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Courses & Degrees
"My experience was one I wouldn't trade for the world."  --Sabrina Porter

International learning doesn't have to be abroad but can happen here on Carnegie Mellon's campus. The following CIT general education-acceptable courses, minors, and university-wide international courses can offer students a richer global understanding.


Minors with an International Focus

All of the following minors, except the International Engineering minor, can also be second majors.

International Engineering

Chinese Studies

European Studies

French and Francophone Studies

German

Global Politics

Hispanic Studies

Japanese

Russian Studies

Social and Cultural History


Courses

The following global courses count toward CIT's general education requirements in the humanistic category.


70-342, Managing Across Cultures

79-011, European History AP Credit

79-104, Introduction to World History

79-113, Culture and Identity in American Society

79-207, Development of European Culture

79-225, Religions of China

79-226, History and Cultures of East Asia

79-227, History of World Architecture

79-233, The United States and the Middle East since 1945

79-237, City Histories: Delhi and London

79-241, African-American History I

79-270, Chinese Culture and Society

79-271, Modern China

79-272, Modern Japan: 1868 to the present

79-280, Russian History from the First to the Last Tsar

79-281, Modern Soviet History: From Communism to Capitalism

79-294, The Making of the African Diaspora in the New World

82-182, Language and Culture: Language in Its Social Context

82-193, The Faust Legend from Europe to Russia

82-226, Intensive German Language and Culture

82-246, Intensive Spanish Language and Culture

82-273, Introduction to Japanese Language and Culture

82-276, Intensive Japanese Language and Culture

82-303, French Culture

82-325, Introduction to German Studies

82-333, Introduction to Chinese Language and Culture

82-336, Intensive Chinese Language and Culture

82-342, Spain: Language and Culture

82-343, Latin America: Language and Culture

82-384, Language and Culture: Language in its Social Context


Univeristy-Wide International Courses

CIT students may choose to take classes in Fall 2009 from the following list to further expand your global experience.


12-100, Introduction to Civil and Environmental Engineering

12-651, Air Quality Engineering

12-713, Industrial Ecology and Sustainable Engineering Design

19-424, Energy and the Environment

19-611, Global Competitiveness: Firms, Nations and Technological Change

19-622, Introduction to Sustainable Engineering

19-665, Materials for Energy Storage

48-240, Historical Survey of World Architecture and Urbanism

48-315, Environment I: Climate & Energy

48-343, American Built Environment Since 1860

48-448, History of Sustainable Architecture

51-371, Design & Social Change

57-173, Survey of Western Music History

70-343, Managing Across Cultures

70-365, International Trade and International Law

70-398, International Finance

70-480, International Marketing

76-319, Environmental Rhetoric

76-332, African American Literature

76-337, World Literature

79212, China and Its Neighbors

79-233, The United States and the Middle East since 1945

79-235, Caribbean Cultures

79-250, Mahatma Gandhi and the Long American Civil Rights Movement

79-255, Irish History

79-258, French History: From the Revolution to De Gaulle

79-261, Chinese Culture and Society

79-266, Russian History: From Communism to Capitalism

79-275, Introduction to Global Studies

79-280, Experiencing Globalization

79-282, Europe and the World

79-289, Energy, Environment, Globalization in the Americas

79-298, Global Justice

79-309, 20th Century China Through Film

79-374, American Environmental History: Critical Issues

80-244, Environmental Ethics

88-359, Globalization

88-362, Diplomacy and Statecraft

88-384, Conflict and Conflict Resolution in International Relations

88-411, The Rise of the Asian Economies

99-238, Materials, Energy and Environment


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