (2 s.h.)
Open to graduate students with permission of adviser and instructor.
0473. Advanced Readings
in Geography (3 s.h.)
Open to graduate students with permission of adviser and instructor.
0481. Internship in Geography/Urban
Studies (1-6 s.h.)
On-the-job training for graduate students with local consulting
firms, planning commissions, community organizations, and various
state, local, and federal government agencies in the Philadelphia
metropolitan area.
0482. Research Methods
in Geography/Urban Studies (3 s.h.)
Overview of the social science research process, from the formulation
of researchable questions, through the design of the investigation,
collection and analysis of data, to the presentation of findings.
Includes the regulations governing research on human subjects.
0489. Internship Paper (1-6
s.h.)
Students completing their internship requirement for the M.A.
degree are required to complete a summary paper that is based
on their experience in the field. This course is a guided writing
course in which students meet with their internship adviser
to develop and complete the paper.
0505. Master's Research (1-3
s.h.)
Required of all candidates for the master's degree with the
thesis option. To be taken after the student's prospectus has
been approved by advisory committee.
0510. Individual Study (1
s.h.)