Graduate Bulletin 2017-18

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Pratt Institute Graduate Bulletin 2017–2018


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About Pratt Institute Academic Degrees Overview

15 School of Architecture 21 Architecture and Urban Design 23 Architecture 31 Urban Design 35 Graduate Center for Planning and Development 39 Urban Placemaking and Management 43 City and Regional Planning 49 Sustainable Environmental Systems 53 Historic Preservation 57 Facilities Management 61 Real Estate Practice 65 69 75 79 85 89 97

School of Art Art and Design Education Arts and Cultural Management Creative Arts Therapy Design Management Digital Arts Fine Arts

109 113 123 131

School of Design Communications Design Industrial Design Interior Design

141 School of Information 145 Library and Information Science 149 Museums and Digital Culture 155 Data Analytics and Visualization 161 Information Experience Design 167 Advanced Certificate Programs 177 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences 181 History of Art and Design 185 Media Studies 189 Performance and Performance Studies 193 Writing 197 Classes in the Liberal Arts 211 Graduate Admissions 225 Financial Aid 239 Tuition and Fees 245 Registration and Academic Policies 259 Student Affairs 269 Libraries 271 Board of Trustees 273 Administration 275 Academic Calendar 281 Directions 285 Index

Pratt Institute is a not-for-profit educational corporation, which, in further­ ance of its purposes and objectives, endeavors to publicize the work and achievements of its students, faculty, staff, and alumni. In connection with these efforts, the Institute reserves the right to release appropriate information and to take photographs, film, or video of faculty, staff, and alumni and their work and to use and dis­tribute these materials in any form or format in furtherance of the Institute’s purpose and objectives. Accreditation Statement Pratt Institute is a coeducational undergraduate and graduate institution chartered and empowered to confer academic degrees by the State of New York. The certificates and degrees conferred are registered by the New York State Department of Education. Pratt is accredited by the Middle States Commission on Higher Education, 3624 Market Street, Philadelphia, PA 19104, 267.284.5000. The Middle States Commission on Higher Education is an institutional accrediting agency recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education and the Council for Higher Education Accreditation. Programs in art and design are accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design (NASAD). Pratt is a charter member of and accredited by the National Association of Schools of Art and Design. The School of Architecture’s Master of Architecture program is accredited by the National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB). (For more information on NAAB accreditation, refer to the School of Architecture section, page 15.) The Master in Library and Information Science program is accredited by the Committee on Accreditation of the American Library Association. The Master in Art Therapy is approved by the Education Approval Board of the American Art Therapy Association, Inc., and as such meets the education standards of the art therapy profession. The Graduate Dance/ Movement Therapy program has been approved by the American Dance Therapy Association. Programs offered by Art and Design Education and the M.S. for Library Media Specialists (LMS) offered by the School of Information are accredited by RATE.


Pratt Institute Graduate Bulletin 2017–2018

All prospective students are encouraged to visit Pratt. Here’s how:

Web Visit Pratt online at www.pratt.edu/admissions.

Guided Tours of Brooklyn Campus Guided campus tours are scheduled Mondays and Fridays at 10 AM, 12 PM, and 2 PM, and Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10 AM and 2 PM.

Follow us on Twitter at twitter.com/prattadmissions

Campus tours can be scheduled online at www.pratt.edu/visit.

Office of Admissions The Office of Admissions is open weekdays from 9 AM to 5 PM from September through May and from 9 AM to 4 PM during June, July, and August.

Arrange a tour online at www.pratt.edu/visit. Questions? Call our Visit Coordinator at 718.636.3779 or email us at visit@pratt.edu Manhattan Campus Please contact your department to schedule a visit.

Contact the Office of Admissions at 718.636.3514 or 800.331.0834 for more information.

Pratt Institute Office of Graduate Admissions Myrtle Hall, 2nd Floor 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 Phone: 718.636.3514 or 800.331.0834 Fax: 718.399.4242



ABOUT PRATT INSTITUTE Brooklyn, New York is home to more artists than any other city in the world and home to one of the best art, archi­ tecture, and design schools in the world. Founded in 1887, Pratt Institute prepares its 3,282 undergraduates and 1,350 graduate students for rewarding and successful careers in art, design, architecture, inform­ ation and library science, and liberal arts and sciences. With a 25-acre landscaped campus in the historic Clinton Hill neighborhood of Brooklyn, a creative comm­ unity in the midst of a renaissance, and a campus in Manhattan, students are fortunate to have access to the resources of both—museums, galleries, restaurants, vintage shops, and more. Graduate programs are located on both campuses. See www.pratt.edu/admissions/applying/ applying-graduate/ for a list of locations and programs. Pratt’s programs are consistently ranked among the best in the country; its faculty and alumni include the most renowned artists, designers, architects, and scholars in their fields. Its programs encourage collaboration and the development of creative strategies for design thinking. As one of the world’s multicultural epicenters for arts, culture, design, technological innovation, and business, New York City provides Pratt students with an exceptional learning environment that extends beyond the Pratt camp­us­es. Pratt’s location is unparalleled for access to design firms and art galleries where students can intern and museums and concert halls where they may enjoy all of the city’s cultural offerings. PRATT’S PROGRAM RANKINGS #1 Interior Design (Ranked first in the country by DesignIntelligence 2016–17) #2 Animation (Ranked second on the east coast, seventh among private schools and colleges, and eighth nationally by Animation Career Review, 2015) #2 City and Regional Planning (Ranked second nationally and sixth regionally among master’s degree‑granting institutions that do not also grant Ph.D.s in the Planetizen Guide to Graduate Urban Planning Programs, 2014) #3 Industrial Design (Ranked third nationally and first regionally by DesignIntelligence 2015. Ranked fifth in U.S. News & World Report’s 2013 guide to “America’s Best Graduate Schools.” #4 Architecture (Ranked fourth among the top 13 best schools offering graduate programs in architecture by GraduatePrograms.com, 2016) #5 Art and Design(Ranked fifth in the world for art and design out of 50 colleges by QS World University Rankings by Subject, 2015)

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#8 Architecture (First Professional Degree) (Ranked eighth on the east coast by DesignIntelligence, 2013) #11 Library and Information Science Archives Program (Ranked 11th nationally by U.S. News & World Report, 2013) #12 Communications Design (Ranked number 12 nationally in U.S. News & World Report’s 2013 guide to “America’s Best Graduate Schools”) #15 Fine Arts (Ranked number 15 nationally out of almost 300 graduate fine arts programs by U.S. News & World Report 2016) Library and Information Science (Ranked among the top library science programs nationally by U.S. News & World Report 2013) Design Management (M.P.S.) (Ranked among the top programs nationally by Bloomberg Businessweek) Consistently High Rankings Ranked among the top design schools by Bloomberg Businessweek, Pratt was ranked 5th in the world among art and design schools by QS World University Rankings. WHERE CREATIVE MINDS ARE INSPIRED. Brooklyn Campus Located just 25 minutes from Manhattan, Pratt’s main Brooklyn location is the only New York City art and design school with a traditional campus. A 25-acre landscaped oasis, Pratt provides visual respite in a busy city. Many of the Institute’s 19th-century buildings have been designated national landmarks, including the 1897 Renaissance Revival-style Caroline Ladd Pratt House, which serves as the official house of the Pratt president and several students. The Pratt Library, which was built in 1896 in a similar style, boasts an interior designed by the Tiffany Glass and Decorating Co. Beyond this rich heritage, Pratt also has several distinctly modern buildings that have been constructed in the past decade. The 26,000-square-foot Higgins Hall Center Section, designed by Steven Holl Architects and Rogers Marvel Architects for the School of Architecture, opened in 2006. The following year marked the opening of the 160,000-square-foot Juliana Curran Terian Design Center— designed by Hanrahan Meyers Architects, the firm led by Thomas Hanrahan, Dean of the School of Architecture. Myrtle Hall, a LEED Gold-certified building designed by the firm WASA/Studio A, was completed in 2010 and is home to the digital arts programs. The 120,000-square-foot building is a testament to Pratt’s commitment to sustainability.

Pratt Institute

The entire 25-acre campus also comprises the celebrated Pratt Sculpture Park, the largest in New York City, with sculptures by artists including internationally renowned Richard Serra and Mark di Suvero. According to Public Art Review, it is one of the 10 best campus art collections in the United States. Pratt’s tree-lined neighborhood, Clinton Hill, has a history that is intimately intertwined with that of the Institute. A century ago, it was home to the elite of Brooklyn. The expansive mansions lining Clinton Avenue belonged to the shipping magnates and mercantile princes of the Gilded Age. Charles Pratt, whose fortune derived from his partnership with John D. Rockefeller in Standard Oil, started his Institute on family land just a few blocks from the family mansion. Clinton Hill is one of New York’s premier Victorian-era neighborhoods and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places. In part because of Pratt, it boasts an extraordinary number of creative artists, architects, designers, illustrators, and sculptors among its residents. Manhattan Campus Pratt’s Manhattan campus is located at 144 West 14th Street, within walking distance of Union Square, Chelsea’s art district, and many other leading educational and cultural institutions. The seven-story, 80,000-square-foot property offers state-of-the-art facilities within a distinctive, turn-of-thecentury Romanesque Revival building. Pratt’s Manhattanbased programs benefit from the new campus’s cutting-edge technology and its prime location. The Manhattan campus houses the School of Information, the School of Continuing and Professional Studies, the Associate Degree programs, the graduate programs in Design Management, Arts and Cultural Management, and the School of Architecture’s under­graduate Construction Management program and graduate programs in Facilities Management and Real Estate Practice. The library, exhibition space, and state-of‑the-art computer labs support the academic programs. Ways to Get to Know Pratt Request information at www.pratt.edu/request, and we’ll send you information about events, deadlines, and programs based on your interests. Visit: www.pratt.edu/visit Email: admissions@pratt.edu Call: 718.636.3514 or 800.331.0834 Facebook: Pratt Institute Admissions Visit us, ask questions, and find out why Pratt is the first choice for so many students. Campus tours are available

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STUDENTS SKETCH IN THE SCULPTUREÂ PARK


PRATT’S BROOKLYN CAMPUS


daily. Schedule your tour of the Brooklyn campus online at www.pratt.edu/visit. Manhattan tours must be scheduled through the department to which you are applying. Most graduate departments welcome prospective students who wish to visit. Please contact your graduate department for an appointment.

sound bays, multimedia video projection, and multiple servers. Equipped with everything from film editing and digital animation to two- and three-dimensional rendering, all workstations feature the latest software for the departments using them. Those working in the threedimensional realm have access to 3-D printers, laser cutters, and CNC milling machines. Pratt continually upgrades lab equipment as industry standards change.

Pratt Institute Office of Admissions Myrtle Hall, 2nd Floor 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 WHERE FACULTY AND STUDENTS ARE AT THE CENTER OF CREATIVE EXPLORATION AND INNOVATION. Professional Faculty Pratt’s over 1,000 faculty members are award-winning professionals who mentor their talented students to achieve comparable success. They bring to the classroom their experience designing buildings, creating ad campaigns, and building furniture. With different views, methods, and perspectives, faculty members share a common desire to develop each student’s potential and creativity to the fullest—to turn out competent and creative professionals who will shape the world to come. Faculty members also serve as critical connections when students are ready for employment or internships. TOOLS FOR TOMORROW Internship and Career Support The Center for Career and Professional Development The Center offers career and internship counseling, résumé and portfolio assistance, industry mentoring, professional development, workshops, entrepreneurial support, and a lifelong job search support system. Six months after graduation, 94 percent of Pratt’s graduate students are employed and 84 percent of those are employed in their field. Qualified students are offered challenging on-the-job experiences in top art galleries, publishing houses, and architecture and design firms in both Manhattan and Brooklyn, giving them firsthand work experience as well as credit toward professional degrees. State-of-the-Art Technology Pratt’s computer labs and digital output centers have the most current equipment available. Computer labs offer computer workstations, color scanners, color and black-and-white printers and plotters, digital and analog output centers, digital photography, video and

Pratt Institute

Exhibitions Gallery space, both on the Brooklyn campus and at Pratt Manhattan, is extensive, showing the work of students, alumni, faculty, staff, and other well-known artists, architects, and designers throughout the academic year. Pratt Manhattan Gallery is a public art gallery that strives to present significant work from around the world in the fields of art, architecture, fashion, and design. The Rubelle and Norman Schafler Gallery on the Brooklyn campus mounts faculty and student exhibitions, as well as thematic shows featuring the work of unaffiliated artists. In addition, Pratt has more than 15 other galleries located across its Brooklyn and Manhattan campuses. Libraries The Pratt Library on the Brooklyn campus is located in an 1896 landmark building with interiors by the Tiffany Glass and Decorating Co. Collections and services are focused on the visual arts, architecture, design, creative writing, and allied fields. Additional materials support the general education curriculum. The library houses more than 200,000 volumes of print materials, including more than 600 periodicals, rare books, and the college archives. The library also includes a multimedia center housing nearly 3,000 film and video titles, as well as the Visual Resources Center, a collection of more than 120,000 circulating architecture, art, and design digital images. The Pratt Manhattan Center Library supports visiting researchers as well as the Pratt community. The library has a growing collection of monographs, serials, and multimedia, as well as stock photography. It offers a wide range of electronic resources, including general and subject-specific databases, all of which are available off-site. Cultural Partnerships in New York City The Institute has created partnerships with a number of major cultural institutions so students may take advantage of the vast opportunities offered in Brooklyn and Manhattan. Students participate in collaborative work as part of their curriculum or simply have class visits. On their own, Pratt students may visit free of charge.

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The Brooklyn Museum, located close to the Brooklyn campus, has an impressive permanent collection and Egyptian art collection. The Asian art collection is one of the more diverse and comprehensive in the New York metropolitan area. The museum puts on several contemp­ orary—and often local—art exhibitions each year. The “First Saturday” of each month is a day of special events when the museum is free to the community. Open year-round, the adjacent Brooklyn Botanic Garden features one of the most impressive Japanese gardens outside of Japan. It captures nature in miniature: trees and shrubs, carefully dwarfed and shaped by cloud pruning, are surrounded by hills and a pond. The Cranford Rose Garden features 5,000 bushes of 1,200 varieties of roses. The Brooklyn Academy of Music, popularly known as BAM, is at the vanguard of theater offerings. You can see productions ranging from performance art and independent films to stylized Shakespearean productions. Pratt students can attend BAM events at discounted rates. In Manhattan, Pratt students also enjoy visiting these institutions where admission fees are waived: the Cooper Hewitt, Smithsonian Design Museum, the Frick Collection, the Museum of Arts and Design, The Museum of Modern Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Study Abroad Programs Pratt’s study abroad programs combine the Institute’s academic excellence with firsthand exposure to some of the most vibrant international centers of art, design, and architecture. Architecture in Turkey Architecture students visit and study urban conditions, historical monuments, and archaeological sites in Istanbul and surrounding regions. This course provides firsthand experience analyzing architecture, cultural forces, and site conditions through architectural investigations.

Architecture and Urban Design in Rome Summer Program This program gives graduate architecture and urban design students the opportunity to earn three credits studying architecture, urbanism, and design during the month of June. The program is located in Rome’s famous Trastevere district and includes travel to Florence, Siena, and Venice. Financial aid is typically available. Pratt Summer in Paris The Summer in Paris program gives students the opportunity to earn six elective credits studying literature and writing. It is available to all Pratt students, but geared more toward undergraduate students. The program is housed at the Cité International Universitaire de Paris, which is located within minutes of the Louvre, Notre Dame, the Eiffel Tower, the Sacré Coeur, and countless other points of interest. The program includes two Humanities courses. Architecture and Design in Copenhagen Summer Program The Architecture and Design in Copenhagen program gives architecture, communications design, fine arts, industrial design, and interior design undergraduate and graduate students the opportunity to earn seven credits studying cutting-edge Scandinavian design. The program lasts seven weeks, running between mid-June and early August. The curriculum combines interdisciplinary studio work with an investigation and analysis of contemporary society, politics, and environment.

Florence Summer Program In partnership with Studio Art Centers International (SACI), students study Florentine art and culture, museum and library research, documentation, and cultural heritage conservation for four weeks. The program offers two 3-credit courses.

Sustainable Planning and Development International Workshops The Graduate Center for Planning and Development (GCPD)—City and Regional Planning, Sustainable Environmental Systems, Historic Preservation, Urban Placemaking and Management, Facilities Management, and, starting in fall 2017, Real Estate Practice—offer seven courses that include an international component. The courses involve study in Brooklyn both before and after the travel element and include Tokyo, Japan, Havana, Cuba, Sao Paolo, Brazil, Rotterdam, the Netherlands, and Copenhagen, Denmark.

London Summer Programs Students have the opportunity to study e-publishing and digital scholarship at Kings College London for two weeks in the early summer and, in a separate program, study museums’ use of digital media at Ravensbourne for two weeks in July. Students can apply for one or both programs, each of which offers one 3-credit course.

Pratt in Venice Summer Program The Venice program, offered in June and July, offers six to eight credits from courses in printmaking/drawing, painting, art history of Venice, and materials and tech­ niques of Venetian art. The program is offered in collab­ oration with the Università Internazionale dell’Arte at the≈Villa Heriott and the Scuola Internazionale di Grafica.

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FILM/VIDEO BUILDING


STUDENT AT WORK IN THE METAL SHOP


Commitment to Sustainability Pratt Institute takes a leadership role in sustainability for schools of art, design, and architecture nationwide. At this critical moment, when our environment and ways of life are at risk, we have a responsibility to ensure that each of our graduates has a deep awareness of ecology, environmental issues, and social justice. In The Princeton Review’s 2013 “Guide to 322 Green Colleges,” Pratt was recognized as one of the country’s most environmentally responsible colleges. As an active participant in the American College and University Presidents’ Climate Commitment (ACUPCC), Pratt seeks to be a carbon-neutral campus. In 2010, Myrtle Hall, a LEED Gold-certified building designed by the firm WASA/Studio A, was completed. The 120,000-square-foot building is a testament to Pratt’s commitment to sustainability. Regardless of discipline, our graduates must be able to integrate best sustainable practices into their professional lives. Within each program, Pratt students are offered an opportunity to learn to think in new ways about the relationship of designer to product, architect to built environment, and artist to creative expression. The Institute is continuously working to reduce our carbon footprint, “greening” our dorms, facilities, and classrooms, and creating an ongoing, living laboratory from which our students can observe, participate, and experiment. The Institute’s Center for Sustainable Design Strategies (CSDS) is an active and collaborative resource for sustain­ able design at Pratt’s Brooklyn campus. Under the umbrella of CSDS, the Pratt Design Incubator for Sustainable Innovation provides ambitious students and Pratt alumni with a stimulating place to launch sustainability-minded businesses, providing office space, planning support, and access to shop facilities. For more information, go to csds.pratt.edu.

of Brooklyn’s major institutions. He dreamed of founding an institution where pupils could learn trades through the skillful use of their hands and accomplished this dream in 1887 when Pratt opened its doors. Today, Pratt offers students more than 25 undergraduate majors and concen­ t­rations—more than most other art and design schools in the country—and more than 25 master’s degree programs. The energy, foresight, and spirit Charles Pratt gave to his dream remain even today. Inscribed on the seal of the Institute is his motto: Be True to Your Work, and Your Work Will Be True to You. PRATT STUDENTS Pratt receives approximately 2,900 applications for its graduate class of 500, enabling the admissions committees to select a student body whose members have a wide variety of backgrounds. Thirty-four percent of the new graduate class comes from other countries, including China, Taiwan, India, South Korea, Mexico, Canada, Thailand, and Turkey. Thirty-seven percent of the graduate enrollment comes from states other than New York, giving Pratt a truly national and international student body. Although it is possible to attend Pratt part-time, 87 percent of graduate students choose to study full-time, reflecting a high degree of commitment. The Institute’s entire student body is composed of 4,632 under­grad­ uate and graduate students—33 percent men and 67 percent women. Living on Campus While there is limited housing on campus, most graduate students live off-campus in a variety of housing options, from apartments to brownstones and lofts, sharing with other students. Many opportunities are listed through the Office of Residential Life. Various optional meal plans are available for residential students.

THE HISTORY OF PRATT On October 17, 1887, 12 young people climbed the stairs of the new “Main” building and began to fulfill the dream of Charles Pratt as the first students at Pratt Institute. Charles Pratt, one of 11 children, was born the son of a Massachusetts carpenter in 1830. In Boston, he joined a company specializing in paints and whale oil products. When he came to New York, he founded a petroleum business that would become Charles Pratt and Company. The company eventually merged with Standard Oil, the company that made John D. Rockefeller his millions. Pratt’s fortunes increased and he became a leading figure in Brooklyn, serving his community and his profes­ sion. A philanthropist and visionary, he supported many

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NOTABLE ALUMNI What do the Chrysler Building and Scrabble have in common? Both were designed by Pratt alumni. Pratt has approximately 26,000 active alumni, whose achieve­ ments are a testament to the soundness of the Institute’s educational philosophy. Pratt alumni have designed well-known and award-winning furniture, clothing, buildings, and commercials, as well as artworks, which are regularly exhibited in major museums and galleries. William Boyer, designer of the classic Thunderbird Shawn Christensen, Academy Award winner Tomie dePaola, children’s book author and illustrator Jules Feiffer, cartoonist and playwright Harvey Fierstein, playwright and actor, Torch Song Trilogy Steve Frankfurt, advertising innovator Bob Giraldi, film director Felix Gonzalez-Torres, installation artist Michael Gross, executive producer, Ghostbusters Bruce Hannah, furniture designer for Knoll, named Designer of the Decade in 1990 Eva Hesse, sculptor and painter Betsey Johnson, fashion designer Ellsworth Kelly, minimalist painter Edward Koren, cartoonist, The New Yorker Naomi Leff, interior designer George Lois, advertising designer Robert Mapplethorpe, photographer Peter Max, pop artist Norman Norell, fashion designer Roxy Paine, conceptual artist Beverly Pepper, sculptor Sylvia Plachy, photographer Charles Pollock, furniture designer Paul Rand, graphic designer, created IBM logo Robert Redford, actor and director Robert Sabuda, illustrator Stefan Sagmeister, graphic designer David Sarnoff, president, RCA Corporation Tony Schwartz, creator, Alka-Seltzer commercial Jeremy Scott, fashion designer Annabelle Selldorf, gallery and museum architect Robert Siegel, architect, Gwathmey Siegel Kaufman Pat Steir, contemporary painter and printmaker William Van Alen, architect, Chrysler Building Tucker Viemeister, product designer, Oxo Good Grips Max Weber, modernist painter Robert Wilson, avant-garde stage director and playwright Carlos Zapata, residential and commercial architect Peter Zumthor, Pritzker Prize-winning architect

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BROOKLYN CAMPUS


HOW A PRATT EDUCATION WORKS Department

Programs and Emphasis

Study Abroad

Campus

Architecture and Urban Design

M.Arch. (first-professional) Architecture M.S. (post-professional) Architecture and Urban Design M.S. (post-professional)

Architecture and Urban Design in Rome, Architecture in Turkey, Architecture and Design in Copenhagen

Brooklyn

Art and Design Education

Art and Design Education M.S. (Initial Certification) Art and Design Education M.S. (Professional Certification) Advanced Certificate in Art and Design Education

Arts and Cultural Management

Arts and Cultural Management M.P.S.

Manhattan

Communications Design

Communications Design M.F.A. Package Design M.S.

Architecture and Design in Copenhagen

Brooklyn

Creative Arts Therapy

Art Therapy and Creativity Development M.P.S. Art Therapy SP/SU M.P.S. (Low Residency) Dance/Movement Therapy SP/SU M.S. (Low Residency) Dance/Movement Therapy M.S.

Design Management

Design Management M.P.S.

Digital Arts

Digital Arts M.F.A. 3-D Animation and Motion Arts Digital Imaging Interactive Arts Combined Digital Arts/Library and Information Science M.F.A./M.S.

Florence Summer Program

Brooklyn

Fine Arts

Fine Arts M.F.A. Integrated Practices Painting and Drawing Photography Printmaking Sculpture

Architecture and Design in Copenhagen, Pratt in Venice

Brooklyn

History of Art and Design

History of Art and Design M.A. Combined History of Art and Design/Fine Arts M.A./M.F.A. Combined History of Art and Design/Library and Information Science M.A./M.S.

Pratt in Venice, Florence Summer Program

Brooklyn

Humanities and Media Studies

Media Studies M.A.

Pratt Summer in Paris

Brooklyn

Industrial Design

M.I.D.

Architecture and Design in Copenhagen

Brooklyn

Information

Data Analytics and Visualization M.S. Information Experience Design M.S. Library and Information Science M.S. Library and Information Science M.S. with Library Media Specialist (L.M.S.) Museums and Digital Culture M.S. Combined Library and Information Science M.S./J.D. (with Brooklyn Law School) Library and Information Science Advanced Certificate Library Media Specialist Advanced Certificate Archives Advanced Certificate Museum Libraries Advanced Certificate User Experience Advanced Certificate Digital Humanities Advanced Certificate

London Publishing Summer School, Florence Summer Program

Manhattan

Interior Design

Three-year M.F.A. Two-year M.F.A. (advanced standing available)

rchitecture and Design in A Copenhagen

Brooklyn

Performance and Performance Studies

Performance and Performance Studies M.F.A.

Graduate Center for Planning and Development

City and Regional Planning M.S. City and Regional Planning M.S./J.D. (with Brooklyn Law School) Historic Preservation M.S. Sustainable Environmental Systems M.S. Facilities Management M.S. Urban Placemaking and Management M.S. Real Estate Practice M.S.

Writing

Writing M.F.A.

Pratt Institute

Brooklyn

Brooklyn

Manhattan

Brooklyn Sustainable Planning and Development International Workshops

Brooklyn, except Facilities Management and Real Estate Practice, which are based in Manhattan

Brooklyn

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STUDENTS OUTSIDE OF HIGGINS HALL


ACADEMIC DEGREES OVERVIEW School of Architecture Architecture (first-professional) M.Arch. 0202 Architecture (post-professional) M.S. 0202 Architecture and Urban Design (post-professional) M.S. 0205 City and Regional Planning M.S. 0206 Facilities Management M.S. 0201 Historic Preservation M.S. 0299 Real Estate Practice M.S. 0511 Sustainable Environmental Systems M.S. 0206 Urban Placemaking and Management M.S. 0206

Combined Degree Programs Library and Information Science/Digital Arts Library and Information Science/Law History of Art and Design/Fine Arts History of Art and Design/Information and Library Science Library and Information Science/Information Law and Society Planning and Law

School of Art Art and Design Education (init./prf. certification) M.S. 0831 Art and Design Education (prf. certification) M.S. 0831 Art and Design Education ADV. CRT. 0831 Arts and Cultural Management M.P.S. 0599 Art Therapy and Creativity Development M.P.S. 1099 Art Therapy and Creativity Development (spring/summer) M.P.S. 1099 Dance/Movement Therapy M.S. 1099 Dance/Movement Therapy (spring/summer) M.S. 1099 Design Management M.P.S. 0599 Digital Arts M.F.A. 1009 Fine Arts M.F.A. 1001 School of Design Communications Design Industrial Design Interior Design Package Design

M.F.A. M.I.D. M.F.A. M.S.

1009 1009 0201 1009

School of Information Data Analytics and Visualization M.S. 0703 Information Experience Design M.S. 0702 Library and Information Science M.S. 1601 Library and Information Science: Library Media Specialist M.S. 0899 Museums and Digital Culture M.S. 0702 Archives Certificate Program ADV. CRT. 1699 Conservation and Digital Curation ADV. CRT. 0702 Digital Humanities ADV. CRT. 1699 Library and Information Studies ADV. CRT. 1699 Library Media Specialist ADV. CRT. 0899 Museum Libraries ADV. CRT. 1699 User Experience ADV. CRT. 0702 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences History of Art and Design Media Studies Museum Studies Performance and Performance Studies Writing

M.A. 1003 M.A. 0601 ADV. CRT. 1003 M.F.A. 1007 M.F.A. 1599

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M.S./M.F.A. 1601/1009 M.S./J.D. 1601/1401 M.S./L.L.M. 1601/1401 M.A./M.F.A. 1009/1001 M.A./M.S.

1009/1601

M.S./L.L.M M.S./J.D.

1601/1401 0206/1401


School of Architecture

Architecture and Urban Design Architecture Urban Design Graduate Center for Planning and Development Urban Placemaking and Management City and Regional Planning Sustainable Environmental Systems Historic Preservation Facilities Management Real Estate Practice

Dean Thomas Hanrahan Assistants to the Dean Kurt Everhart Pamela Gill Director of Production Technologies Mark Parsons Office Higgins Hall North, 1st Floor Tel: 718.399.4304  Fax: 718.399.4315 arch-dean@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/architecture



Studies in the School of Architecture gather from the arts, sciences, and liberal arts to produce works of value that are sensitive to the realities of life in the cultures of the world. Graduates are imbued with strong ethics and an understanding of architects’ ability to improve quality of life. As a result, they know how to build, what to build for whom, and how to enhance the surrounding environment, in the city or country, in a public works project or a private home. The Graduate Architecture and Urban Design programs offer three graduate degrees—one professional and two post-professional. The first-professional Master of Architecture (M.Arch.) degree is an 84-credit, three-year professional degree program for students holding a four-year undergraduate degree in any field. This program prepares students to take the architectural licensing exam and to become practicing architects. Students may also receive advanced standing for pursuing further graduate studies. The post-professional Master of Science in Architecture (M.S. Arch. degree) is a 36-credit, three-semester (summer, fall, spring) program for those who hold an accredited five-year Bachelor of Architecture or the equivalent. A thesis is completed in the final semester. The post-professional Master of Architecture and Urban Design degree is a 33-credit, three-semester (summer, fall, spring) pro­gram for those who hold an accredited five-year Bachelor of Architecture or the equivalent. A culmination project is completed in the final semester. Students in the M.S. Arch. and the Urban Design programs are encouraged to develop specialized areas of research. The School of Architecture is dedicated to maintaining the connection between design theory and practice and to extending the range of knowledge necessary to fully understand the built environment. The diversity of programs within the school, and the ac­cessi­­bility of other programs within the Institute, en­ables students to pursue a wide range of interests within the field. Archi­tecture students may take elec­tives in fine arts, illustration, computer graphics, industrial design, furniture design, interior design, and photogra­phy, as well as electives in advanced archi­tec­ tural theory, design, techno­­logy, and management. The school’s location in New York City allows students immediate and frequent access to the city’s resources. The grad­

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uate programs also have excellent internal resources: a strong faculty, good facilities, and a developing research network that connects the department and its students to serious national and international work in the field. This network brings distinguished visitors to speak to graduate students in a research forum; invites visiting faculty to teach studios, workshops, and seminars; and forges extensive and thoughtful connections with inter­national cities and throughout the United States. The opportunity to learn from peers is also an exciting part of the educational experience at Pratt. Post-professional degree students come from a wide range of architectural practice, and first-professional degree students come from diverse fields of undergraduate study. The student body includes many inter­ national students, each of whom brings a different perspective to the study of architecture. The school encourages transfer students to apply and will eval­uate credits from other colleges, universities, or community colleges. The School of Architecture demonstrates daily that learning does not occur solely within the classroom. This is reflected in the annual under­graduate and graduate lecture series, which bring some of the most influential architects in the world to campus; the Center for Experimental Structures; exhibitions by students and faculty that fill three galleries on a regular basis; and the study abroad programs in Italy and France. The school publication, InProcess, documents stu­dent work throughout the year. Pratt’s Center for Community Development, formerly PICCED, one of the oldest community advocacy and technical assistance organizations in the United States, gives students additional opportunities to work on real-life projects. Students are further exposed to the professional world through optional internship programs that place them in outstanding New York architectural firms, public agencies, and nonprofit design institutions, giving them first­hand work experience as well as credit toward their professional degrees. The School of Architecture’s mission is to educate the future leaders of the design disciplines in the professional fields of archi­ tecture, urban design, city and regional planning, construction and facilities management, and historic preservation. This effort builds upon a strong context of professional education within an art and design institute that stresses the relationship between intel­lectual

18


development and creative activity. The school provides a broad cultural and intellectual base in the liberal arts and sciences while providing the specialized knowledge unique to individual disci­ plines. The importance of lifelong learning is emphasized through studio-based curricula and research-oriented thesis programs. In the United States, most registration boards require a degree from an accredited professional degree program as a prerequisite for licensure. The National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB), which is the sole agency authorized to accredit profes­ sional degree programs in architecture offered by institutions with U.S. regional accreditation, recognizes three types of degrees: the Bachelor of Architecture, the Master of Architecture, and the Doctor of Architecture. A program may be granted an eight-year, three-year, or two-year term of accreditation, depending on the extent of its conformance with established educational standards. Doctor of Architecture and Master of Architecture degree programs may require a preprofessional undergraduate degree in architecture for admission. However, the preprofessional degree is not, by itself, recognized as an accredited degree. Pratt’s Graduate Architecture and Urban Design offers the following NAAB-accredited programs: M. Arch (non-prepro­fes­sional degree + 84 credits). Next accreditation visit for all programs: 2017. Pratt’s Graduate Planning Program is accredited by the Planning Accreditation Board and offers a two-year Master of Science degree in City and Regional Planning. The Facilities Management program is non-accredited and offers a two-year Master of Science degree in Facilities Management. The School of Architecture reserves the right to temporarily retain during the academic year, for exhibition and classroom purposes, representative work of any student enrolled in its programs.

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Architecture and Urban Design

www.pratt.edu/ grad-architecture-urban-design

Graduate Architecture and Urban Design offers a firstprofessional degree in architecture and post-professional degrees in architecture and urban design. The mission of the Graduate Architecture and Urban Design (GAUD) programs is twofold. For the first-professional de­gree program, students develop expertise to engage and lead complex architectural pro­jects in the professional practice of architecture through the exploration and development of substantive me­thods of design and inquiry across the discipline. For the post-professional programs, both in architecture and in urban design, the mission is to ex­pand a student’s established profes­sional education into new forms of thinking, types of practices, and areas of expertise. In all cases, each program promotes a student’s lifelong relationship with his or her field. Students in GAUD are immersed in an exploratory design-studio culture. The three distinct degrees within the two programs—Architecture and Urban Design—share coursework, students, faculty, and events, thus allowing each program to draw upon the others’ perspectives and expertise. This mix supports the ability to integrate diverse theoretical and technical knowledge in speculative design work while emphasizing critical thinking and making. Students and faculty are engaged in the design of con­ temp­­orary experimental architectural projects and the integration of academically rigorous seminar courses in history and theory, computer media, and technology. The Graduate Architecture programs have a diverse faculty of distinguished educators and practicing archi­ tects, excellent facilities, and trans-disciplinary con­nec­ tions with the well-known art and design departments of Pratt Institute. Distinguished visitors present their work to graduate students on a regular basis in research forums, guest studios, and seminars. Faculty and students in both programs come from national and inter­­ national backgrounds. The Graduate Architecture programs at Pratt Institute’s School of Architecture contribute to the pro­gres­sive design envi­ronment for advanced architectural re­search located in New York City. The school’s New York City location provides immediate and frequent access to an extensive range of creative oppor­tunities. The international study abroad programs extend the investigation of the city to Rome and Istanbul with con­cen­trated seminars looking at both cities and their unique contributions to architecture and urbanity. Graduate Architecture and Urban Design offers two summer intensive International Study programs. One program goes to Europe, most recently Rome, and the other to Central America or Asia, most recently Cuba.

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Architecture

Chair David Erdman Assistant Chair Philip Parker Assistants to the Chair Erin Murphy Gloria Nyaega Program Coordinators Master of Architecture Alexandra Barker Master of Science, Architecture Jason Vigneri-Beane Architecture History/Theory Maria Sieira Technology Cristobal Correa Media Hart Marlow Office Tel: 718.399.4314  Fax: 718.399.4379 gaud@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ grad-architecture

Architecture is a cultural act. Both the first-professional and post-professional programs seek to formulate a contemporary approach to architecture that is “eco­ logical” in the sense that it provides collective exchanges that are both trans-disciplinary and trans-categorical. This ecological approach encourages feedback, theoretical studies, and exposure to myriad other categories and disciplines that are newly emerging in contemporary culture. It also helps students develop relationships with industry, manufacturing, and political agencies. This approach seeks to intensify hetero­geneous interests and agencies. In addition, the programs seek architectural innovations in both theory and practice of architecture and the intercon­nected phenomena out of which the discipline emerges. The Graduate Architecture program offers two degrees: Master of Archi­tecture (M.Arch.) (first-professional), and Master of Science (M.S.) in Architecture (post-professional). Master of Architecture (First-Professional) The Master of Architecture, a first-professional degree, is a NAAB accre­dited 84-credit, three-year pro­gram that maintains a mission to train students as leaders in the professional practice of architecture with sub­stantive methods of design and inquiry. The program is intended for students holding a four-year undergraduate, nonprofessonal degree in any field. Applicants with four-year, B.Sc. in Architecture or B.Sc. Eng. in Architecture may qualify for advanced standing. This program aims to establish a student’s professional education with new forms of thinking and practice and to help students develop lifelong relationships to their respective fields. Core design studios and seminars in history and theory, computer media, and building technologies in the first three semesters prepare students for the comprehensive architecture project in the fourth semester. This combined design and integrated building systems course integrates all related disciplines into the single project. The final two semesters are dedicated to advanced-option studios and seminars where students can explore a range of options within all four areas of the curriculum. Master of Science, Architecture (Post-Professional) The 36-credit, three-semester (summer, fall, spring) post-professional program aims to expand a student’s previously established professional education into new forms of thinking and practice. Open to students holding a five-year (B. Arch.) or equivalent (M.Arch.) degree in architecture, the program helps students develop a lifelong relationship to their specific interests in architecture. All students are exposed to relevant issues through rigorous

23


history and theory electives, lectures by prominent scholars, computer technology courses emphasizing critical thinking, and studios requiring integration of theoretical and technical knowledge. The program begins with an intensive summer semester concentrating in design, visualization and fabrication media, and theory; and continues in the second semester with students selecting specific concentrations in areas of digital media and fabrication. The culmination of the program is a research and design thesis project in which students develop specialized approaches to contemporary architecture within year-long themes.

Architecture

24


WORK BY VICTORIA MACEIRA (M.ARCH. ’13) AND MICHAEL GRIESER (M.ARCH. ’13)


WORK BY ERICK MALDONADO (M.ARCH. ’16), ALIHAN ONEY (M.ARCH. ’16), AND ARIF JAVED (M.ARCH. ’16)

WORK BY DANIEL LONGORIA (M.ARCH. ’16)


WORK BY JOSE ABREU (M.ARCH. ’16)

WORK BY ALIREZA KABIRI (M.ARCH. ’15)


WORK BY CHANG-KUANG CHAO (M.S. ARCHITECTURE ’12)

WORK BY ULRIKA LINDELL, MATT BOKER, AND DAN HOCH (M.ARCH. ’15)


ACHITECTURE FACULTY Vito Acconci Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., College of the Holy Cross; M.F.A. Writers’ Workshop, University of Iowa. Nick Agneta Adjunct Associate Professor B.Arch., Cooper Union; R.A., New York State. Carlos Arnaiz Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. Philosophy, Williams College; M.Arch., Harvard University. Kutan Ayata Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A. Architecture, Massachusetts College of Art, Boston; M.Arch., Pinceton University. Alexandra Barker Adjunct Assistant Professor; Coordinator, M.Arch. B.A., Harvard University; M.Arch., Harvard University. Stéphanie Bayard Adjunct Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Dipl. Arch., Paris La Villette. Meta Brunzema Adjunct Associate Professor M.Arch., Columbia University. Robert Cervellione Visiting Instructor B.Arch., Roger Williams University; M.Arch., Pratt Institute. Steven Chang Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., University of California at Berkeley. Cristobal Correa Assistant Professor B.S.C.E., Universidad de Chile; M.S.C.E., MIT. Theo David Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.Arch., Yale University. Manuel De Landa Adjunct Professor B.F.A., School of Visual Arts. Deborah Gans Professor B.A., Harvard University; M.Arch., Princeton University. James Garrison Adjunct Associate Professor B.Arch., Syracuse University. Erik Ghenoiu Adjunct Associate Professor B.A. Geography (cultural), Clark University; M.A. History of Art and Architecture, Harvard University; M.S. Geography (urban), University of Wisconsin at Madison; Ph.D. Architecture, Landscape Architecture, and Urban Planning, Harvard University.

Architecture

Jose Gonzalez Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University.

Carla Leitao Adjunct Associate Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; studied at Architecture School of Lisbon.

Catherine Ingraham Professor B.A., St. John’s College; M.A., Ph.D., The Johns Hopkins University.

John Lobell Professor B.Arch., M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania.

Hina Jamelle Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Denison University; M.Arch., University of Michigan. Robert Kearns Visiting Assistant Professor B.A.E., M.A.E., Penn State University. Karel Klein Adjunct Associate Professor B.S. Civil Engineering, B.S. Architecture, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; M.Arch., Columbia University. Carisima Koenig Visiting Instructor B.A., Drake University; M.Arch., Iowa State University. Mehmet Ferda Kolatan Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Arch. Dipl. (with distinction), RWTH Aachen. Sulan Kolatan Adjunct Professor Diploma, Technische Hochschule Aachen Universitat; M.S. Architecture and Building Design, Columbia University. Craig Konyk Adjunct Associate Professor B.Arch., Catholic University; M.Arch., University of Virginia. Christopher Kroner Adjunct Assistant Professor B.S. Architecture Design, University of Virginia; M.Arch., Columbia. Sameer Kumar Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., CEPT, Ahmedabad; M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania. Sanford Kwinter Professor B.I.S. University of Waterloo/University of Toronto; D.E.A., Université de Paris; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia University. Thomas Leeser Associate Professor Bachelor of Architecture (Vordiplom), Technische Hochschule Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany; Thesis Year Foreign Exchange Program, The Irwin S. Chanin School of Architecture at the Cooper Union; Master of Architecture (Dipl. Ing.), Technische Hochschule Darmstadt, Darmstadt, Germany.

Ariane Lourie-Harrison Adjunct Associate Professor A.B., Princeton University; M.Arch., Columbia University; Ph.D. (modern architecture), Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Peter Macapia Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design; M.T.S., Harvard University; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia University. William MacDonald Professor B.Arch., Syracuse University; M.Sc. Architecture and Urban Design, Columbia University. Radhi Majmuder Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. Economics; M.S. Civil Engineering, Columbia University; M.B.A. Global Executive, London Business School. Rosalinda Malibiran Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch. Design, University of Florida; M.Arch., Columbia University. Elliott Maltby Adjunct Associate Professor B.A. Philosophy, Kenyon College; Master of Landscape Architecture, University of California at Berkeley. Deborah McGuinness Visiting Associate Professor B.S. Civil Engineering, Villanova University. Benjamin Martinson Visiting Instructor Bachelor of Music, University of Colorado, Boulder; M.Arch., Pratt Institute. Bruce Nichol, Arb, Riba Visiting Professor B.A. (Hon.), Huddersfield Polytechnic; Graduate Diploma, Architecture, Oxford Brookes University. Signe Nielsen Adjunct Professor B.A., Smith College; B.S.L.A., City College School of Architecture; B.S., Pratt Institute. Philip Parker Adjunct Associate Professor, Chair of GAUD B. Design in Architecture, University of Florida; M.Arch., Yale University. Brian Ringley Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., M.Arch., University of Cincinnati. David Ruy Associate Professor B.A., St. John’s College; M.Arch., Columbia University.

29


Richard Scherr Director, Facilities Planning, Adjunct Professor B.Arch., Cornell University; M.S. Architecture, Columbia University.

CURRICULA

Erich Schoenenberger Adjunct Associate Professor B. Environ. Design, Technical School of Nova Scotia; M.S. Advanced Architecture and Design, Columbia University.

Semester 1 ARCH-601 Design Studio I: Fundamentals ARCH-611 Computer Media I: Multimedia ARCH-631 Structures I ARCH-651 History and Theory I: Modern History Credit subtotal

Paul Segal Adjunct Professor B.A., M.F.A., Princeton University. Benjamin Shepherd Adjunct Associate Professor B.S.C. Environmental Science, Northland College; M.A. Environmental Management, Yale School of Forestry. Maria Sieira Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Yale University; M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania. Henry Smith-Miller Adjunct Professor B.A., Princeton University; M.Arch, University of Pennsylvania. Roland Snooks Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., RMIT University; B. App.Sci.Environ. Design, University of Canberra; M.S. Advanced Architecture and Design, Columbia University. Michael Szivos Adjunct Assistant Professor B.Arch., Louisiana State University; M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University. Jeffrey Taras Visiting Instructor B.A., M.A., University of Michigan; M.Arch., Columbia University. Maria Ludovica Tramontin Adjunct Assistant Professor B.S. Civil Engineering, University of Cagliari, Italy; M.S., Columbia University GSAPP; Ph.D., University of Cagliari, Italy. Nanako Umemoto-Reiser Adjunct Professor B.A., Osaka University of Art, Japan; B.Arch., Cooper Union. Jason Vigneri-Beane Adjunct Associate Professor; Coordinator, B.P.S. Arch., M.S. Arch., SUNY at Buffalo; M.Arch., Iowa State University.

M.Arch. in Architecture 5 3 3 3 14

Semester 2 ARCH-602 Design Studio II: Context 5 ARCH-612 Computer Media II: Advanced Multimedia 3 ARCH-632 Structures II 3 ARCH-753 History and Theory III: Non-Western History 3 Credit subtotal 14 Semester 3 ARCH-703 Design Studio III: Urban Mixed Use ARCH-652 History and Theory II: Architectural Theory ARCH-761 Environmental Controls ARCH-762 Material and Assemblies Credit subtotal

3 3 3 14

Semester 4 ARCH-704 ARCH-763

Design Studio IV: CAP Integrated Building Systems History/Theory Elective ARCH Elective Credit subtotal

5 3 3 3 14

Semester 5 ARCH-805 ARCH-861

Design Studio V: Vertical Option Professional Practice History/Theory Elective ARCH Elective Credit subtotal

5 3 3 3 14

Semester 6 ARCH-806

Design Studio VI: Vertical Option 5 History/Theory Elective 3 All-Institute Elective 6 Credit subtotal 14 Total credits required 84

5

M.S. in Architecture Semester 1 ARCH-981 Pro Seminar I ARCH Elective ARCH-803 Summer Design Studio VI: Vertical Option Credit subtotal

John Christopher Whitelaw Visiting Instructor B.S., Georgia Institute of Technology; M.Arch., Columbia University.

Architecture

Semester 2 ARCH-901 ARCH-982 ARCH-988

30

3 6 5 14

Fall Design Studio Pro Seminar II Thesis Research ARCH Elective Credit subtotal

Semester 3 ARCH-912 Thesis All-Institute Elective Credit subtotal Total credits required

5 3 3 3 14

5 3 8 36


Urban Design

Chair David Erdman Assistant Chair Philip Parker Coordinator David Ruy Assistants to the Chair Erin Murphy Gloria Nyaega

The Graduate Architecture and Urban Design program, offered on the Brooklyn campus, is a unique threesemester program for students who have already comp­ leted a professional degree in archi­tecture. Preparing students to take leadership positions in the 21st century, the program takes into con­sider­ation the most urgent questions confronting the design of cities today. Guided by leading design professionals and scholars, students develop power­ful contemporary design tech­ niques and a sophisticated conceptual outlook in order to advance new strategies and new possibilities. As of 2010, for the first time in human history, the majority of the global population now lives in cities. As noted by the World Health Organization, seven out of 10 people will be living in cities by the year 2050. Given the astonishing scale at which urbanization is taking place today, how we are designing our cities is becoming synonymous with how we are designing civilization itself. Mirroring the com­plex­ity of the contemp­orary situation, the program is itself highly international. From all corners of the world, students converge on this program in New York City, a city that remains one of the great laboratories for urban thought and innovation. Intensive and ambitious in its scope, the program is structured around a single urban design project that is con­tinuously developed by each student across three studio semesters. Each studio semester has a specific focus that is supplemented by advanced seminar topics in histories of urban design, urban planning and zoning policies, Geographic Information Systems (GIS), and digital design technologies. Recently, the program continued its speculative investigation of producing new land masses within the New York City estuary. Students examined the spectacular and problematic opportunities that come with creating new land where none existed before. The geo-engi­neer­ing scenarios considered how this problem might articulate a new kind of architectural ground leading to new urban typologies. Projects developed extensions of this premise into new real estate economies, new infra­structures, new zoning logics, and perhaps most importantly, new experiences. Examining as a precedent the astonishingly artificial geology of New York City itself, students were asked to consider the profound and paradoxical coherence of a city that is always changing.

Office Tel: 718.399.4314  Fax: 718.399.4379 gaud@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ dept-urban-design

31


WORK BY ASENA GUMERIC (M.S. ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN DESIGN ’15)

WORK BY SAYALI PAWAR (M.S. ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN DESIGN ’16)


WORK BY SAHIL DAGLI AND SABARISH PARTHASARATHY (M.S. ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN DESIGN ’16)


URBAN DESIGN FACULTY Vito Acconci Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., College of the Holy Cross; M.F.A. Writers’ Workshop, University of Iowa. Carlos Arnaiz Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. Philosophy, Williams College; M.Arch., Harvard University. Stéphanie Bayard Adjunct Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Dipl. Arch., Paris La Villette.

David Ruy Associate Professor B.A., St. John’s College; M.Arch., Columbia University. Erich Schoenenberger Visiting Instructor B. Environ. Design, Technical School of Nova Scotia; M.S. Advanced Architecture and Design, Columbia University. Nanako Umemoto-Reiser Adjunct Professor B.A., Osaka University of Art, Japan; B.Arch., Cooper Union.

Meta Brunzema Adjunct Associate Professor M.Arch., Columbia University. Jose Gonzalez Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University.

M.S. in Architecture and Urban Design (Post-Professional) Semester 1 UD-803 UD Studio I UD-813 Methods and Computer Applications UD-993 Urban Design Theory Credit subtotal

Sulan Kolatan Adjunct Professor Diploma, Technische Hochschule Aachen Universitat; M.S. Architecture and Building Design, Columbia University. Carla Leitao Adjunct Associate Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; studied at Architecture School of Lisbon. William MacDonald Professor M.Sc. Architecture and Urban Design, Columbia University; B.Arch., Syracuse University; attended the Architectural Association in London. Elliott Maltby Adjunct Associate Professor B.A. Philosophy, Kenyon College; Master of Landscape Architecture, University of California at Berkeley. Benjamin Martinson Visiting Instructor Bachelor of Music, University of Colorado, Boulder; M.Arch., Pratt Institute. Signe Nielsen Adjunct Professor B.A., Smith College; B.S.L.A., City College School of Architecture; B.S., Pratt Institute. Philip Parker Adjunct Associate Professor, Assistant Chair of GAUD B. Design in Architecture, University of Florida; M.Arch., Yale University.

34

5 3 3 11

Semester 2 UD-901 UD Studio II 5 UD-981A Culmination Project Research 3 UD-991 Urban Design and Implementation: Case Studies 3 All-Institute Electives 3 Credit subtotal 14 Semester 3 UD-902

Mehmet Ferda Kolatan Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Advanced Architectural Design, Columbia University; Arch. Dipl. (with distinction), RWTH Aachen.

Urban Design

CURRICULA

UD Culmination Project All-Institute Elective Credit subtotal Total credits required

5 3 8 33


Graduate Center for Planning and Development

The Graduate Center for Planning and Development (GCPD) is an alliance of six programs with a shared value placed on urban sustainability—defined by the “triple bottom line” of environment, equity, and economy. The six graduate Master of Science programs are: ll City and Regional Planning ll Sustainable Environmental Systems ll Historic Preservation ll Urban Placemaking and Management ll Facilities Management ll Real Estate Practice Each of the six graduate programs maintains its inde­ pen­dence, degree, and depth of study. Yet with the advice of coordinators and department chairs, students can move among the six programs, with the further option to follow set tracks for specialized or multi­faceted studies. Studios bring together students from all six graduate programs for interdisciplinary teamwork. GCPD also offers linkages to the under­graduate Construction Manage­ment program, with the oppor­tunity to focus on real estate development; Brooklyn Law School, with the oppor­tunity to earn a joint master’s/Juris Doctor; and the Pratt Center for Community Development, with the opportunity to combine study and advocacy. The primary mission of the GCPD is to provide a pro­fes­sionally oriented education to a student body whose members have diverse cultural, educational, and profes­ sional backgrounds. The GCPD welcomes applicants with undergrad­­uate degrees in a wide range of disciplines. In the application process, the GCPD values creativity, civic engage­ment, and depth of experience, in addition to intellectual capacity.

Coordinator David Burney 718.399.4323 dburney@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Adia Ware 718.399.4340 aware@pratt.edu

Urbanism In this century, as in the last, the major human force on our planet is migration to metropolitan areas, while the major challenge of the present and future is addressing global warming. Prior city-planning values of aesthetics (as per the City Beautiful movement of the late 19th century) and new technology (as per the City Efficient movement of the mid-20th century) must now be augmented with a new City Sustainable movement. The GCPD is especially committed to realizing this paradigm on the commu­nitywide as well as the citywide basis. Environmental Sustainability The Sustainable Environmental Systems program is entirely devoted to urban environmental policy, science, and de­­sign. “Green development” and LEED courses augment the Facilities Management program curriculum. The Historic

35


Preservation program is already “greened,” as the most sustain­able ac­tion is to preserve and reuse. Social Equity and Economic Viability True sustainability considers factors such as social justice and financial realities. Advocacy and participatory planning are core principles, further propelled by the Livable Cities and Environmental Justice movements. Sustainability is not just a new set of technologies and standards, it is also a value system. Professionalism and Internships Relevant employment and internships are an important component of the GCPD’s educational approach. Students entering with work in a relevant field may earn credits through work experience/portfolio credit. Unpaid and paid intern­ships are available. The resulting variety of profes­ sional experiences enriches seminar discussions and studio teamwork, provides students with a wealth of contacts in the field, and strengthens their job qualifications. Impact Through internships, partnerships, studios, demon­stra­ tions of professional competence, and directed research, students have ample opportunity to work on real-world and real-time issues. Successes are illustrated in this catalog and in the GCPD newsletter. (Check the websites for each program.) New York’s history, diversity, and international character offer a rich training ground for planners, preservationists, developers, and sustain-­ ability practitioners. Students graduate equipped with the technical knowhow, collabora­tive abilities, and critical-thinking skills necessary to pursue professional careers and plan for environmental and social justice in urban places. Alumni play leading roles in a broad spectrum of jobs in the public, private, and nonprofit sectors. GCPD courses are offered in the evenings, except for the Historic Preservation program’s courses, which are concentrated on two weekdays and evenings. This scheduling affords students maximum flexibility to work or intern, and affords the GCPD the ability to tap as faculty the region’s most accomplished professionals. These include the founders of community organizations, executives in development firms, New York City commis­ sioners, political leaders, and more. The Pratt Center The GCPD collaborates closely with the Pratt Center for Community Development (www.prattcenter.net)—one of the na­tion’s foremost university-based research and

Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development

technical assistance organizations in the service of disadvantaged communities. A number of courses relate to Pratt Center projects, many students intern at the Pratt Center, Pratt Center senior staff teach in the GCPD, and other faculty work closely with the Pratt Center on research and advocacy efforts. Pratt Center’s services include: ll Visioning to identify community needs and workable strategies. ll Testimony and events to inform groups and officials about community challenges and opportunities. ll Research, recommendations for action, and advocacy to advance community plans. ll Neighborhood and regional coalitions to advance specific policy recommendations. The GCPD also enjoys a relation­ship with the New York City Environmental Justice Alliance (NYC-EJA) and with Project for Public Spaces (PPS). NYC-EJA is the city’s leading advocate for sustainability and resiliency for poor and working-class neighborhoods of color. PPS is the nation’s leading propo­nent of placemaking, traffic calming, public markets, and more, with projects all around the world. Other organizations with opportunities for intern­ ship placements include the New York City Economic Development Corporation and other city agencies, the New York Landmarks Conservancy and other civic organiza­tions, environ­mental groups, and communitybased organi­zations throughout New York City. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) With the graduate Communications Design program, the GCPD founded SAVI, the Spatial Analysis and Visualization Initiative. SAVI supports GCPD studios and research with depth in GIS analysis and with an added focus on how best to represent data, e.g., infographics. SAVI is also a resource for community and civic organizations, and in 2014 launched a certificate degree in GIS and data visualization. Global Practice The GCPD is responding to the challenges of the “global village” with courses that run partly or entirely abroad. These courses are as much about students learning global innovations and practi­ces as about providing oppor­t­ unities for students to study in foreign places. For example, Pratt students have trav­eled to Brazil to consider innova­ tive approaches to affordable housing, studied climate change infastructure with Dutch students and experts, and fleshed out the community details of a regional sus­ tain­ability plan for Goa with Indian students.

36


PROGRAMS FOR SUSTAINABLE PLANNING ANDÂ DEVELOPMENT STUDENTS HELP PLANT THE CANNONEER COURT GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECT, DECEMBER 2015.


Joint Degree in Law Pratt Institute and Brooklyn Law School (BLS) have created an open door allow­ing Pratt students to take selected courses at BLS, and vice versa. Pratt and BLS also sponsor a program leading to the degrees of Master of Science in City and Regional Planning and Juris Doctor (J.D.). Students can also participate in BLS’s Community Development Clinic, which represents community development corporations, cultural institutions, and affordable housing providers that serve underrepresented communities. The joint degrees can be earned in four to five years of full-time study, which takes less time and costs less than pursuing the two degrees independently. Students must apply and be accepted to both schools indepen­ dently. Prospective law students must take the LSAT. The joint degree can be pursued simultaneously or sequentially, so long as 15 or more credits of the Pratt master’s degree are completed after matriculation at BLS.

Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development

38


Urban Placemaking and Management

Academic Coordinator David Burney dburney@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Adia Ware aware@pratt.edu Office Tel: 718.399.4340 www.pratt.edu/pspd

In the past 15 to 20 years, there has been a paradigm shift in thinking about planning and urban design, from a primary focus on buildings to a focus on the spaces between buildings—“public space.” Rather than allowing these spaces to be formed as an afterthought of building design, “placemaking” sees the creation of successful public spaces as the starting point, which in turn dictates the siting and design of other components of the urban fabric. The Master of Science (M.S.) in Urban Placemaking and Management (UPM) prepares professionals for this rapidly growing field. Students learn to create successful, vibrant, equitable, and economically viable public spaces using a bottom-up, community-driven, people-centric approach. The program is for students with professionally oriented undergraduate education, professional degrees, or professional experience in architecture, engineering, environmental or landscape design, urban planning, and related studies. Students are immersed in the core skills of analysis, conceptual design, and management of the public realm in cities. The 40-credit program equips students to qualify for employment in a range of institutional, governmental, non‑profit, and private-sector settings. Students gain a broad theoretical knowledge of the historical, political, and social frameworks with which to conceptualize the public realm, while developing skills to analyze urban space and under­stand the relationship of public space to public policy and private development. Through studios and internships, students further gain practical understanding of the planning and design of public space, including management and the integration of the principles of sustainability into public space development. The core knowledge and skills base of placemaking as a discipline are delivered over four semesters through a combination of lectures, seminars, case studies, and studio-based exercises. Students pursue a curriculum of study structured by four academic knowledge streams: design and infrastructure, economics, planning and policy, and management. The program offers students the flexibility to develop advanced knowledge and skills through electives in three areas of focus, each corresponding to an area of employment for placemakers: ll Community-Based Design ll Parks, Open Space, and Green Infrastructure ll Transportation and Main Street Management Graduates are equipped to effectively analyze, manage, and influence the complex process of public-realm design and management.

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Internships Students have the opportunity to gain work experience in the field at some of the leading placemaking organizations in New York City. Research Fellowships The program provides a few students with the opport­ unity to do independent research focusing on placemaking. Past fellowship topics included public art and creative place­making, European placemaking, architecture and place-based theory, place and identity, secret spaces, and placemaking in Southeast Asia. Studio Culture The program strengthens students’ skills through two studios where students work individually and in teams. The studios tackle real placemaking challenges and connect students with a project for a business improve­ment district, community-based group, or another organization. Community-Based Design Concentration Drawing on Pratt Institute’s rich history in communitybased planning, the Community-Based Design concent­ ration approaches placemaking from the ground up to study how the built environment affects the health, well-being, and expression of its residents. Classes include Active Design, Public History, and Art and Social Change. Parks, Open Space, and Green Infrastructure Concentration Parks, plazas, and open spaces are key components of placemaking as both social spaces and urban connections to nature. In the Parks, Open Space, and Green Infra­ structure concentration, students focus on developing, monitoring, and managing these spaces through inno­ vative environmental systems methods. Classes include Open Space and Parks, Managing Coastal Resources, Productive and Performative Landscapes, and Sustainable Urban Agriculture. Transportation and Main Street Management Concentration Transit and main streets are the infrastructural foundation of placemaking. In the Transportation and Main Street Management concentration, students focus on developing and revitalizing places around public and alternative trans­portation hubs and main streets. Classes include Pedestrian and Bicycle Planning, Transit Equity, Downtown Economic Development, Main Street Revitalization, and Public Security: Design and Debates.

Urban Placemaking and Management

40


PLANNING SESSIONS, COURTESY OF NYC HOUSING PRESERVATION & DEVELOPMENT


URBAN PLACEMAKING AND MANAGEMENT FACULTY Caron Atlas Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.A., University of Chicago. David Burney Academic Coordinator Dip. Arch., Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh; Dip. Arch., Kingston University, London; M.S., University of London. Joan Byron Visiting Assistant Professor B.L. Arch., Pratt Institute; M.P.A., Harvard University.

Jon Meyers Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Dartmouth College; M.B.A., Columbia University. Norman Mintz Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Pratt Institute; M.S., Columbia University. Mariana Mogilevich Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Yale University; Ph.D., Harvard University. Eliza Montgomery Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch, Columbia Graduate School of Architecture Planning and Preservation.

Steve Davies Professor M.Arch., University of California, Berkeley.

Signe Nielsen Adjunct Associate Professor B.S., Pratt Institute; B.A., Smith College; B.L.Arch., City College of New York.

Mike Flynn Visiting Assistant Professor Studied at University of Vermont; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute. Christine Gaspar Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Brown University; M.Arch, M.C.P., MIT. Ingrid Haftel Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Washington; M.A., University of Chicago. Will Hart Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Vanderbilt University; M.L.A. Landscape Architecture, The University of Georgia. Tom Jost Visiting Assistant Professor B.S., Lehigh University; M.U.D. Urban Design, Pratt Institute. Gillian Kaye Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Barnard College, Columbia University. Setha Low Visiting Assistant Professor M.A. Anthropology, University of California at Berkeley. Jonathan Martin Associate Professor B.S.D., Arizona State University; M.R.P., Ph.D., Cornell University.

M.S. in Urban Placemaking and Management Semester 1 UPM-601 History and Theory of Public Place UPM-609 Lab: Analysis of Public Space UPH-614 Civic Engagement

2 5 1

Take 3 of 4 one-credit courses offered as Proseminar: UPM-602A Proseminar: Design and Infrastructure UPM-602B Proseminar: Planning & Policy UPM-602C Proseminar: Economics UPM-602D Proseminar: Management Credit subtotal 11

Cynthia Nikitin Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Clark University; M.A., New York University.

Semester 2 UPM-621 Urban and Contextual Design UPH-611 Democracy, Equity, and Public Space “Area of Focus” Electives Credit subtotal

2 6 11

John Shapiro Chair, Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment; Associate Professor Chair, Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment; B.A., Clark University; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute.

Semester 3 UPM-622 UPM-612 UPM-613

3 1 2 4 10

Ron Shiffman Professor Emeritus B.S.Arch., M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute.

Semester 4 UPM-699 Demonstration of Professional Competence 3 UPM-698 Placemaking Workshop 5 Credit subtotal 8 Total credits required  40

Jaime Stein Visiting Assistant Professor, Academic Coordinator B.S., Millersville University; M.S., Pratt Institute. Lacey Tauber Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.S., Historic Preservation, University of Texas at Austin; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute.

Meg Walker Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Wesleyan University; M.Arch., Columbia University. Don Weinreich Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch, Columbia Graduate School of Architecture Planning and Preservation.

Jonathan Marvel Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Dartmouth College; M.Arch., Harvard Graduate School of Design. William Menking Professor B.A., University of California at Berkeley; M.S., University College, London; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute.

Urban Placemaking and Management

CURRICULUM

42

Open Space and Parks Economics of Place Place, Politics, & Management “Area of Focus” Electives Credit subtotal

3


City and Regional Planning

Since its inception 50 years ago, the City and Regional Planning program, offered at the School of Architecture on the Brooklyn campus, has remained true to its emphasis on an education that stresses practice over theory, part­icipatory planning over top‑down policymaking, and advocacy over technocracy. Pratt’s accredited Master of Science in City and Regional Planning requires 60 credits. The schedule of classes allows students to enter in fall or spring, and complete their studies in two or two-and-a-half years. To promote specialized or interdisci­pli­nary study, half of the credits are in elective seminars and studios. While by no means required to do so, students can focus on one of six particular professional specializations, corresponding to the program’s areas of strength. Internships Virtually every student is assured an opportunity to take an internship, and four out of five students do so. Studio Culture All of the advanced planning studios are interdisciplinary, drawing students from other Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment (GCPE) programs: Sustain­able Environmental Systems, Facilities Management, Historic Preser­vation, Urban Place­making and Management, and Real Estate Practice. The studios tackle real planning challenges, often in connection with a project from the Pratt Center for Community Development or another advocacy organization.

Chair Eve Baron 718.687.5641 ebaron@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Adia Ware 718.399.4340 aware@pratt.edu Office Tel: 718.399.4340 www.pratt.edu/planning

Community Development and Participatory Planning Students focus on planning with communities through asset-based approa­­ch­es to strengthen healthy places and revitalize distressed ones. They learn how to build equity, regulate land use with neighborhood quality of life in mind, develop affordable housing, strengthen businesses and retain jobs, and enhance urban environ­ments through design and amenities. The program’s alliance with the Pratt Center for Community Development provides the under­ pinning for this specialization. For more information, visit www.prattcenter.net. Physical Planning Students develop an understanding of the interplay among physical, social, regulatory, cultural, and economic consider­ations in creating viable physical patterns for diverse contexts—from large-scale development to neigh­bor­hoods and cities. The empha­sis is on the experi­ ence of place and on economic and social vitality rather than on pure design or a particular design ideology.

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Placemaking and Alternative Transportation In the past 10 years there has been a paradigm shift in thinking about urbanism, from a primary focus on buildings to one on the spaces between buildings and public space. Students learn to create and manage successful, vibrant, and equitable public spaces from a bottom-up, people-centric approach. (Refer to the Urban Place­making and Management program for additional electives.) Sustainability and Resiliency In considering urban air, water, waste, and brownfield problems and best practices, students learn how to promote sustainable communities and environmental justice. (Refer to the Sustainable Environmental Systems program for additional electives.) Preservation Planning Students learn to integrate historic pre­servation in the wider context of urbanism, real estate development, and sustainability. The National Council for Preservation Education recognizes the Preservation Planning special­ ization. (Re­fer to the Historic Preservation program for additional electives.) Public-Purpose Real Estate Development Students can gain the full range of knowledge associated with expertise in real estate development, but with an emphasis on green development, affordable housing, adaptive reuse, and public/private partnerships. (Refer to the Real Estate program for additional electives). Joint Degree in Law Pratt Institute and Brooklyn Law School sponsor a pro­ gram leading to the de­grees of Master of Science in City and Regional Planning and Juris Doctor (J.D.). (Refer to the earlier GCPE sec­­tion for more details.)

City and Regional Planning

44


INTERNATIONAL COURSES RUN IN BRAZIL, CUBA, JAPAN, THE NETHERLANDS, AND TURKEY


STUDENT PLAN FOR RETAINING INDUSTRY WHILE ADDRESSING CLIMATE CHANGE IN BROOKLYN

INTERNATIONAL COURSES RUN IN BRAZIL, CUBA, JAPAN, THE NETHERLANDS, AND TURKEY


CITY AND REGIONAL PLANNING FACULTY Caron Atlas Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.A., University of Chicago. Eve Baron Chair B.A., M.S., Ohio State University; Ph.D., Rutgers University. Jenifer Becker Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Wisconsin at Madison; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute. Bethany Bingham Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Cincinnati; M.S., Pratt Institute. David Burney Associate Professor Dip. Arch., Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh; Dip. Arch., Kingston University, London; M.S., University of London. Joan Byron Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; Urban and Regional Policy Fellow, Harvard University. Mike Flynn Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Vermont; M.S.C.R.P, Pratt Institute. Michael Freedman-Schnapp Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.U.P., New York University. Adam Friedman Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Haverford College; J.D., Benjamin Cardozo School of Law. Mindy Fullilove Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Nutrition, M.D., Columbia University. Moses Gates Visiting Assistant Professor M.U.P., Hunter College. Eva Hanhardt Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Brown University; M.U.P., New York University. Daniel Hernandez Visiting Assistant Professor B.S., California State University; M.Arch., University of California at Los Angeles. Georges Jacquemart Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.U.P., Stanford University. David Kallick Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Yale University.

City and Regional Planning

Raj Kottamasu Visiting Assistant Professor Certificate in Film, Video and New Media, Art Institute of Chicago; M.C.P., Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Tanu Kumar Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Williams College; M.S., Cornell University. Frank Lang, R.A. Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Columbia University; M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania. Matthew Lister Visiting Assistant Professor Master of Suburb and Town Design, University of Miami; M.S. Real Estate Development, MIT. Alan Mallach Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Sociology, Yale University.

Ronald Shiffman Professor B.S.Arch., M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute. Mitchell Siver Professor B.A. Architecture, Pratt Institute, M.S., Hunter College. Toby Snyder Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Clark University; M.S.C.R.P., University of Pennsylvania; M.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design. Samara Swanston Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., St. John’s University. Lacey Tauber Visiting Assistant Professor B. Journalism, University of Texas at Austin; M.S. City and Regional Planning, M.S. Historic Preservation, Pratt Institute.

Elliott Maltby Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Kenyon College; M.L.A., University of California at Berkeley.

Adia Ware Visiting Assistant Professor B.I.D., Pratt Institite; M.S., Pratt Institiute.

Michael Marrella Visiting Assistant Professor M.C.P. with Urban Design Certificate, MIT.

Meg Walker Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., Columbia University.

Jonathan Martin Professor B.S.D., Arizona State University; M.R.P., Ph.D., Cornell University.

Ben Wellington Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Computer Science, Ph.D., New York University.

William Menking Professor B.A., University of California at Berkeley; M.S., University College, London; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute; doctoral candidate, The Graduate School of the CUNY.

Barika Williams Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Washington University in St. Louis; M.C.P., MIT.

Mercedes Narciso Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Simón Bolívar University; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute. Signe Nielsen Adjunct Professor B.A., Smith College; B.L.Arch., City College of New York; B.S., Pratt Institute. Larisa Ortiz Pu-Folkes Visiting Assistant Professor M.C.P., MIT. Juan Camilo Osorio Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Universidad Nacional de Colombia; M.S., University of Massachusetts. Steven Romalewski Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., Columbia University. John Shapiro Associate Professor M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute.

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Ayse Yonder Professor Diploma for Architecture, Istanbul Technical University; M.C.P., University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley.


CURRICULUM M.S. in City and Regional Planning Semester 1 PLAN-600 Fundamentals: Seminar and Studio PLAN-602 History and Theory of City Planning PLAN-603 Urban Economics Elective Credits Credits subtotal

3 3 3 14

Semester 2 PLAN-604 PLAN-605

3 3 8 14

Semester 3 PLAN-701 PLAN-810 or PLAN-820 or PLAN-850 Semester 4 PLAN-810 or PLAN-820 or PLAN-850 PLAN-891

Planning Law Planning Methods I Elective Credits Credits subtotal

5

Planning Methods II 3 Studio: Sustainable Communities Studio: Land Use and Urban Design Studio: Sustainable Development 5 Elective Credits 3 Credits subtotal 11

Studio: Sustainable Communities Studio: Land Use and Urban Design Studio: Sustainable Development 5 Directed Research 2 Elective Credits 5 Credits subtotal 12

Semester 5 PLAN-892 Demonstration of Professional Competence 3 Elective Credits 6 Credits subtotal 9 Total credits required 60

City and Regional Planning

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Sustainable Environmental Systems

Coordinator Jaime Stein 718.399.4328 jstein9@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Adia Ware 718.399.4340 aware@pratt.edu Office www.pratt.edu/ses

The Master of Science in Sustainable Environmental Systems is one of the nation’s most inno­va­tive, inter­disc­ iplinary, systems-based sustainability programs. The 40-credit Master of Science in Sustainable Environmental Systems (SES), offered in the evenings at Pratt’s School of Architecture on the Brooklyn campus, is designed to meet today’s increasing demand for environmental professionals. Students learn the interdisciplinary skills needed to assess contemporary environmental issues; catalyze innovative environ­mental problem-solving; uphold environmental and social justice; and engage diverse stakeholders in designing and developing sustainable plans, policies, and communities. Graduates are pre­pared to take on a range of roles as environmental designers, policy analysts, sustainability consultants, low-impact developers, researchers, and advocates, collaborating with environmental scientists, policymakers, and communities. The Sustainable Environmental Systems program is unique in its combination of science, design, and policy. By uniting a foundation of theoretical and technical core courses with innovative mini-courses, the program offers a uniquely comprehensive curriculum that fosters exposure to cutting-edge practicing professionals. The program encourages students to closely examine the relationships between the environment, policy, and systems design. The Sustainable Environmental Systems program is unique in its emphasis on the urban environment. As integral members of the Graduate Center for Planning and Development (GCPD), students are exposed to land use, transportation, preservation, development, and economic planning strategies. Through this exploration, students understand the complexities of the urban context and can analyze global, federal, state, and local policies accordingly. Students learn the skills needed to build and preserve sustainable urban communities. Through the Recovery, Adaptation, Mitigation and Planning initiative (RAMP), the SES program has formed an interdisciplinary suite of studio courses and work­shops in which students and faculty members from the School of Architecture work with local community leaders from the region’s most vulnerable coastal communities. The collaborative approach of RAMP enables focused interdisci­plinary study and implement­ation of resiliency strategies for sustainable coastal communities. The Sustainable Environmental Systems program welcomes students with a variety of undergraduate degrees, recognizing that sustainability is most effective when integrating a number of disciplines. Students entering the program with relevant professional expe­ rience, or with a Bachelor of Architecture or a B.S./B.E.

49


in civil engineering or environmental science, may receive up to 10 credits of advanced standing. Professional Practice Students learn from each other as well as from the faculty. Most students have had (or in the course of study will gain) work experience in the environmental area or related fields—as architects, engineers, community organizers, and entrepreneurs. As the degree is particularly rewarding for those seeking professional development, many students have existing professional experience.

the “least carbon footprint” approach is to preserve and reuse. ll Courses in two new programs—Urban Placemaking and Management and Real Estate Practice—allow SES students to explore these disciplines and further develop their areas of focus within the study of sustainable systems.

Internships Virtually every student is assured an internship with an organization, agency, or professional practice. In the past, interns have been placed with the Mayor’s Office of Long-Term Planning and Sustainability, Metropolitan Waterfront Alliance, New York Industrial Retention Network, and Pratt’s Center for Sustainable Design Strategies. Internship examples include modeling energyeffi­ciency efforts in Bedford-Stuyvesant with the Pratt Center for Community Development, working with local businesses to develop sustainability plans, and working on LEED-certified projects. (Refer to the earlier section on the GCPD for details.) Design Build Working alongside professionals, and using New York City as a laboratory, students learn a sustainability concept and its implementation. This experi­ence is reflected in our Green Infrastructure Design Build studio as well as our Green Infrastructure fellowships. Multidisciplinary Experience Bringing cutting-edge New York City sustainability practi­ tioners into the classroom gives students access to an invaluable network as they enter the professional world. The Sustainable Environmental Systems program is integrated with other GCPD programs, with the option for extended study beyond the 40-credit Master of Science in SES, as follows: ll Courses in the City and Regional Planning program expose students to land use, transportation, and economic development planning strategies. Joint studios deal with sustainability plans for development sites, neighborhoods, and businesses. ll Courses in the Facilities Management program allow for a focus on green development and property management practices. ll Courses in the Historic Preservation program allow for a focus on livability and the recognition that often

Sustainable Environmental Systems

50


STUDENTS ATTEND A CLIMATE MARCH


SUSTAINABLE ENVIRONMENTAL SYSTEMS FACULTY Bridget Anderson Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Macalester College; M.P.A., Columbia University. Alec Appelbaum Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. English, M.B.A., Yale University. Eddie Bautista Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute. Jenifer Becker Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Wisconsin at Madison; M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute. Michael Bobker Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Energy, New York Institute of Technology. Carlton Brown Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Princeton University. Ester Brunner Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.A., Columbia University. Damon Chaky Assistant Professor, Department of Mathematics and Science Ph.D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Carter Craft Visiting Assistant Professor M.U.P., New York University. Ben Gibberd Visiting Assistant Professor M.A., Edinburgh University. Raymond Figueroa Visiting Instructor Cornell University College of Human Ecology.

Visiting Assistant Professor M.C.P., MIT. Gita Nandan Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., University of California at Berkeley. Leonel Ponce Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., University of Texas at Austin; M.S., Pratt Institute. Carolyn Schaeberle Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Engineering Science, Smith College; M.S.I.D., Pratt Institute. David Seiter Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Art History, Vassar College; M.L.A. Landscape Architecture, University of Pennsylvania. Ronald Shiffman Professor B.S.Arch., M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute. Christopher Starkey Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., M.E.M., Yale University. Jaime Stein Coordinator, Sustainable Environmental Systems B.S., Millersville University; M.S., Pratt Institute. Ira Stern Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.C.R.P., Pratt Institute. Gelvin Stevenson Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Carleton College; Ph.D. Economics, Washington University. Samara Swanston Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., St. John’s University.

Tom Jost Visiting Assistant Professor M.U.D. Urban Design, Pratt Institute; B.A. Economics, Lehigh University. Gavin Kearney Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Lawrence University; J.D., University of Minnesota. Sarah Kogel-Smucker Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., Boston College Law School. Elliott Maltby Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Kenyon College; M.L.A., University of California at Berkeley. Paul Mankiewicz Visiting Associate Professor Ph.D., CUNY. Michael Marella

Sustainable Environmental Systems

52

CURRICULUM M.S. in Sustainable Environmental Systems Semester 1 SES-633A SES-631 MSCI-610

Environmental Law Sustainable Communities Science of Sustainability Professional Elective Credits Credit subtotal

Semester 2 SES-632 Environmental Economics SES-633B Environmental Impact Assessment SES-634A Climate Change and Cities SES-634B Sustainability  Indicators SES-634C Life Cycle Analysis SES-635A Solid Waste Management SES-635B Water Quality Management SES-635C  Urban Energy Management  All-Institute Elective Credits   Credit subtotal

3 3 3 5 14

3 3 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 14

Semester 3 PLAN-810 Sustainable Communities Studio or PLAN-820 Land Use Studio or PLAN-850 Sustainable Development Studio or PLAN-880A International Planning Studio 5 SES-660A Demonstration of Professional Competence 2 Elective Credits 5 Credit subtotal 12 Total credits required  40


Historic Preservation

Academic Coordinator Nadya K. Nenadich 718.399.4326 nnenadic@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Adia Ware 718.399.4340 aware@pratt.edu Office www.pratt.edu/ historic-preservation

Pratt’s Historic Preservation program prepares students for leadership in a rapidly changing preservation field. The 47-credit Master of Science in Historic Preser­ vation (HP), offered at Pratt’s School of Architecture on the Brooklyn campus, is designed to meet today’s increasing demand for preservation professionals. Students learn the interdisciplinary skills needed to assess contemp­ orary preservation issues and contribute greatly to an ever-expanding field. The Historic Preservation program aims to train pre­ servationists who are highly knowledgeable in the field, as well as critical enough to push the boundaries of the discipline. Rather than focusing on the preservation of the past, the program focuses on diverse strategies to manage change in the present. Preservation is a truly forwardlooking profession, fueled by the opportunity and the need to find creative solutions that protect cultural resources by ensuring their use and continuity through time. Pratt Institute’s M.S. degree in Historic Preservation offers a unique approach to preservation education, striving to go beyond the physical aspects of preservation in order to understand what role our discipline plays within a larger context of and sus­tain­able practices. After an intense year of core courses that provide a solid foundation in the critical areas of historic preser­ vation practice, students are encouraged to develop their particular interests. They spend their second year on a thesis project and elective courses within their chosen area of focus, specializing in a particular aspect of urban preservation and built environment manage­ ment. We seek to help students develop their own passions and expertise while they are in school, so that they graduate with a body of knowledge that can inform and contribute to the profession. Upon the successful completion of their theses, students become qualified historic preservation pract­itioners with a focus that at once broadens their knowledge base and deepens their expertise—thus en­hanc­ing their skills and the range of work that they are equipped to handle as they enter this transdisciplinary field. In addition, students have the option to explore inter­ national studios and practice on offer from other programs. A required internship in the field of historic preservation rounds out the program and ensures that students leave Pratt with relevant real-world work experience, as well as a network of professionals in preservation. The academic areas of focus not only offer students the possibility of honing their knowledge and skills to prepare for a preservation career, but also enrich historic preservation as a discipline by broadening its reach and allowing for continuity and innovation.

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There are three areas of focus within the program: Design, Conser­vation, and Sustainability; Historic Resource Management; and Community Preservation and Planning. We believe that these three areas cover many crucial aspects of preservation in order to better protect our historic resources while fostering innovation in the field. Design, Conservation, and Sustainability addresses the issues that arise during the process of designing a new structure in a historic context and offers skills and training in the conservation of historic structures. In addition, the focus area enables students to explore the nexus between historic preservation and environ­mental sustainability. Historic Resource Management addresses the issues surrounding the stewardship of historic buildings and sites, providing students with a deeper understanding of the theories and practices of historic building and site conservation, interpretation, and management. Community Preservation and Planning explores the relationship between urban planning and preservation practice, including the challenges of integrating placebased history into community planning efforts and managing change in historic neighborhoods. The Historic Preservation program resides within the Graduate Center for Planning and Development in the School of Architecture. GCPD’s mission is to create and sustain a learning community of students, faculty, and alumni that is characterized by innovative professional practice and that emphasizes planning and preservation approaches rooted in the principles of sustainability, equity, and public participation. The program takes a values-based approach to historic preservation. This means that rather than just looking at preservation through a curatorial lens, the program recognizes the need to take a more holistic approach. The values-based approach proposes that cultural issues are critical to the understanding and conservation of the built environ­ment. Moreover, it establishes that social memory is a critical aspect of dealing with historical value, because it can help bridge spaces and times by focusing on the users and not just the objects.

Historic Preservation

54


STUDENT STEPHANIE MORABITO IN SPECIAL TOPICS IN CONSERVATION: PAINT, STONE AND METALS CLASS


HISTORIC PRESERVATION FACULTY Lisa Ackerman Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Middlebury College; M.B.A., New York University; M.S., Pratt Institute. Beth Bingham Visiting Assistant Professor M.S., Pratt Institute. Patrick Ciccone Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.S., Columbia University. Carol Clark Visiting Associate Professor B.A., University of Michigan; M.S., Columbia University. Laura Klar Phillips Visiting Assistant Professor Pat Fisher-Olsen Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Thomas Edison State College; M.S., Pratt Institute. Andrew Wasserman Adjunct Associate Professor Norman Mintz Visiting Associate Professor B.A. Industrial Design, Pratt Institute; M.S., Columbia University.

CURRICULUM M.S. in Historic Preservation Semester 1 PR-640 History/Theory of Preservation PR-643B Architecture and Urban History I: Europe PR-661 Preservation Law and Policy PR-651 Building Technology Credit subtotal

3 3 3 12

Semester 2 PR-839 Studio I: Documentation and Interpretation 5 PR-600 Current Issues in Historic Preservation 1 PR-642A Concepts of Heritage 3 PR-643A Architecture and Urban History II: United States 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 3 PR-891 Thesis I PR-840 Preservation Studio 2 Concentration Elective Credit subtotal

2 5 7 14

Semester 4 PR-892 Thesis II PR-670A Concentration Elective Credit subtotal Total credits required

2 7 9 47

Nadya K. Nenadich Adjunct Associate Professor, Academic Coordinator B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.S., Columbia University; Ph.D., Polytechnic University of Cataluña. Christopher Neville Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Amherst College; M.S. Historic Preservation, Columbia University. Theodore Prudon Adjunct Professor M.A., M.S., Ph.D., Columbia University; M.S., University of Delft, the Netherlands. Lacey Tauber Visiting Assistant Professor B. Journalism, University of Texas at Austin; M.S. City and Regional Planning, M.S. Historic Preservation, Pratt Institute. Vicki Weiner Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Drew University; M.S., Columbia University. Kevin Wolfe Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Holy Cross College; B.L.A., City College of New York; M.A., Clark University; M.Arch., Columbia University.

Historic Preservation

3

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Facilities Management

Chair Regina Ford Cahill, M.S. rcahill8@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Philip Ramus fm@pratt.edu Office Tel: 212.647.7524  Fax: 212.367.2497 www.pratt.edu/ facilities-management Pratt Manhattan Campus 144 West 14th Street New York, New York 10011 212.647.7524 fm@pratt.edu

The 50-credit Master of Science program in Facilities Management (FM) prepares graduates as professionals and problem solvers to assume executive responsibilities in the management of facilities. Responsibilities include the assurance of a quality environment, cost-effective capital and operating invest­­ments, economically and environmentally sensitive operations, and the management of facilities and equipment as assets. Pratt’s Facilities Management program can be comp­ leted in two years of full-time study. All courses are offered in the evenings at the Pratt Manhattan campus. Fall and spring entrance are available. The program teaches sustainable practices and innovative approaches to emerging technologies and instills ethical values, which distinguish Pratt’s facilities management alumni as they lead the field’s efforts to advance the quality of the built environment. Special Admission Requirements Undergraduate degrees in business, property manage­ ment, environmental science, architecture, construction manage­ment, and engineering fields are preferred for admission. Applicants receiving a bachelor’s degree in other fields are also eligible but may be required to take noncredit courses in technical subjects prior to registering for required courses. Applicants must submit a statement of purpose in essay format to support the application for advanced studies. The essay should indicate an interest in or an awareness of issues addressed in the Facilities Management program. Interviews are recommended and may be scheduled by sending an email to fm@pratt.edu. Students are eligible for graduate assistantships and tuition scholarships upon acceptance into the program. Facilities management has emerged as a new area of expertise as communities, corporations, and institutions systematically plan for fiscal and ecological stewardship of the built environment. Facilities managers have become integral members of the organizational team by identifying needs, planning for growth and change, and establishing protocols for the safe, efficient, and ecologically sound operation of the built environment. The executive facilities management function consists of a distinct set of responsibilities that have proven their value to the C-suite. These include: ll Strategic planning ll Financial forecasting and budgeting ll Real estate acquisition and disposal ll Architectural and engineering planning and design

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ll Construction management, maintenance, and sustainable operations management ll The integration of new technologies into existing and planned facilities Managing these areas of responsibility requires the integration of business skills and technical expertise about the built environment. With this paradigm in mind, graduates of the Facilities Management program will be able to: ll Understand the planning, construction, and operations framework in which facilities are managed at local, regional, national, and international levels, and act as liaison between the owner and professional service agents on building teams. ll Synthesize interdisciplinary efforts and act across traditional administrative, planning, and operational boundaries to organize, coordinate, and control diverse facilities and management activities. ll Perceive and anticipate design requirements, their impact on quality of life and environmental issues, and their value in the engineering of facilities. ll Analyze facility needs and develop planning initiatives and effective implementation strategies that are responsive to specific current and projected facilities issues. ll Manage the process of facility development to complete projects on schedule and within budget to a specified standard of quality. ll Direct and lead the specialists, consultants, and in-house staff, as well as outsourcing organizations that perform specific aspects of the facilities management function. ll Coordinate development activities with ongoing operations to minimize disruptions and maintain the business continuity of facilities functions and economic viability.

Regional Planning, Urban Placemaking, Historic Preservation, and Sustainable Environmental Systems. Work and Study Facilities Management courses are offered in the evenings at the Pratt Manhattan Center, affording students maximum flexibility to combine work and study. Refer to the earlier GCPE section for more information on these opportunities.

The faculty consists of professionals actively engaged in facilities management in the public and private sectors as well as in various areas of specialization such as hospitals. This combination of actively practicing faculty and students working in the field brings a dynamic vitality to Pratt’s Facilities Management program. Pratt’s Facilities Management program collaborates with the Graduate Center for Planning and the Environment (GCPE) thus providing unique opportunities for enriched study, potentially leading to careers in real estate development, as well as expertise in planning, sustain­ability, and preservation. Students may select electives from these related fields of study: City and

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PROFESSORS AND STUDENTS HELPING TO PLANT AÂ CAMPUS GREEN INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECT


FACILITIES MANAGEMENT FACULTY Lennart Andersson Visiting Assistant Professor M.B. Engr., Wasa Gymnasium, Stockholm, Sweden; M.Arch., Savannah College of Art and Design. Regina Ford Cahill Chair, Associate Professor B.S., SUNY Downstate Medical Center; M.S., Pratt Institute.

Marjorie St. Elin Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Construction Management, Pratt Institute. Mira Tsymuk Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Economics and Computer Science, University of Business Management, Moscow, Russia; M.B.A., University of Economics and Finance, Moscow, Russia; M.A. Economics, CUNY Hunter.

Matthias Ebinger Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Construction Management, New York University; Dipl.Ing.FH, Konstanz University of Applied Science.

M.S. in Facilities Management Semester 1 FM-621 Computer Applications 3 FM-631 Principles of Facilities Management 3 FM-633 Managerial Accounting and Finance 3 FM-663 Real Estate Development 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 2 FM-632 Project Management 3 FM-634 Facility Programming and Design 3 FM-636 Facility Maintenance and Operations 3 ­ Elective Credits 3 Credit subtotal 12

William Henry Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., New York University.

Semester 3 FM-731 Strategic Planning and Management 3 FM-733 Economic Evaluation of Facilities 3 FM-735 Telecommunications: Concepts and Strategies 3 FM-771 Legal Issues 3 Credit subtotal 12

Stephen LoGrasso Visiting Assistant Professor B.S., New York Institute of Technology. Harriet Markis Adjunct Associate Professor B.S., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute; M.Eng., Cornell University.

Semester 4 FM-798 Demonstration of Professional Competence 4 HMS-697A Thesis Writing I 1 Elective Credits 9 Credit subtotal 14 Total credits required 50

Mary Matthews Professor Emerita B.A., Concentration in Sociology and Education Management, Emmanuel College; M.S. Social Work, Boston College; M.B.A. candidate, New York University Stern School of Business. Gerald F. McGowan Visiting Associate Professor M.B.A. Management, New York University. Martin McManus Visiting Assistant Professor B.B.A. Accounting, Pace University. Russell Olson Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., M.S. Urban Environmental Systems, Pratt Institute. John Osborn Visiting Associate Professor B.A. Political Science and Economics, SUNY at New Paltz; J.D., University of South Carolina Law Center. Edward Re Adjunct Associate Professor A.A.S. Construction Technology, NYC Technical College; B.S. Construction Management, M.S. Facilities Management, Pratt Institute. Audrey L. Schultz Associate Professor M.S. Architecture, Concentration in Construction Management, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University; Ph.D., Built Environment, Concentration in Lean Facilities Management, The University of Salford.

Facilities Management

CURRICULA

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Real Estate Practice

This 36-credit Master of Science program is designed to be completed in three full-time terms of study in the afternoons and evenings on the Pratt Manhattan Campus. The Real Estate Practice program supports and builds upon one of Pratt Institute’s core competencies: education in the design and planning of the built environment. Residing in the School of Architecture, the Real Estate Practice program complements existing School of Architecture programs in Facilities Management, Construction Management, Sustainable Environmental Systems, Historic Preservation, Urban Placemaking and Management, and City and Regional Planning. Mission Statement The mission of Pratt’s Real Estate Practice (REP) program is to educate and train students in the core discipline and skills of real estate practice. The goal of the program is to develop students who have the capacity to practice the business of real estate with a focus on public-private partnerships, as well as housing and urban development, with a commitment to achieving the triple bottom line benefitting society, the environment, and the economy. A key objective is to graduate students as real estate entrepreneurs who have the core skills to secure profes­ sional employment in the real estate business while supporting social inclusion, environmental sustainability, and commercial viability.

Chair Regina Ford Cahill, M.S. rcahill8@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Philip Ramus fm@pratt.edu Office Pratt Manhattan 144 West 14th Street New York, New York 10011 rep@pratt.edu

Program Focus The REP program prepares students for an employment environment that today demands flexibility on the part of real estate development practitioners and a rigorous understanding of the complexities of urban development. Whereas in the past real estate professionals typically worked in either the public or the private sector, career trajectories for professionals today vary widely as a result of changes in the development process. The increasing role of public-private partnerships means that real estate professionals interact with a much broader interdisciplinary team. In addition, the goals of sustainability—economic development, social equity, and environmental stewardship—are increasingly integrated into development planning. Similarly, achieving community-based development goals has become a facet of the development process. Real estate professionals today need the flexibility to practice across sectors while ensuring financial viability. The REP program prepares graduates to seek employ­ ment in the field by complementing one of the core competencies of Pratt Institute: education in the design and development of the built environment. The Pratt

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School of Architecture is a key setting for educating future real estate development professionals because of the interdisciplinary character of its programs. Students in the REP program will gain in-depth understanding of the core knowledge areas of real estate development practiced across the country and will develop inter­disc­ iplinary collaborative skills within the School of Archi­ tecture’s academic community.

estate transactions. The program will focus on real estate development within the framework of effective public-private partnerships.

The Curriculum The Pratt Master of Science (M.S.) in Real Estate Practice provides students with theoretical and practical knowledge and experience in the core disciplines of the real estate business, as follows:

ll

Real Estate Finance Students will be immersed in the financial instruments available to develop and invest in real estate. They will gain a practical understanding of the connection between markets and trends in order to analyze the financial viability of real estate proposals. The program will focus on urban economics and public and private financing to develop and invest in housing and urban development.

ll

ll ll

ll

ll

ll Real Estate Development Students will obtain the fundamental skills to serve as developers and project managers in housing and urban development within public-private partnership structures. They will have a sound understanding of the develop­ment process and of how to manage an integrated, multi­disci­ plinary process with multiple interests. The program will focus on the evolving field of sustainable development to achieve triple-bottom-line objectives.

Academic and Career Objectives of Program and Concentration Students will be able to apply the core disciplines in real estate to develop, invest, and finance housing and urban development projects. Students will have practical project management skills applicable to the real estate development process. Students will develop theoretical and practical knowledge of real estate practice. Students will have an area of concentration that builds on the foundational building blocks of real estate development, investment, and finance. Students will be familiar with the structures of publicprivate partnerships, mission-driven real estate practice, and sustainable development. Students will have professional experiences as part of their coursework to develop high-quality development proposals, feasibility analyses, and other reports and presentations. Students will develop networks consisting of students, professors, and real estate professionals to facilitate their transition from academia to the workforce, and to provide ongoing professional relationships as careers develop

Real Estate Investment Students will develop the capacity to move beyond the development of a single project and understand the risk and cost-benefit factors associated with real estate portfolio investment. They will acquire the foundational knowledge of real estate portfolio analysis and project risk factors in portfolio acquisitions and asset management. The program will focus on cost-benefit analysis of green, high-performance, and sustainable-development portfolio strategies. Real Estate Law Students will be grounded in the regulatory and legal parameters that directly affect the development of, and investment in, the built environment. They will have an understanding of zoning and land use, land law, publicprivate structures, and standard legal documents in real

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CURRICULA M.S. in Real Estate Practice Semester 1 REP-601 The Development Process 2 REP-602 Fundamentals of Real Estate Development Analysis 3 REP-603 Urban Economics and Market Analysis 2 REP-604 Real Estate Law and Land Use Regulation 2 REP-605 Real Estate Valuation and Capital Markets 2 REP-609 Urban Redevelopment Praticum 3 Credit subtotal 14 Semester 2 REP-651 REP-652

Public-Private Redevelopment Project Management “Area of Focus” Electives Credit subtotal

1 2 8 11

Semester 3 REP-659 Demonstration of Professional Competence 5 “Area of Focus” Electives 6 Credit subtotal 11 Total credits required 36

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Pratt Institute has admirably filled a unique position in the American educational system...I am confident that Pratt will continue its traditions of excellence in the years ahead. President John F. Kennedy, from a telegram sent on the occasion of Pratt’s 75th anniversary in 1962


School of Art

Art and Design Education Arts and Cultural Management Creative Arts Therapy Art Therapy and Creativity Development Dance Movement Therapy Design Management Digital Arts Fine Arts

Dean Gerry Snyder Acting Assistant to the Dean Ramona Allen Assistant Dean Dianne Bellino Director of Finance and Administration Daisy Rivera Office Main Building, Fourth Floor Tel: 718.636.3619  Fax: 718.636.3410 art-dean@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/soa



The mission of the School of Art is to educate those who will make and shape our built and mediated environment, our aesthetic surroundings, and our collective future. The School of Art’s graduate programs are dedicated to the primacy of a professional standard and the transformative power of creativity. We educate leaders in the creative professions to identify, understand, and benefit from the challenges of a rapidly changing world. The School of Art is dedicated to developing creative leadership in a world that requires it. The School of Art’s innovative graduate programs bring together exceptional students who flourish in an environment that encourages autonomy and growth. An internationally recognized faculty known for its excellence in teaching leads the graduate programs. Faculty members work individually with students and in small seminar classes to maximize their graduate experience. The School of Art has two parallel objectives that guide every department. One is the emphasis on professional development, where students gain the techniques, skills, methodologies, and vocabulary required for success as productive artists, film­ makers, cultural leaders, educators, and therapists. The second objective—intertwined with the first—recognizes that this technical experience only takes root within a complex cultural context. Therefore, students in the School of Art also develop the critical judgment and historical perspective needed to become creative problem solvers and leaders in their respective professions.

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Art and Design Education

Chair Heather Lewis hlewis@pratt.edu 718.636.3637 Assistant to the Chair Mirland Terlonge mterlong@pratt.edu 718.636.3681 Art and Design Education Office Tel: 718.636.3637  Fax: 718.230.6817 adeinfo@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/art-designeducation Director, Center for Art, Design, and Community Engagement K–12 Aileen Wilson awilson2@pratt.edu 718.687.5602 Deputy Director K–12 Tara Kopp tkopp@pratt.edu 718.636.3654 Youth Programs Office Tel: 718.636.3654  Fax: 718.230.6876 www.pratt.edu/youth

The M.S. Initial, Advanced Certificate, and Professional degrees prepare students to approach teaching as a creative process modeled upon and nourished by intensive studio preparation in a contemporary art context. Students engage in fieldwork and student teaching experiences which help them integrate their studio work, studies in education theory, research and teaching practice. Through­­out their teaching experiences in K-12 schools and community-based educational settings students: ll provide holistic studio learning opportunities for young people ll value young people’s social and cultural assets ll connect to young people’s families and communities. Upon graduation, students are proficient in their research skills and communications about contemporary art and design practices as they advocate for studio-based art and design programs in diverse learning contexts. Students practice teaching in Saturday Art School and in New York City’s public schools. Saturday Art School is a laboratory where learning how to teach and research­ ing issues of pedagogy are modeled upon artistic practice. Students test ideas, develop a personal teaching style, and explore research questions through participation and observation. Students thus get opportunities to work collaboratively with their peers, community members, and professionals in the field, while they learn to develop lessons and construct environments that promote critical inquiry and creative practice. A range of art practices is presented and explored, from traditional forms to contemp­orary multidisciplinary works. Our approach to art and design education is dis­ting­ uished by a willingness to look to other disciplines for inspiration. In recent years, we have drawn upon the work of artists, educators, and scholars in diverse fields such as play and performance, museum education, and comm­unity art and design education. As reflective practitioners and researchers, students are prepared to work effectively in diverse cultural contexts and to apply interdisc­iplinary perspectives in a variety of edu­ca­ tional settings. THE PROGRAM’S STRUCTURE M.S. in Art and Design Education with Initial Teacher Certification in Visual Arts, Pre-K–12 (Brooklyn campus, a 38-credit-hour degree) Applicants must have completed a four-year under­grad­ uate program with a minimum of 25 credit hours in the appropriate courses in studio art and/or the history of art from a regionally accredited institution of higher

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education, or one that is approved by the New York State Department of Education, or with the equivalent of the bachelor’s degree from an international institution of acceptable standards. M.S. in Art and Design Education Professional Certification (Brooklyn campus, a 34-credit-hour degree) Applicants must have received their Initial Certification as a teacher of visual arts and have prior teaching experience.

ll Training in Harassment, Bullying, Cyberbullying, and Discrimination in Schools: Prevention and Intervention ($85, 1st Semester, Fall) Tests and Assessments: ll Educating All Students-EAS ($92, 1st Semester, Fall) ll Academic Literacy Skills Test-ALST ($118, 2nd Semester, Spring) ll Content Specialty Test—CST ($134, 3rd Semester, Fall) ll Education Teacher Performance Assessment—EdTPA ($300, 4th Semester, Spring)

Advanced Certificate in Art and Design Education (Brooklyn Campus) This 23-credit-hour program is open to individuals with an M.F.A. degree, or those currently enrolled in the M.F.A. program at Pratt. For those applicants already holding an M.F.A. degree, the program may be completed in two semesters. All applicants must submit a portfolio of 15 images of work (submit online at pratt.slideroom.com). The required written statement of purpose is given significant con­sider­ ation. All applicants are contacted for a Skype interview when all materials have been received. Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 (250 computer or 100 Internet) is required for international students. All applicants are encouraged to schedule a visit to the department or attend one of our open houses. Certification Requirements In order to be recommended for NYSED Initial/Professional Certification in Visual Arts, Pre-K–12, candidates must have completed the following procedures, workshops and tests as you move through the program so that by the time you have finished your last semester, you will have completed everything you will need to apply for certifi­ cation. The fees for the workshops and tests/assessments will be charged as part of your cost of tuition and will therefore be part of your student loan package as needed. Fingerprinting ($135) You will be required to be fingerprinted in preparation for observing and teaching in New York City’s public schools in your first semester. Workshops ll These workshops must be taken with a provider approved by NYSED. ll Child Abuse Identification Workshop ($45, 1st Semester, Fall) ll School Violence Prevention and Intervention Workshop ($45, 1st Semester, Fall)

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ARRIANA PARTLAND ADVENTURES IN ART: AGESÂ 7-8. PHOTO BY: SAM STUART


KALISHA MONTOYA DRAWING, PAINTING, AND PRINTMAKING: AGES 9–10. PHOTO BY: SAM STUART


ART AND DESIGN EDUCATION FACULTY Caitlin Cahill Visiting Instructor B.A. French, Wellesley College; M.A. TESOL, City College. Phillip DeSantis Visiting Instructor B.A. Fine Arts, Brooklyn College; M.A. Art Education, Brooklyn College. Mary Elmer-DeWitt Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. French, New York University; M.S. Art and Design Education, Pratt Institute. Borinquen Gallo Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Cooper Union; M.F.A. Painting, Hunter College; Ed.D. candidate, Teachers College, Columbia University. Sarah Holcomb Visiting Instructor B.F.A., MICA; M.S. Art and Design Education, Pratt Institute. Ann Holt Visiting Instructor B.F.A. Painting, San Francisco Art Institute; M.A. Art Education, Concordia University, Quebec, Canada; Ph.D. Art Education, Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Minor, Pennsylvania State University, University Park.

Kelly Normand Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Fine Arts, Cooper Union; M.S. Art and Design Education, Pratt Institute. Ropiek, Rachel Visiting Instructor B.A. Art History/French, Wellesley College; M.A., Art History, Courtauld Institute of Art, London. Patrick Rowe Visiting Instructor B.F.A. Studio Arts, Carnegie Mellon University; M.F.A. Printmaking, Pratt Institute; M.S. Art and Design Education, Pratt Institute. Theodora Skipitares Associate Professor B.S., University of California at Berkeley; M.F.A., New York University. Jaret Vadera Visiting Instructor B.F.A. in Fine Art, Ontario College of Art and Design; M.F.A. Yale University. Aileen Wilson Professor B.A. Fine Art (Printmaking/Painting), Gray’s School of Art, Aberdeen, Scotland; M.A. Printmaking, Chelsea School of Art, London; Ed.D. Art/Art Education, Teachers College, Columbia University.

Tara Kopp Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Fine Arts, Rhode Island School of Design; M.F.A. Painting, Pratt Institute; Advanced Certificate in Art and Design Education. Rebecca Krucoff Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. American Studies, University of Iowa; M.S.Ed., Bank Street College of Education; M.S. Historic Preservation, Pratt Institute.

M.S. in Art and Design Education (Initial/Professional Certification) Semester 1 ADE-506 ADE-616 ADE-630 ED-608

Literacy and Language Acquisition in the Art Classroom 1 The Inclusive Art Room: Educating All Students 3 Media and Materials: From Studio to Classroom 3 New York City’s Youth: A Historical Perspective 3 Credit subtotal 10

Semester 2 ADE-621B Student Teaching II Saturday Art School 3 ADE-619 Foundations in Art & Design Education 3 ED-601 Contemporary Issues in Teaching 1 ED-603 Contemporary Issues in Museum Education or ED-604 Contemporary Issues in Social Practice 1 Credit subtotal 8 Semester 3 ADE-621 Student Teaching I: Saturday Art School ADE-620 The Art of Teaching Art & Design ED-660A Thesis I Art or Design Elective Credit subtotal

3 3 3 2 11

Semester 4 ADE-631 ED-660B

6 3 9 38

Student Teaching: Public School, PreK-12 Thesis II Credit subtotal Total credits required

M.S. in Art and Design Education (Professional Certification)

Heather Lewis Professor Ph.D. History of Education, New York University. Monica Marino Visiting Instructor B.A. Art History, Virginia Polytechnic Institute; M.S. Childhood Education, Hunter College. Camille Martin Assistant Dean, School of Design B.Arch., Miami University; M.Arch., Washington University-St. Louis. Joshua Millis Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Painting, Tyler School of Art, Temple University; M.F.A., The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Ryan Minezzi Visiting Instructor B.F.A., M.S. Art and Design Education, Pratt Institute.

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CURRICULA

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Semester 1 ADE-616 ADE-506 ADE-630

The Inclusive Art Room: Educating All Students 3 Literacy and Language Acquisition 1 Media and Materials: From Studio to the Classroom 3 Art or Design Elective 3 Credit subtotal 10

Semester 2 ADE-635 ED-601 ED-603

Puppets and Performing Objects: 3 Contemporary Issues in Teaching 1 Contemporary Issues in Museum Education 1


ED-604

Contemporary Issues in Social Practice Art or Design Elective Credit subtotal

Semester 3 ADE-618 Contemporary Museum Education or ADE-636 Puppets and Performing Objects ED-660A Thesis I Art or Design Elective Credit subtotal Semester 4 ADE-624 or ADE-628 ED-660B

1 3 9

3 3 3 9

Art, Community and Social Change Innovation & Museum Education 3 Thesis II 3 Credit subtotal 6 Total credits required 34

Advanced Certificate in Art and Design Education Semester 1 ADE-506 Literacy and Language Acquisition in the Art Classroom 1 ADE-621 Student Teaching: Saturday Art School 3 ADE-616 The Inclusive Art Room: Educating All Students 3 ADE-620 The Art of Teaching Art & Design 3 ED-608 New York City’s Youth: A Historical Perspective 3 Credit subtotal 13 Semester 2 ADE-622 ADE-631 ADE-619

College Teaching Student Teaching: Public School, PreK-12 Foundations in Art and Design Education Credit subtotal Total credits required

Art and Design Education

3 6 3 12 25

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Arts and Cultural Management

Chair Mary McBride, Ph.D. Office Tel: 212.647.7560 acm@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ arts-cultural-management

The mission of the 42-credit Arts and Cultural Management (ACM) graduate program is to build on Pratt Institute’s international reputation for developing creative leaders. Our program aims to develop leaders who are able to use their creativity strategically to foster creative expression, build creative community, and shape a commerce of ideas and images in an increasingly challenged and mediated world. ACM prepares participants to lead and manage in an emerging cultural landscape that includes new challenges, new media, and new forms of cultural expression. Based in experiential learning, the program creates a collaborative learning community that sharpens critical thinking, deepens reflective practice, and develops strategic leadership skills. Located at Pratt’s Manhattan campus, the program encourages participants to consider their role in society and their respective communities as cultural arbiters and educators. This approach yields arts and cultural leaders who are equipped with the necessary theoretical, analytical, and practical skills to respond creatively to the changing cultural, economic, and social environments in which they work. The two-year Arts and Cultural Management Program, created to bridge the creative disciplines with the strategic disciplines, provides a leadership education more focused than an M.B.A. on the special needs of cultural leaders managing 21st-century creative enterprises across the boundaries of private, nonprofit, and government sectors. Our program objective is to develop reflective leaders who can collaborate to create sustainable strategic advantages using our Triple Bottom Line by Design plus Culture (TBLD+C) strategic framework. By expanding the coursework to include nonprofit management practices, public policy, and other contemporary issues, ACM stresses the importance of simultaneously developing business acumen and a sense of social responsibility. These goals are accomplished by: ll Strengthening each participant’s ability to deal with a wide range of critical artistic, institutional, and business problems in practical and theoretical terms. ll Increasing the individual’s ability to manage complex, cross-disciplinary, and competing problems and tensions that are inherent in arts and cultural business environments. ll Utilizing technology and new media to advance strategic goals. ll Providing practical skills for negotiating organizational and artistic conflicts. ll Broadening outlooks on the social, economic, and political climate and the role of arts and cultural institutions in society. ll Sharpening personal capacities for understanding and solving organizational and human relations problems.

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ll Developing communications skills for the effective exchange of ideas and information. ll Stretching the individual’s capacities to anticipate and effectively manage change fueled by external forces. ll Developing the leadership capabilities of each participant. ll Sharing the ideas and experiences of a diverse group of promising arts and cultural managers. The ACM program prepares participants for rapidly shifting cultural, economic, and social environments and political contexts. It provides the skills necessary to lead and manage in a changing world and an increasingly challenged ecosystem. The ACM program provides participants with the opportunity to: ll Join a creative learning community of professionals with diverse expertise. ll Develop a strategic skill set that bridges public, for‑profit, and nonprofit sectors. ll Explore the role of art, culture, and meaning-making in shaping equity, economy, and ecology of place. ll Create and expand professional networks worldwide. ll Examine trends and global challenges. ll Use technology to advance dialogue and engagement. ll Refine communication, collaboration, and conflictmanagement skills. ll Lead the development of thriving cultures and creative economies. Leadership coaching is a key component of the Arts and Cultural Management program. It provides partici­ pants with an opportunity to reflect on their leadership style and identify strengths and stretch steps. Coaches work one-on-one and with participant teams and serve as catalysts for positive change and ongoing devel­ opment related to career needs. Coaches enable and support participants. They assist in conducting assessments, enabling participants to develop specific personal and professional development action plans, and enabling teams to deepen their skill in managing conflict and encouraging innovation. Our goal is to help you design and develop a life as a leader and manager of creative enterprise. Classes are offered on alternating weekends in Manhattan to accommodate working professionals and those who may wish to pursue full-time internships.

42 credits to complete the program and receive a Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S.) in Arts and Cultural Management. The program has five required semesters— fall, spring, summer, fall, spring. Each semester is divided into two terms and participants enroll in two courses per term, with the exception of semesters three and five. Courses are taken in order as listed in the program curriculum. Two five-day intensives—at the beginning and in the middle of the program—provide the opportunity for several brief, intensive courses, including behavioral simulation and negotiating modules. Coursework is concentrated in these sessions and moves at a fast pace. Class attendance is critical, since each alternating weekend of classes is one-tenth of the entire course. Students are required to complete the 42-credit hours of the program to graduate. Entrance Requirements We offer applicants from around the world an alternative to a traditional M.B.A. for those who value applied creativity. Our program connects creative thinking with strategic thinking and is designed for those who want to apply their creativity to lead and manage. Applicants should have an interest in designing cultural experiences, events, and programs that enrich, enliven, and engage. We are looking for applicants who want to be actively involved in designing futures and shaping prosperity using culture as an asset. The ideal candidate wants to use the creative and strategic arts to make a difference in our shared world and to build a work life that will enable that. The required statement of purpose should reflect the applicant’s personal vision of how this program fits in with his or her personal and professional goals, including how the applicant hopes to use the skills he or she acquires in this program. The statement should be no more than 500 words or two pages. In some cases, volunteer experience will be an acceptable demonstration of interest in the field. An interview (in person or by phone) with the program director is required for admission. For inter­ national students, a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 600 is required. Course enrollment is available to fully matriculated design management and arts and cultural management students only.

The Program’s Structure The Arts and Cultural Management program is a two-year, cohort-based program. Participants are required to take

Arts and Cultural Management

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STUDENTS IN CLASS


ARTS AND CULTURAL MANAGEMENT FACULTY

University Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service.

Catherine Ashcraft Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D. Urban Studies and Planning, MIT.

Tiffany Townsend Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. International Affairs, George Washington University; M.S. Strategic Com­mun­ications, Columbia University.

Catherine Cacho-Leary Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Dance, George Washington University; M.B.A. Public Administration, Keller Graduate School of Management. Laurence DeGaetano Adjunct Assistant Professor M.B.A., New York University.

Kelly Kocinski Trager Visiting Associate Professor J.D., Brooklyn Law School. Alicia Whiteman Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute.

Dyanis De Jesus Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute. Tyra Nicole Dumars Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute. Kristen Earls Visiting Assistant Professor M.A. International Education, New York University. Scott Fiaschetti Visiting Associate Professor M.B.A., Syracuse University. Larry Gibbs Visiting Assistant Professor Appalachian State University. Richard Green Professor B.S. Education, Temple University.

M.P.S. in Arts and Cultural Management Semester 1 ACM-625 Leadership and Team Building 2 ACM-627 Management Communications 2 ACM-631 Behavioral Simulation 1 ACM-641 Management of Arts and Cultural Organizations 2 ACM-645 Art in the Urban Environment 2 Credit subtotal 9 Semester 2 ACM-623 Financial Planning and Budget Management 2 ACM-624 Arts and Cultural Education 2 ACM-632 Organizational Behavior 2 ACM-642 Nonprofit Law and Governance 2 Credit subtotal 8 Semester 3 ACM-626 Managing Innovation and Change ACM-633 Negotiating ACM-646 External Relations ACM-652 Directed Research ACM-664A Capstone Planning: Advisement Credit subtotal

2 1 2 1 1 7

Semester 4 ACM-621 ACM-622 ACM-643 ACM-654

2 2 2 2 8

Strategic Marketing Fundraising for Arts and Culture Art, Culture, and Social Policy Strategic Technology Credit subtotal

Semester 5 ACM-628 Advertising and Promotion 2 ACM-644 Cultural Pluralism: Designing Cultures of Inclusion 2 ACM-651 Finances and Financial Reporting for Nonprofit Managers 2 ACM-664B Shaping the 21st Century: Integrative Capstone 2 ACM-671 Managerial Decision-Making 1 DM-643 Intellectual Property Law 1 Credit subtotal 10 Total credits required  42

Jeffrey Klein Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., Fordham University. Mary McBride Professor, Chair Ph.D., New York University. Antonio Ponton-Nunez Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S. Arts and Cultural Management, Pratt Institute. Christina Rosan Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D. City Planning and International Development, MIT. Christopher Shrum Associate Professor M.P.A., New York University Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service; Ph.D. Human and Organizational Development, Fielding Graduate University. JoJo Spiker Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute. Denise Tahara Visiting Associate Professor C.P.A., M.B.A, New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business; Ph.D., New York

Arts and Cultural Management

CURRICULUM

78


Creative Arts Therapy

Art Therapy and Creativity Development Dance Movement Therapy

Chair Julie Miller Assistant Chair Dina Schapiro Administrative Secretary TBA Office Tel: 718.636.3428  Fax: 718.636.3597 adt@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ creative-arts-therapy

Established in 1970, Pratt’s Department of Creative Arts Therapy is one of the oldest graduate creative arts therapy training programs in the country. Pratt offers a Master of Professional Studies in Art Therapy and Creativity Development and a Master of Science in Dance/Movement Therapy. Students learn creative arts therapy skills as applied to a wide variety of patient populations, including psychiatric inpatient and outpatient, substance abuse, geriatric, special education, therapeutic nurseries, after-school programs, families, medical rehabilitation, child life, eating disorders, AIDS, the homeless, and traumatized populations, as well as work in prevention and wellness. At the end of their training, they are prepared for entry work in a broad continuum of settings, ranging from institutions to creative work in the community. Our students learn to combine personal artistry with clinical acumen through the integration of experiential, theoretical, and practical learning. Our goal is to help students be able to use a complex and open theoretical framework that makes it possible for them to respond to a multitude of clinical situations. They learn to use themselves in the most creative ways possible, while being grounded in developmental and diagnostic skills, and group and individual dynamics. Each student is encouraged to develop his or her own unique style, informed by an experiential process. The core of our teaching philosophy is the primacy of creative expression informed by psychological, develop­ mental, and relational theory as the path to integration and healing. Experiential learning and process orientation are the cornerstones of our curriculum. Every course includes some experiential components, and the depart­ ment maintains an environment that supports and encourages the students’ involvement in that process. Accordingly, we are committed to maintaining small class sizes, enhancing communication between students and faculty, and encouraging discussion of the learning process itself. One of the strongest elements of our program is the synthesis of the theoretical and the practical. Our program combines practicum/internship assignments with coursework from beginning to end, providing graduates with a firm grounding in the actual practice of art and dance/movement therapy upon graduation. Students attend two days of fieldwork/practicum/internship weekly. Art therapy students complete one practicum in each of their two years. Dance/movement therapy students complete 480 hours of fieldwork in their first year and a 700-hour internship with a second population in their second year. They receive weekly on-site supervision.

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In addition, they engage in weekly group and bi-monthly individual supervision sessions with a member of our faculty. Because Pratt is located in a large urban center, there are a wide variety of practicum sites with a range of populations. Our internship coordinators assist students in finding appropriate clinical placements based on the learning needs of each individual student. There is richness to be gained from including both art therapy and dance/movement therapy students in the department. Students can learn about the nature of creative arts therapy in general and the particular strengths and limitations of their chosen modality. Though a majority of the courses are discipline specific, many of the classes combine art and dance therapy students so material is explored from both perspectives. Graduates receive discrete degrees in either art or dance therapy. Knowledge of research and professional writing skills are developed across the curriculum through written assignments required in every class and the completion of a thesis. Students are given the option of a range of research methods, including quantitative and qualitative. The latter may include a case study, a project implemented in the community, or descriptive methods investigating the experience of a phenomenon or therapeutic process. The American Art Therapy Association has approved the Art Therapy and Creativity Development degree. The Dance Therapy program is approved by the American Dance Therapy Association. Both programs are licensurequalifying and graduates automatically satisfy educational requirements for licensure in New York State. For those considering a career in art or dance therapy or who want a basic introduction, we offer the Spring Institute, which is a three-day set of workshops in various areas of creative arts therapy.

THE PROGRAM’S STRUCTURE Both the M.P.S. in Art Therapy and Creativity Develop­ ment and M.S. in Dance/Movement Therapy programs provide a synthesis of creative, aesthetic, and psycho­ therapeutic theory. Courses offer a thorough theoretical frame­work that is translated into personal and practical application through an experiential process. Artwork and/or movement is done in every course and is used to learn therapeutic skills. Students focus on a wide variety of populations and are required to work with a different population for each of the two years of fieldwork/ internship/practicum. Both programs are for students who want a broad body of skills, balanced with a strong theoretical framework.

Creative Arts Therapy

Academic Year/Low Residency Formats The Creative Arts Therapy program offers its degrees in two formats: The academic year format offers classes in a traditional manner, with classes in fall and spring semesters, for 15 weeks each semester. The low residency format is an innovative educational program based on a low residency adult learning model. The program is designed for those students who do not live near or are otherwise unable to engage in a traditional master’s degree format. Students in the academic year format are admitted for the fall semester only. Students in the low residency format are admitted for the spring semester only. See www.pratt.edu/apply for graduate requirements. Academic Year Format The cycle of classes is as follows: students take courses and fieldwork/practicum/internship from September through May for two consecutive years. Low Residency Format The cycle of classes is as follows: students take one class (9 days) in mid-March in Brooklyn. During the last week of June, they take another class (8 days), also in Brooklyn. During the first three weeks of July, students take courses (over three weeks) in New Hampshire. Students complete reading assignments before classes and then complete their papers after classes are over, giving them a chance to integrate class experience with readings and fieldwork/practicum/internship experience. Two years of fieldwork/internship (dance/movement therapy) or practicum (art therapy) are done from September through May following the first and second year of summer classes. Supervision is completed through weekly phone and Skype contact, as well as an active online forum that keep low residency students consistently in touch with Pratt faculty and one another. Housing is available on campus when courses are being held in New York. Courses in New Hampshire take place in Lincoln, in the White Mountains. Students rent resort condominiums at reasonable prices for the duration of their stay. The low residency format is offered to both art and dance/movement therapy students. The low residency program is not considered full-time. Therefore, international students will be ineligible for F-1 Visas. Admission Requirements (for all degrees) A bachelor’s degree is required for admission. For the Art Therapy program, a degree in art or psychology is preferred. For the Dance Therapy program, a degree

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DANCE/ART THERAPY PRESENTATION


in dance or psychology is preferred. The following prerequisites are required for all programs: 12 credits in psychology (to include coursework in general, developmental, and abnormal psychology and theories of personality). For the Art Therapy program only: 18 credits in studio art (to include coursework in drawing, painting, and 3-D to include ceramics). For the Dance/Movement Therapy program only: coursework in anatomy/kinesiology, extensive experience in at least two idioms of dance, one of which must be modern dance, and experience in mind/body modalities, such as meditation, yoga, body therapy, etc. All prerequisite courses may be taken on an under­ graduate level but must be taken from an accredited institution to receive academic credit. Studio classes will be accepted for movement experience. For the Art Therapy program, students may start classes with half of the psycho­logy and half of the studio art credits but must complete all prerequisites before the start of the second year. For the Dance Therapy program, students may start classes with half of the psychology credits, but all other prerequisites must be completed before starting the program. Psychology credits must be completed before the start of the second year.


CREATIVE ARTS THERAPY FACULTY Claudia Bader Visiting Instructor M.P.S., Pratt Institute. Shannon Bradley Visiting Instructor M.S. Art Therapy and Creativity Development, Pratt Institute. Corinna Brown Visiting Instructor B.A., M.A., State University of New York at Albany; M.S., Hunter College. Kimberly Bush Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Sarah Lawrence College; M.F.A., Parsons The New School for Design; Adv. Cert., Pratt Institute. Jean Davis Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE M.P.S., Pratt Institute. Christian Devereaux Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Kent State University; M.A., University of California at Los Angeles; Ph.D., Santa Barbara Graduate Institute. Ted Ehrhardt Adjunct Assistant Professor, CCE M.S., Hunter College. Cara Gallo Visiting Instructor M.S. Dance Therapy, Hunter College. Alison Gigl-George Adjunct Assistant Professor Valerie Hubbs Visiting Instructor B.A., Hofstra University; M.S., Hunter College.

Deborah Rice Visiting Professor B.S. Psychology and Studio Arts, University of Pittsburgh; M.P.S. Creative Arts Therapy and Creativity Development, Pratt Institute.

CURRICULA

Maria Rivera Visiting Instructor M.S. Dance/Movement Therapy, Pratt Institute.

Semester 1 ADT-641 ADT-645 ADT-661 TECH-634

Creative Arts Therapy Id. I Group Creative Arts Therapy I Fieldwork Experience and Supervision I Materials in Creative Arts Therapy Credit subtotal

Semester 2 ADT-632 ADT-642 ADT-640 ADT-647 ADT-662

Research and Thesis Creative Arts Therapy II Development of Personality I Art Diagnosis Fieldwork Experience and Supervision II Credit subtotal

Semester 3 ADT-649 ADT-630 ADT-663 ADT-688 ADT-655

Advanced Seminar I in Creative Arts Therapy Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment Issues Fieldwork Experience and Supervision III Family Art Therapy Development of Personality II Credit subtotal

Semester 4 ADT-646 ADT-650 ADT-660 ADT-664 ADT-643

Group Creative Arts Therapy II 3 Advanced Seminar II in Creative Arts Therapy 3 The Psychology of Intergroup Relations and Institutional Process 3 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision IV 2 Expressive Modalities 3 Credit subtotal 14 Total credits required 53

Sara Rothstein Visiting Instructor M.P.S. Creative Arts Therapy and Creativity Development, Pratt Institute. Dina Schapiro Assistant Chair, Director of Graduate Art Therapy Program M.P.S., Pratt Institute. Jean Seibel Visiting Instructor M.S. Dance Therapy, Hunter College. Linda Siegel Assistant Professor, Director of Graduate Art Therapy Program M.P.S. Art Therapy, Pratt Institute. Lauren Smith Visiting Instructor M.P.S., Pratt Institute. Elissa White Visiting Assistant Professor Joan Wittig Associate Professor, Director of Graduate Dance/Movement Therapy Program B.S., University of Wisconsin at Madison; M.S., Hunter College. Eva Teirstein Young Visiting Instructor M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago; M.P.S. Creative Arts Therapy, Pratt Institute.

3 3 2 3 11

3 3 3 3 2 14

3 3 2 3 3 14

M.P.S. in Art Therapy and Creativity Development Low Residency Program

Melissa Klay Adjunct Instructor B.A., Stephens College; M.P.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D., Pacifica Graduate Institute.

Semester 1 (spring) ADT-641 Creative Arts Therapy I ADT-640 Development of Personality I Credit subtotal

Judith Luongo Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE M.P.S. Art Therapy, Pratt Institute.

3 3 6

Semester 2 (summer) ADT-642 Creative Arts Therapy II 3 ADT-645 Group Creative Arts Therapy I 3 TECH-634 Materials in Creative Art Therapy 3 Credit subtotal 9

Briana Mac William Visiting Instructor M.S. Art Therapy, Pratt Institute. Julie Miller Chair M.A., M.S., Hunter College Dance Therapy Master’s Program and the Hunter College School of Social Work. Deniz Oktay Visiting Instructor M.S. Dance Therapy, Pratt Institute. Sean Plunkett Visiting Instructor M.P.S. Art Therapy and Creativity Development, Pratt Institute.

Creative Arts Therapy

M.P.S. in Art Therapy and Creativity Development

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Semester 3 (fall) ADT-661 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision I Credit subtotal Semester 4 (spring) ADT-630 Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment Issues ADT-662 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision II ADT-647 Art Diagnosis Credit subtotal

2 2

3 2 3 8

Semester 5 (summer) ADT-632 Research & Thesis ADT-649 Advanced Seminar I in Creative Arts Therapy ADT-688 Family Art Therapy ADT-655 Development of Personality II Credit subtotal

3 3 3 12

Semester 6 (spring) ADT-664 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision IV Credit subtotal

2 2

3

Semester 7 (summer) ADT-643 Expressive Modalotoes 3 ADT 646 Group Creative Arts Therapy II 3 ADT-660 Psychology of Intergroup Relations 3 ADT-650 Advanced Seminar II in Creative Arts Therapy 3 Credit Subtotal 12 Total Credits Required 53

M.S. in Dance/Movement Therapy Academic Year Program Semester 1 DT-671 Theory and Practice of Dance Therapy I DT-673 Studies in Movement Behavior I ADT-641 Creative Arts Therapy I ADT-645 Group Creative Arts Therapy I ADT-661 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision I Credit subtotal Semester 2 DT-675 Improvisation DT-674 Studies in Movement Behavior II ADT-632 Research and Thesis ADT-642 Creative Arts Therapy II ADT-662 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision II ADT-640 Development of Personality I Credit subtotal

Creative Arts Therapy

3 3 3­ 3 2 14

3 3 3 3 2 3 17

Semester 3 ADT-649 Advanced Seminar I in Creative Arts Therapy ADT-630 Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment Issues DT-672 Theory and Practice of Dance Therapy II ADT-663 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision III ADT-655 Development of Personality II Credit subtotal

3

3 2 3 14

M.S. in Dance/ Movement Therapy Low Residency Program

Semester 2 (summer) ADT-642 Creative Arts Therapy II ADT-645 Group Creative Arts Therapy I DT-671 Theory and Practice of Dance Therapy I Credit subtotal Semester 3 (fall) ADT-661/671 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision I Credit subtotal Semester 4 (spring) ADT-630 Clinical Diagnosis and Treatment Issues DT-674 Movement Behavior II ADT-649 Advanced Seminar I in Creative Arts Therapy ADT-655 Development of Personality II ADT-662 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision II Credit subtotal Semester 5 (summer) ADT-632 Research & Thesis DT-672 Theory and Practice of Dance Therapy II Credit subtotal

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2 2

Semester 7 (spring) ADT-664 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision IV Credit subtotal

2 2

3

Semester 4 ADT-646 Group Creative Arts Therapy II 3 ADT-650 Advanced Seminar II in Creative Arts Therapy 3 ADT-660 The Psychology of Intergroup Relations and Institutional Process 3 ADT-664 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision IV 2 Credit subtotal 11 Total credits required 56

Semester 1 (spring) ADT-641 Creative Arts Therapy I DT-673 Movement Behavior I ADT-640 Development of Personality I Credit subtotal

Semester 6 (fall) ADT-663 Fieldwork Experience and Supervision III Credit subtotal

3 3 3 9

3 3 3 9

2 2

3 3 3 3 2 14

3 3 6

Semester 8 (summer) ADT-646 Group Creative Arts Therapy II 3 Advanced Seminar II in Creative Arts Therapy ADT-660 The Psychology of Intergroup Relations 3 ADT-650 Advanced Seminar in Creative Arts Therapy 3 DT-675 Improvisation 3 Credit subtotal 12 Total credits required 56


Design Management

Chair Mary McBride, Ph.D. Office Tel: 212.647.7538 dm@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ design-management

Design education imparts many things, but it does not typically provide training in the leadership, team building, strategy, finance, marketing, and operations skills necessary to effectively lead a design department or to run a design business. Similarly, MBAs who are selected to lead design functions often lack the design experience necessary to guide design decisions or to lead creative people. The 42-credit Design Management program was created to bridge the disciplines of design and business manage­ment. Since its launch in 1995, the two-year program has been providing an executive education more focused than an M.B.A. on the special needs of design leaders managing firms or teams in creative industries. Design Management classes, offered at Pratt’s Manhattan campus, are aimed at and delivered by working professionals from the worlds of business and design. Participants come from a variety of disciplines, including industrial design, interior design, graphic design, fashion design, communications and information design, interactive media design, architecture, and engineering and materials science. The program will also consider applicants without design degrees who have an interest in design and creative enterprise leadership. The program’s academic calendar is modeled after successful executive M.B.A. programs. Its schedule of alternating weekends (Saturdays and Sundays) allows participants to carry their full job responsibilities while they study. The mission of the Design Management graduate program is to build on Pratt Institute’s international repu­ tation for developing creative leaders and to provide an educational experience that can help shape 21st-century strategic leaders who are able to bridge the disciplines of design and business to catalyze innovation. Our program objective is to develop reflective leaders who can collab­ orate to create sustainable strategic advantage and lead as if life matters using our Triple Bottom Line by Design plus Culture (TBLD+C) strategic framework. The program provides designers with the opportunity to: ll Join a learning community of professionals with diverse professional and cultural backgrounds. ll Develop a strong skill set in the discipline of business and the management of design. ll Explore emerging trends and draw from new ideas converging across design disciplines. ll Learn to identify and manage critical business challenges strategically. ll Practice using Triple Bottom Line by Design plus Culture (TBLD+C) to create strategic and sustainable advantage and social innovation.

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ll Analyze key global, social, economic, environmental, technological, and political challenges. ll Meet the challenge of management in team-based organizations. ll Develop leadership capabilities. ll Refine communication, negotiation, and conflict management skills. ll Learn techniques for leading and managing innovation. ll Use technology to aid design in creating advantage. ll Sharpen skills in operations and project management, finance, and budgeting. ll Apply strategic thinking to marketing, new product development, and brand management. ll Create and extend professional networks worldwide. Leadership coaching is a key component of the Design Management program. It provides participants with an opportunity to reflect on their leadership style and identify strengths and stretch steps. Coaches work one-on-one and with participant teams and serve as catalysts for positive change and ongoing development related to career needs. Coaches enable and support participants. They assist in conducting assessments, enabling partici­ pants to develop specific personal and professional development action plans, and enabling teams to deepen their skills in managing conflict and encouraging innovation. Graduates are prepared for leadership roles in strategic design and strategic management. They are able to use design to create sustainable strategic advantage and social innovation and to shape the way business is designed worldwide.

in each class, which many participants in executive programs consider especially valuable. The program has five required semesters—fall, spring, summer, fall, spring. Each semester is divided into two terms and participants enroll in two courses per term, with the exception of semesters four and five. Courses are taken in order as listed in the program curriculum. Participants are required to complete 42 credit hours in order to receive the accredited academic degree Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S.) in Design Management. Admissions Requirements Design Management program applicants should ideally have an undergraduate degree in one of the design disciplines and a minimum of three years’ professional experience prior to admission. Qualified applicants without design degrees will also be considered. All applicants must follow the standard rules for admission to a graduate program at Pratt and meet those requirements. See www.pratt.edu/apply. Course enrollment is available to fully matriculated design management and arts and cultural management students only.

The Program’s Structure The Design Management program curriculum is designed to develop strategic management skills in five areas related to design management: operations management, financial management, marketing management, organization and human resource management, and management of innovation and change. Courses are relevant and offer active learning experiences that provide participants with an integrated focus on the role of design in the creation and management of strategic and sustainable advantage and social innovation. Offered at Pratt’s West 14th Street campus in Manhattan, classes meet every other weekend for two full days. In addition, students attend class for a full week each at the beginning and in the middle of the program. This integrative experience provides the opportunity for several brief, intensive courses, including behavioral simulation and negotiating modules. These weeks allow students to establish and maintain relationships with other students

Design Management

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Catherine Ashcraft Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D. Urban Studies and Planning, MIT.

Yutaka Takiura Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Waseda University, Tokyo; M.Arch. Urban Design, University of Pennsylvania; M.Arch., Illinois Institute of Technology.

Laurence DeGaetano Adjunct Assistant Professor M.B.A., New York University.

Kelly Kocinski Trager Visiting Associate Professor J.D., Brooklyn Law School.

Dyanis DeJesús Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute.

Marvin Waldman Visiting Assistant Professor M.B.A., Baruch College.

DESIGN MANAGEMENT FACULTY

M.P.S. in Design Management Semester 1 DM-631 DM-632 DM-652 DM-654 DM-661

Leadership Behavioral Simulation Leadership and Team Building Design Management Strategic Technology Financial Reporting and Analysis Credit subtotal

Semester 2 DM-622 Advertising and Promotion DM-633 Managing Innovation and Change DM-641 International Environment of Business DM-651 Management Communications Credit subtotal

Tyra Nicole Dumars Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute. Roger Dunbar Visiting Professor Ph.D., Cornell University.

1 2 2 2 2 9

2 2 2 2 8

Semester 3 DM-634 Negotiating 1 DM-653 Design Operations Management 2 DM-656 Directed Research 1 DM-662 Money and Markets 2 DM-673 Capstone Planning: Advisement 1 Credit subtotal 7

Scott Fiaschetti Visiting Associate Professor M.B.A., Syracuse University. Larry Gibbs Visiting Assistant Professor Appalachian State University.

Semester 4 DM-621 Strategic Marketing DM-642 Business Law DM-643 Intellectual Property Law DM-663 Financing: Companies and New Ventures DM-671 Managerial Decision Making Credit subtotal

Richard Green Professor B.S., Education, Temple University. Mung Ki Woo Visiting Assistant Professor Graduate of France’s Ecole Polytechnique and Telecom ParisTech.

2 2 1 2 1 8

­­Semester 5 DM-623 Building Entrepreneurial Courage 2 DM-644 Design Futures: Theory and Practice 2 DM-655 New Product Management and Development 2 DM-672 Business Strategy 2 DM-674 Shaping the 21st Century: Integrative Capstone 2 Credit subtotal 10 Total credits required  42

Mary McBride Professor, Chair Ph.D., New York University. Jacqueline McCormack Adjunct Associate Professor M.P.S., Pratt Institute. James Murray Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S., Pratt Institute. Christina Rosan Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D. City Planning and International Development, MIT. Rachel Starobinsky Visiting Assistant Professor M.P.S. Design Management, Pratt Institute. Jo Ann Stonier Visiting Assistant Professor J.D., St. John’s University. Denise Tahara Visiting Associate Professor C.P.A., M.B.A., New York University Leonard N. Stern School of Business; Ph.D., New York University Robert F. Wagner Graduate School of Public Service.

Design Management

CURRICULUM

88


Digital Arts

Imagine you’re an artist who knows how to use every piece of hardware and software in the world—now what? Students in the M.F.A. in Digital Arts program at Pratt are immediately engaged in utilizing digital technologies to create artwork. These artists come together to study inter­ active arts, digital animation and motion arts, and digital imaging. Within a context of new media, students use critical thinking, creative problem solving, technical facility, and conceptual skills to develop a sophisticated body of work. Studio practice is essential for students of interactive art and imaging. Students working in these areas are provided with studio space for the completion of their theses. This intensive course of study is augmented by internships, spe­cial topics courses, and lectures and critiques by visit­ ing artists. Students create work with the guidance of a faculty of professional practicing artists and scholars who serve as models in the pursuit of artistic excellence. Digital art students become part of the thriving New York art scene, estab­lish­ ing a professional network and taking advantage of exhibition opportunities that exist nowhere else in the country. Graduates become leading contributors to the digital arts with a commitment to the cultural enrichment of their world. The Program’s Structure Students are able to follow one of three tracks: interactive arts, digital animation and motion arts, or digital imaging. This 60-credit, full-time program is to be completed in two calendar years. Students complete required course­work in their primary area of emphasis and one year of work on a thesis, which culminates in a thesis paper, exhibition, or screening of the completed work. Additional degree require­ ments include completing six credits of extra-departmental studio electives, one course in art history, and one course in liberal arts studies.

Chair Peter Patchen Assistant Chair Carla Gannis Assistant to the Chair Deidre Carney Lab Managers Igor Molochevski Sharlene Medina Office Tel: 718.636.3411  Fax: 718.399.4494 dda@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ digital-arts-grad

Interactive Arts Students use computer-human interaction to convey meaning in the form of physical installations, interactive objects, apps, sculpture, and online artworks. This includes the combination of data, video, animation, text, audio, and imagery in an interactive environment. Recommended electives include courses in history of new media, sculpture, creating exhibitions, prototyping, programming, interactive installation, online media, robotics and physical computing, electronic music, and sound. Digital Animation and Motion Arts Students create evocative narrative and non-narrative films and installations using 2-D and 3-D digital animation techniques, live action, and motion graphics. Recom­mended electives include history of animation, film criticism,

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tradi­tional animation, character design and rigging, lighting and rendering, audio and video, compositing and special effects, and advanced digital animation techniques. Digital Imaging This area of study employs digital and traditional processes in the creation of large-format digital prints, installations, artist books, and other tactile media. It addresses critical issues and techniques in the develop­ment, printing, and present­ ation of digitally based art. Recommended electives include critical history of photography, etching, silkscreen, litho­ graphy, and digital photography. Admissions Requirements Applicants must have an undergraduate degree in art, design, or animation and should submit a strong visual portfolio demonstrating a conceptual and aesthetic focus. Applicants whose first language is not English must achieve a minimum score of 550 on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL). In addition to the TOEFL requirement, all enrolling students whose first language is not English will be tested for English proficiency unless they have a TOEFL score of 600. Pending the outcome of this test, individuals may be assigned to ESL courses. For more information, contact the Office of Admissions at admissions@pratt.edu or the department chair at 718.636.3411. Digital Arts graduate assistantships are available beginning in the first semester of attendance. Positions range from assisting faculty research to creative or technical support. Graduate assistantships are awarded based on individual skills or degree goals and are available throughout the Digital Arts M.F.A. program. Facilities ll Nine digital studios ll Imaging center ll Audio room ll Gallery/test space ll Graduate studios (by concentration) ll Green screen room Additional Resources ll B/W laser printers ll 3-D printer (ABS) ll 3-D scanner ll Color laser and inkjet printers ll DVD and CD-ROM duplicator ll Flatbed scanners ll Slide scanner ll RAID file storage and transfer system ll Plasma screen

Digital Arts

ll Render farm ll Laser cutter Software ll Adobe Photoshop ll Adobe Illustrator ll Adobe InDesign ll Adobe After Effects ll Adobe Audition ll AutoDesk Maya ll Apple Logic ll Adobe Dreamweaver ll Adobe Flash ll Max/MSP/Jitter ll Mental Ray ll Nuke ll Processing ll QuickTime Pro ll RealFlow ll Syflex ll Unity and much more Imaging Center The Digital Arts Imaging Center has class-related equip­ ment and other services available only to registered Digital Arts students. Services include: ll Wide-format 2-D printing ll 3-D printing ll 3-D scanning ll Flatbed and slide scanning ll Vinyl cutters ll Laser cutter Equipment for checkout includes ll HD digital video cameras ll Digital still cameras ll Portable lighting kits ll Digital audio recorders ll Go Pro Cameras ll Headphones ll Microphones ll Motion Control System ll 11’ × 12’ portable green screen ll Portable video projection screens ll Sensor Kits ll Video tripods with three-way fluid heads ll Wacom tablets ll Installation computers ll Digital projectors (normal and wide throw) ll Wide array of tutorials and much more.

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WORK BY ELEFTHERIOS BENETOS (M.F.A. ’14), DIGITAL PRINT


J. CONNOLLY (M.F.A. ’16), MACHINIMA ANIMATION STILL

A. MOUYISA (M.F.A. ’16), PAINT ON GLASS, ANIMATION STILL


WORK BY NICK DEASE (M.F.A. ’16)

K. RAHIMI (M.F.A. ’16), 3-D ANIMATION STILL


WORK BY DIOU SHI (M.F.A. ’15) WORK BY CASSANDRA HICKMAN (M.F.A. ’16)


DIGITAL ARTS FACULTY Dan Augsburger Visiting Instructor B.F.A. Time Arts, Northern Illinois University; M.F.A. Animation, Savannah College of Art and Design. Justin Berry Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Liubomir Borissov Associate Professor B.S. Mathematics and Physics, California Institute of Technology; M.P.S. Interactive Telecommunications, New York University; Ph.D. Physics, Columbia University; Global Vilar Fellow, Tisch School of the Arts, New York University. Michael Bourbeau Visiting Instructor B.A. Liberal Studies, Hamilton College; M.F.A. Computer Art, School of Visual Arts. Svjetlana Bukvich-Nichols Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Sarajevo University Music Academy; M.F.A., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Blake Carrington Assistant Professor B.A. Digital Media, Indiana University Bloomington; M.F.A. Computer Art, Syracuse University. Elliot Cowan Visiting Instructor Edward Darino Adjunct Assistant Professor M.F.A., Tisch School of Art, New York University; Ph.D., UEU on New Technologies. Marianna Ellenberg Visiting Instructor B.A., Wesleyan University; M.A., Slade School of Art. Mike Enright Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., The University of the Arts; M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts. Carla Gannis Assistant Chair B.F.A., University of North Carolina at Greensboro; M.F.A., Boston University. Kay Hines Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. Art History, Barnard College. Faith Holland Visiting Instructor B.A. Media Studies, Vassar College; M.F.A. Photography, Video, and Related Media, School of Visual Arts.

Digital Arts

Kenneth Hughes Visiting Instructor Everett Kane Assistant Professor B.A. Religion, Princeton University; B.F.A. with distinction, M.F.A. Fine Arts, Art Center College of Design. Hyunsuk Kim Visiting Instructor Jacques Khouri Visiting Instructor B.A. Graphic Design, Université du Québec à Montréal; B.F.A. Cinema: Film Animation, Concordia University; M.F.A. Animation, M.A. Sequential Art, Savannah College of Art and Design. Linda Lauro-Lazin Adjunct Associate Professor Master’s in Computer Graphics, NYIT. David Mattingly Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Colorado State University; M.F.A., Art Center. Genevieve Okupniak Visiting Instructor M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts. Michael O’Rourke Professor M.F.A., University of Pennsylvania; Ed.M., Harvard University. Peter Patchen Chair M.F.A., University of Oregon. Mira Scharf Visiting Instructor B.S., University of California at San Diego; M.F.A., University of California at Los Angeles. Claudia Tait Associate Professor B.F.A., Ringling School of Art and Design; M.F.A., University of Maryland Baltimore County. Michael Tanzillo Visiting Instructor B.F.A. Studio Art (Photography), The Ohio State University, Columbus; M.F.A. Visual Effects, Savannah College of Art and Design. Katherine Torn Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Chicago Institute of the Arts. Lukas Wadya Visiting Instructor M.F.A., School of Visual Arts. Gregory Webb Adjunct Instructor Daniel Weisbard Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Rochester Institute of Technology.

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Elizabeth White Visiting Instructor B.A., Vassar College; M.F.A, Photography, Video, and Related Media, School of Visual Arts. Bryan Zanisnik Visiting Instructor M.F.A., Hunter College; studied at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture.


CURRICULA

Semester 4 DDA-660B

M.F.A. in Digital Arts (3-DÂ Animation and Motion Arts Concentration) Semester 1 DDA-606A Graduate Seminar I DDA-610 Digital Arts Practicum DDA-617 Languages DDA-643 Animation Studio Studio Elective Credit subtotal

3 3 3 3 3 15

Semester 2 DDA-606B DDA-643

3 3 6 3 15

Graduate Seminar II Animation Studio DDA Elective Studio Elective Credit subtotal

Semester 3 DDA-653 Post-Production DDA-660A Thesis I Art History Elective DDA Elective Credit subtotal

3 6 3 3 15

Semester 4 DDA-660B

6 3 3 3 15 60

Thesis II Liberal Arts Elective DDA Elective DDA Elective or Internship Credit subtotal Total credits required

M.F.A. in Digital Arts (Interactive Arts Concentration) Semester 1 DDA-606A Graduate Seminar I DDA-610 Digital Arts Practicum DDA-617 Languages DDA-622 Interactive Media I Studio Elective Credit subtotal

3 3 3 3 3 15

Semester 2 DDA-585 DDA-587 DDA-606B

Interactive Installation Art of Electronics Graduate Seminar II DDA Elective Studio Elective Credit subtotal

3 3 3 3 3 15

Semester 3 DDA-660A DDA-646

Thesis I Interactive Arts Studio DDA Electives Art History Elective Credit subtotal

6 3 3 3 15

Digital Arts

Thesis II Liberal Arts Elective DDA Elective DDA Elective or Internship Credit subtotal Total credits required

6 3 3 3 15 60

M.F.A. in Digital Arts (Digital Imaging Concentration) Semester 1 DDA-606A Graduate Seminar I DDA-610 Digital Arts Practicum DDA-617 Languages DDA-645 Digital Imaging Studio Studio Elective Credit subtotal

3 3 3 3 3 15

Semester 2 DDA-606B DDA-614 DDA-645

Graduate Seminar II 3-D Computer Modeling Digital Imaging Studio DDA Elective Studio Elective Credit subtotal

3 3 3 3 3 15

Semester 3 DDA-660A

Thesis I DDA Electives Art History Elective Credit subtotal

6 6 3 15

Semester 4 DDA-660B

Thesis II Liberal Arts Elective DDA Elective DDA Elective or Internship Credit subtotal Total credits required

6 3 3 3 15 60

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Fine Arts

Chair Deborah Bright Assistant Chairs Dina Weiss Nat Meade Assistant to the Chair Lisa Banke-Humann Technicians Adam Apostolos Aubrey Hillman Yasu Izaki Caitlin Riordan Jason Segall Christopher Verstegen Sky Yoon Office Tel: 718.636.3634 www.pratt.edu/ fine-arts-grad

Pratt Institute’s M.F.A. program in Fine Arts provides an advanced education for artists supported by a distinguish­ ed faculty and exceptional facilities. The program has been recognized for its excellence by both USA Today, which rated Pratt as the number one Art and Design School for Fine Art, and by a U.S. News & World Report that ranked Pratt among the top 15 of over 200 Fine Arts M.F.A. programs in the nation. Located at the center of New York City’s thriving art worlds, Pratt’s Fine Arts M.F.A. program immerses students in the diverse cultures of contemporary art-making. The curriculum is both rigorous and flexible, offering wide latitude for exploration while fostering critical perspect­ ives and a deeper understanding of the histories, issues, and cultural contexts that inform art practices today. Pratt’s M.F.A. degree is in Fine Arts rather than in a specific medium or discipline. Though many students remain com­mitted to the area of interest they chose when they entered the program—whether painting and drawing, print­making, sculpture, photography, or integrated practices —they are free to explore other forms and approaches as their work leads. Faculty and students build close relation­ships through structured studio visits, seminars, and informal conversations and these relation­ ships create a vital comm­unity and support network that endures after graduation. Pratt’s graduate fine arts facilities are outstanding. Students have individual studios for both years of the degree program. These are located in the Pfizer Building, a renovated industrial building that also houses fabri­ cation shops, temporary exhibition spaces, and seminar rooms. Campus facilities include a fully equipped wood shop, metal shop, print shop, ceramics studios, dark­ rooms, a digital output lab with high-resolution scanners and printers, as well as dedicated campus galleries. There are many opportunities to show work in a variety of tradi­tional and non-traditional spaces and students are encouraged to curate their own temporary exhibitions. In the fall, M.F.A. students host open studios for the public, and in the spring, second-year students mount individual thesis exhibitions that are also open to the public. In addition to a regular schedule of studio visits by faculty members, the department’s Visiting Artists Lecture Series (VALS) brings internationally renowned artists to campus to give public lectures and have individual studio visits with graduate students. The Pratt Artists League (PAL), the grad­uate student club, invites visiting artists and critics for studio visits, and organizes open studios as well as other student-generated programming and exhibi­ tions, including a curated group exhibition for graduating students at a professional art space.

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Pratt’s faculty members in the Fine Arts program are distinguished by their achievements and exhibiting inter­ nationally, as well as receiving major awards from the Guggenheim Foundation, National Endowment for the Arts, Tiffany Foundation, Joan Mitchell Foundation, Skowhegan, Pollock-Krasner Foundation, Creative Capital, and Art Matters. Pratt’s graduate students in Fine Arts come from around the world and are selected for their promise and readiness for the intensive, self-directed experience of graduate study. THE PROGRAM’S STRUCTURE The Fine Arts M.F.A. program at Pratt Institute offers five areas of emphasis: painting and drawing, printmaking, photography, sculpture, and integrated practices (including forms of installation, time-based art, public and activist practices, and performance art). First-year students complete required courses in a primary area of emphasis, as well as broadly required courses in contemporary critical studies and art history. During the second year, students focus on their thesis work under the guidance of their chosen thesis faculty, culminating in a public solo exhibition and written thesis statement that is archived in the Pratt Libraries. In addition to required courses, students have 21 credits of open electives that may be used for inter­disc­ iplinary, studio, or technical courses, or internships that support their interests and work. A minimum of 60 credits and four semesters of study are required for the M.F.A. degree. The time and number of credits to complete the degree may not be reduced but may be extended if needed. Admissions Requirements Applicants for admission to the M.F.A. degree program in Fine Arts must have an undergraduate degree from an accredited U.S. college, university, or art/design school, or the equivalent degree from a recognized inter­ national institution. It is not required that applicants have majored in studio art as undergraduates, only that they demon­strate the maturity, preparation, and readiness for the intensity and challenges of graduate study. International Applicants International applicants must have a minimum Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) score of 80 to be considered for admission. As much of the studio educa­ tional experience takes place through discussion, it is important that students have satisfactory English comp­ rehension and speaking skills.

Fine Arts

Application Guidelines Applications to the Fine Arts M.F.A. program should be submitted by January 5. Applications will not be reviewed until all required documentation is received. Applicants who advance from the initial stage of application review will be asked to schedule a Skype interview. Most applicants will be notified of their final admission status by April 1. The M.F.A. Admissions Committee is looking for work that demonstrates the applicant’s aesthetic and conceptual development and potential for successful growth over the two years of the program. The Fine Arts Department is committed to creating a graduate community of artists from many different backgrounds and cultural heritages that is reflective of the city and the world in which we live. In addition to Pratt’s general graduate admissions requirements, applicants to the Fine Arts M.F.A. program are required to upload the following materials to pratt.slideroom.com: 1. A portfolio of 20 well-selected images (including detail views) of works made in the last 2–3 years. 2. Information for each image including the work’s title, dimensions, materials used, and date of completion. Campus Visits The Fine Arts Department welcomes visitors to Pratt at any time during the academic year. Interested applicants (or potential applicants) should contact Nat Meade, Assistant Chair of Fine Arts, to schedule an appointment and tour of facilities/studios (tel: 718.636.3792, email: nmeade@pratt.edu). Optional Dual Degree Programs M.F.A. students in Fine Arts may also enroll concurrently in the following dual degree and certificate programs. These programs require an additional year of study, in most cases. ll M.S./M.F.A. in Fine Arts/History of Art Students will complete the normal requirements for the M.F.A. (including 15 credits of History of Art courses), plus 30 additional credits of art history, including the distribution requirements and required courses specified for the M.S. degree in art history. Students must apply to, and be accepted by, both departments and complete a total of 75 credits. ll M.F.A./Post-Baccalaureate Certificate in Art and Design Education M.F.A./Post-Baccalaureate Certificate in Art and Design Education is designed for M.F.A. students desiring eligibility for a Pre-K–12 teaching certificate.

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WORK BY BRITTANY BALDWIN (M.F.A. ‘16)


WORK BY TAL GILBOA AND ELIZABETH KLEBERG (M.F.A. ’16)

WORK BY BONAM KIM (M.F.A. ‘15)


Students take 20 credits in Art and Design Education. With one additional studio elective credit, students can qualify for their provisional New York State Certification to teach Fine Arts, Pre-K–12, a certification that is reciprocated in more than 35 states. For specific courses, see the Art and Design Education section of this bulletin. ll M.F.A./Advanced Certificate in Art and Design Education This 23-credit program is open to individuals with an M.F.A. degree, or those currently enrolled in the M.F.A. program at Pratt. For those applicants already holding an M.F.A. degree, the program may be completed in two semesters, and the application requirements are the same as those listed for the M.S. in Art and Design Education.

Fine Arts

101


WORK BY LEA FALES (M.F.A. ‘16)


WORK BY EVAN PAUL ENGLISH (M.F.A. ‘16)

WORK BY VALERIA LOMBO (M.F.A. ‘16)


WORK BY JOSH MCFADDEN (M.F.A. ‘16)

WORK BY MARK GENS (M.F.A. ‘16)


FINE ARTS FACULTY Ann Agee Visiting Associate Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.F.A., Cooper Union; M.F.A., Yale University. David Alban Visiting Assistant Professor, Ceramics B.F.A., Kansas City Art Institute; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art. Ruby Onyinyechi Amanze Visiting Assistant Professor, Drawing B.F.A., Tyler School of Art; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art. Adam Apostolos Visiting Instructor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices; Metal Shop Technician A.O.S. Graphic Design, Pratt Institute. Karen Bachmann Visiting Assistant Professor, Jewelry B.F.A., Pratt Institute. Lisha Bai Adjunct Assistant Professor, Printmaking B.A., Washington University in St. Louis; M.F.A., Yale University.

Deborah Chaney Visiting Associate Professor, Printmaking B.F.A., Tamarind Master Printer. David Cohen Visiting Associate Professor, Fine Arts B.A. Hon., History of Art, University of Sussex; M.A. History of Art, Courtauld Institute of Art, University of London. Angela Conant Visiting Assistant Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.F.A., Boston College; M.F.A., School of Visual Arts. James Costanzo Adjunct Associate Professor, Fine Arts M.A., M.F.A., University of Iowa. Grayson Cox Visiting Associate Professor, Printmaking B.F.A., Indiana University; M.F.A., Columbia University. Peggy Cyphers Adjunct Professor, Painting B.F.A., Maryland Institute of Art; Towson State University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute.

Joseph Fyfe Adjunct Associate Professor, Fine Arts B.F.A., University of the Arts, Philadelphia College of Art. Brice Garrett Visiting Assistant Professor, Jewelry B.A. Jewelry + Metalsmithing, San Diego State University, San Diego, California; M.F.A. Jewelry + Corpus, Konstfack University College of the Arts, Crafts and Design, Stockholm, Sweden. Anne Gilman Adjunct Professor, Printmaking B.F.A., State University of New York at New Paltz; M.F.A., Brooklyn College. Jonathan Goodman Visiting Assistant Professor, Fine Arts B.A., Columbia University; M.A., University of Pennsylvania. David Gothard Visiting Assistant Professor, Drawing B.F.A., Pratt Institute. Toni Greenbaum Visiting Associate Professor, Jewelry B.A., City College of New York; M.A., Hunter College.

Lisa Bateman Adjunct Associate Professor, Drawing B.F.A., East Carolina University; M.F.A., Virginia Commonwealth University.

Pradeep Dalal Visiting Assistant Professor, Fine Arts B.Arch., Center for Environmental Planning and Technology; M.S., Massachusetts Institute of Technology in Architecture; M.F.A., International Center of Photography/Bard College.

Michael Brennan Adjunct Associate Professor, Painting B.A., University of Florida; M.F.A., Pratt Institute.

Gregory Drasler Adjunct Professor, Painting B.F.A., M.F.A., University of Illinois.

Deborah Bright Chair B.A., Wheaton College; M.F.A., University of Chicago.

Kelly Driscoll Associate Professor, Printmaking B.F.A., Plymouth University of England; M.F.A., City College, New York.

Mona Brody Adjunct Associate Professor, Painting B.F.A., Moore College of Art and Design; M.S., Massachusetts College of Art; M.F.A., Vermont College of Art.

Samuel Evensen Visiting Assistant Professor, Drawing B.F.A., Brigham Young University; M.F.A., The New York Academy.

Vera Iliatova B.A., Brandeis University; M.F.A. Painting, Yale University.

Howard Buchwald Professor, Painting B.F.A., The Cooper Union; M.A., Hunter College.

Brad Ewing Visiting Instructor, Printmaking B.F.A., Cornish College of the Arts; M.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design.

Yasu Izaki Visiting Instructor, Wood Shop Technician B.F.A. Sculpture/Painting, University of Alaska Fairbanks; M.F.A. Sculpture, Pratt Institute.

David Butler Adjunct Associate Professor, Jewelry B.F.A., Georgia State University; M.F.A., University of Washington.

Patrick Fenton Visiting Assistant Professor, Printmaking B.A., University of California at Los Angeles; M.F.A., Stanford University.

Russell Jones Visiting Assistant Professor, Jewelry M.A. Graphic Design, Metropolitan University of Manchester; B.F.A., Rhode Island School of Design.

Kathy Butterly Visiting Associate Professor, Ceramics M.F.A., University of California, Davis; CABFA, Moore College of Art, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Allen Frame Adjunct Associate Professor, Fine Arts B.A. Art History and English, Harvard University.

William Carroll Visiting Associate Professor, Fine Arts B.F.A., Pratt Institute; M.F.A., Queens College, CUNY. Nanette Carter Adjunct Associate Professor, Drawing B.A., Oberlin College; M.F.A., Pratt Institute.

Fine Arts

Linda Francis Adjunct Professor, Painting B.F.A., M.A., Hunter College. Michael Fujita Visiting Assistant Professor, Ceramics B.F.A. Ceramic Art, Kansas City Art Institute; M.F.A., New York State College of Ceramics at Alfred University.

105

Nancy Grimes Adjunct Associate Professor, Painting B.A., Indiana University; M.F.A., School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Raphael Griswold Visiting Assistant Professor, Printmaking B.A., Wesleyan University, Middletown; M.F.A., Brooklyn College. Aubrey Hillman Visiting Instructor, Jewelry M.F.A., University of Oregon; B.F.A., SUNY New Paltz.

Shirley Kaneda Professor, Painting B.F.A., Parsons The New School of Design. Michael Kirk Adjunct Professor, Printmaking B.F.A., Rutgers University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Ross Knight Visiting Assistant Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.F.A., University of Minnesota at Minneapolis.


Vivien Knussi Adjunct Assistant Professor, Fine Arts B.A., M.A., Tufts University; Ph.D., Columbia University.

J. Martin Mazzora Visiting Assistant Professor, Printmaking B.F.A., West Virginia University; M.F.A., American University, Washington, D.C.

Peter Kruty Visiting Assistant Professor, Printmaking B.A. Geography, University of Chicago; M.A., M.L.S. Book Arts, Printmaking and Photography, University of Alabama.

Nat Meade Visiting Instructor, Assistant Chair B.F.A., University of Oregon; M.F.A., Pratt Institute.

Julia Kunin Visiting Associate Professor, Ceramics B.A., Wellesley College; M.F.A., The Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University. Alexander Kvares Visiting Assistant Professor, Printmaking B.F.A. Painting, University of Kansas; M.F.A. Printmaking, University of Texas. Benjamin La Rocco Visiting Assistant Professor, Painting B.A., Middlebury College; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. David Lantow Visiting Associate Professor, Printmaking B.F.A., University of Iowa; M.F.A., Brooklyn College, CUNY. Catherine Lecleire Adjunct Associate Professor, Painting B.A. Political Science, Ursinus College; B.F.A., M.A.E., Art Education, Philadelphia College of Art; M.F.A., University of Southern California. Jenny Lee Adjunct Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.F.A. Sculpture, The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art. Frank Lind Professor, Painting B.A., Georgetown University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Patricia Madeja Professor, Jewelry B.F.A., Pratt Institute. Ann Mandelbaum Adjunct Professor, Fine Arts M.A. Media Studies, The New School; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Dennis Masback Adjunct Professor, Drawing B.F.A., M.F.A., Washington University School of Art. Mary Mattingly Visiting Assistant Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices Studied at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture; B.F.A., Pacific Northwest College of Art, Oregon. Jen Mazza Visiting Assistant Professor, Painting B.A., Mary Washington College in Fredericksburg, Virginia; M.F.A., Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University.

Fine Arts

Jennifer Melby Adjunct Associate Professor, Printmaking B.F.A., Arcadia University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Ann Messner Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.F.A., Pratt Institute. Curtis Mitchell Adjunct Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices M.F.A. Sculpture, Yale University School of Art; M.A. Sculpture, Goddard College. John Monti Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.S. Painting, Portland State University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Donna Moran Professor, Printmaking B.A. Art Education, C.W. Post College; M.F.A. Painting/Printmaking, Pratt Institute. Robert Morgan Adjunct Professor, Fine Arts B.F.A., University of Redlands; E.D.M., Northeastern University; M.F.A., University of Massachusetts; Ph.D., New York University. Dominique Nahas Adjunct Associate Professor, Fine Arts B.F.A., School of Visual Arts; M.A. Art History, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Mario Naves Adjunct Assistant Professor, Painting B.F.A., University of Utah; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Sarah Nicholls Visiting Assistant Professor, Printmaking B.F.A., Sarah Lawrence. Thirwell Nolen Adjunct Associate Professor, Ceramics B.Arch., Auburn University; M.Arch., Georgia Institute of Technology. John O’Connor Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Graphic Design, Westfield State College; M.F.A., Pratt Institute; M.A. Theory, Criticism, and History of Art, Pratt Institute; studied at Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Catherine Redmond Adjunct Associate Professor, Painting Studied at Art Students League of New York; Harpur College, SUNY; Cornell University. William Richards Adjunct Associate Professor, Drawing B.F.A., Pratt Institute; M.F.A., University of New Mexico; M.A., University of Iowa.

106

Caitlin Riordan Visiting Instructor, Printmaking Technician B.F.A., Maine College of Art. Mary Beth Rozkewicz Adjunct Associate Professor, Jewelry B.F.A., State University of New York. Alan Ruiz Visiting Assistant Professor, Drawing B.F.A., Pratt Institute; M.F.A., Yale University. Stuart Sachs Visiting Assistant Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices Analia Segal Adjunct Associate Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.A. Graphic Design, University of Buenos Aires; M.A. Studio Art, New York University. Jason Segall Visiting Instructor, Ceramics Technician B.F.A. Ceramics, Kansas City Art Institute; M.F.A. Ceramics, Alfred University. Beverly Semmes Visiting Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.F.A., Boston Museum School; B.A. Art History, Boston Museum School; M.F.A., Yale University School of Art; studied at Skowhegan School of Art. Steven Sergiovanni Visiting Assistant Professor, Fine Arts B.A., Southwestern University in Georgetown, Texas; M.A., New York University. Carla Shapiro Adjunct Assistant Professor, Fine Arts Studied at International Center of Photography; B.F.A., Syracuse University; Central London Polytechnic, London, England. Jean Shin Adjunct Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute. Gerald Siciliano Adjunct Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute. Robbin Silverberg Adjunct Associate Professor, Printmaking B.A. Sculpture and Art History, Princeton University. Joseph Smith Professor, Drawing B.F.A. Fine Arts (Graphic Arts and Illustration), Pratt Institute; M.F.A. Painting, New York University. Judith Solodkin Visiting Associate Professor, Printmaking B.A., Brooklyn College; M.F.A., Columbia University


Laurel Sparks Visiting Associate Professor, Drawing B.F.A., School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; M.F.A., Milton Avery Graduate School of Art, Bard College; M.A., Tufts University. Joseph Stauber Adjunct Assistant Professor, Drawing B.F.A., Pratt Institute; M.F.A., SUNY at Purchase. Jason Stopa Visiting Assistant Professor, Fine Arts B.F.A., Indiana University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Irvin Tepper Adjunct Professor, Ceramics B.F.A., Kansas City Art Institute; M.F.A., University of Washington. Christopher Verstegen Visiting Instructor, Graduate Studios Supervisor B.A., The College of Wooster; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Timothy Veske-McMahon Visiting Assistant Professor, Jewelry B.F.A., Pratt Institute; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art. Emily Weiner Visiting Assistant Professor, Painting B.A. Studio Art, Barnard College; M.F.A., School of Visual Arts. Dina Weiss Visiting Instructor, Assistant Chair B.S. Studio Art, New York University; M.F.A., Parsons The New School for Design. Christopher White Adjunct Associate Professor, Painting B.A., Harvard University. Rachel Wiecking Visiting Assistant Professor, Printmaking B.A. American Studies, Literature, University of California, Santa Cruz; B.F.A. Book Arts, Oregon College of Art and Craft, Portland; M.A. Art History, Purchase College, New York; M.F.A. Studio Art, Purchase College, New York. Chris Wright Adjunct Associate Professor, Painting B.F.A., Pacific NW College of Art; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. SeoKyeong Yoon Studio and Gallery Manager B.F.A., Kookim University, Seoul Korea; PB, San Francisco Art Institute; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Robert Zakarian Professor, Sculpture + Integrated Practices B.F.A., M.F.A., Pratt Institute.

CURRICULUM M.F.A. in Fine Arts Semester 1 PHIL-604 Aesthetics

3

Studio I: FA-691A or FA-692A or FA-693A or FA-694A or FA-695A

3

Studio II: FA-6918 or FA-6928 or FA-6938 or FA-6948 or FA-6958 Semester 2 Studio III: FA-691C or FA-692C or FA-693C or FA-694C or FA-695C FA-699C

Painting and Drawing IA Integrated Practices IA Sculpture IA Printmaking IA Photography IA

Painting and Drawing IB Integrated Practices IB Sculpture IB Printmaking IB Photography IB Art Criticism/Analysis/History Studio Electives Credit subtotal

3 3 3 15

Painting and Drawing II

3

Integrated Practices II Sculpture II Printmaking II Photography II Symposium I Art Criticism/Analysis/History Liberal Arts Elective Studio Electives Credit subtotal

3 3 3 4 16

Semester 3 FA-699B FA-650A

Symposium I Thesis I Art Criticism/Analysis/History Studio Electives Credit subtotal

3 3 3 7 16

Semester 4 FA-601 FA-650B

Thesis Statement I Thesis II Studio Electives Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 7 13 60

Katrin Zimmerman Visiting Assistant Professor, Jewelry A.A.S. Jewelry Design, Fashion Institute of Technology; B.A. Chinese Art and Archaelogy (cum laude), School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK; M.A. Chinese Art and Korean Art, School of Oriental and African Studies, London, UK.

Fine Arts

107


I can’t overemphasize the importance of New York as the center of the art and design world; studying in New York at Pratt was a very special experience. John Pai, M.F.A. ’64, internationally renowned sculptor and former Pratt faculty member


School of Design

Communications Design Package Design Industrial Design Interior Design

Dean Anita Cooney Assistant to the Dean Donna Gorsline Assistant Dean T. Camille Martin Director of Finance Jerry Risner Office Juliana Curran Terian Design Center Steuben 304 Tel: 718.687.5744  Fax: 718.687.5722 sod@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/sod



The School of Design is home to the most comprehensive design education available, supported by a distinguished faculty and exceptional facilities. Two major objectives guide every program. The first is an emphasis on professional skills development. Students gain the techniques, skills, method­ologies, and vocabulary required to succeed as productive designers and scholars. The second objective—imperative, as acquiring professional expertise is not simply based in technical training—is development of the critical judgment and historical perspective that students need to become innovative problem solvers. The School of Design offers graduate degree programs in communications design, industrial design, interior design, and package design. Exceptional technical and studio resources support all programs. Pratt’s distinguished programs in the School of Art and the School of Architecture also enrich the School of Design programs. The faculty consists of professional artists, designers, and practitioners, including numerous recipients of prestigious awards such as Tiffany, Fulbright, and Guggenheim fellowships. The faculty’s works, projects, and publications are recognized and respected internationally. Gifted students from across the United States and around the world collaborate and learn at Pratt, weaving creative energy and opportunity into an unmatched educational experience. Our graduate programs provide students with the opportunity to develop and refine their design process, design voice, and creative skills, leading to professional competence and leadership that contribute to the growing body of design knowledge. Graduate education at Pratt is conceptual and aspirational while being firmly grounded in craft and making. Critical inquiry and research skills are developed through projects in and around the city of New York. It is in this unique and diverse cultural context that the school’s disciplines are taught. The campus is located in Brooklyn, the city’s epicenter of design and culture, providing inspiration and the opportunity to learn from, and interact with, the multitude of creatives who make this borough their home.

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Communications Design

Communications Design Package Design

Chair Santiago Piedrafita Acting Assistant Chair David Burke Assistant to the Chair Yusze Ang Office Tel: 212.647.7573  Fax: 212.367.2481 des@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/gradcommunications-design

Pratt Institute’s graduate Communications Design program has been educating graphic and package design­ ers for more than 40 years. In a survey of 10,000 design professionals by Graphic Design USA magazine, the Pratt program is recognized as one of the five most influential schools in the field over the past 50 years and one of the top five schools today. The program is ranked in the top 12 of over 200 graduate design programs in the nation, as reported in U.S. News & World Report rankings. Pratt offers the Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) degree in Communications Design and the Master of Science (M.S.) degree in Package Design. Our M.F.A. in Communications Design, a 62-credit graduate program, emphasizes full-time studio practice in communications design (print and digital media, artifacts, information, environments, systems). The components of the M.F.A. program focus on studio practice, research and scholarship, design teaching methodologies, and studies of visual media, including history, praxis and theory, critical and creative analysis, aesthetics, as well as other related humanities and social sciences. Our M.S. in Package Design, a 48-credit graduate program, emphasizes full-time studio practice in package design (typography, branding, structural packaging, fragrance packaging, sustainability) and offers a broadly based curriculum centered on the decision-making process for new product/package development, featuring courses in package design, brand development, visual communications, digital technology, marketing, and form. The department is located on Pratt’s main campus in Brooklyn, New York, in the Design Center, a building devoted to its School of Design programs, both under­ graduate and graduate. The department’s faculty includes highly regarded, award-winning professional designers, authors, and marketing and media specialists. The faculty members serve as important professional contacts for the students—several have written pivotal design books and articles, and many have been honored with design awards from prestigious arts and design organizations. With access to world-famous design firms—and through the department’s internship opportunities and pro­fes­ sional faculty—students have the opportunity to talk and work with some of the best designers in the country. As a result, many students secure industry positions even before graduation. A diverse body of students from different professional, educational, and cultural backgrounds—more than 28 countries are represented—come to Pratt to further their careers in the design industry, begin a journey toward becoming a design educator, or alter a career course. Our graduate programs provide students the opportunity

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to develop and refine their design process, design voice, and creative skills, leading to professional competence and leadership. M.F.A IN COMMUNICATIONS DESIGN Design plays a central and formative role in shaping communities, technology, and business. Never before have designers been expected to cultivate such a diverse set of skills and such broad knowledge. Our M.F.A. program prepares individuals to pursue design with passion and cultural relevance. Our distinctive program emphasizes design as a means for communicating meaningful messages, organizing information, creating compelling user experiences, and effecting social change. We believe that the most intriguing and successful designers are cultural innovators who use media to inform, persuade, and entertain. Our graduates develop voices as authors and entrepreneurs engaged in identifying and solving design problems within cross-disciplinary environments. We approach design as an agent of change —a strategy for transforming behaviors of individuals in desirable and sustainable ways. The program provides a framework for both profes­ sional practice and academic careers, while emphasizing full-time studio practice in graphic design—communi­ cations, identities, objects, environments, and systems. Graduates enter the professional world with a confident design voice and an outstanding body of work, prepared to become innovative leaders in communications design areas—i.e., print and digital media, typography, identity systems and branding, design strategy, social media and interaction design, motion design, environ­ mental design, data visualization, information design, and user experience design. The M.F.A. in Communications Design is a full-time program with classes offered during the day as well as some evenings for the convenience of students. A minimum of 62 credits, completed within two years of study, is required for the M.F.A. in Communications Design degree. Students accepted typically hold undergraduate degrees in graphic design or related design fields, such as industrial and interior design, architecture, fine arts, and media arts. We also welcome applicants from non-design fields including communications and journalism, business, liberal arts, and the sciences. Up to six credits of qualifying courses may be required for applicants who do not meet all entrance standards but whose applications indicate a strong aptitude for graduate study. A portfolio review is required for admission. The M.F.A. in Communications Design program strives to prepare individuals to be confident and mature

Communications Design

independent designers who will contribute to the expansion of the field; are skilled in the effective and appropriate use of technology; become leaders in the communications design profession; and are innovators in design pedagogy, research, and publication. Learning outcomes of the M.F.A. Communications Design degree: ll The ability to identify a problem (problem-seeking) and apply design process and research methodology toward finding a solution ll Advanced professional competence, demonstrating depth of knowledge and achievement, in a well developed, defendable, and significant body of work ll The ability to demonstrate knowledge of necessary theory and practice and the desire for a leadership position in the professional and academic worlds ll Advanced capabilities with technologies, demon­strated in the creation, dissemination, presentation, docu­ ment­ation, and preservation of work M.S. IN PACKAGE DESIGN The M.S. in Package Design, a degree first offered in 1966, educates students from diverse cultural, professional, and educational backgrounds in design thinking, technical skills, collaborative abilities, academic knowledge, and managerial competence. While focusing on creative problem-solving, the curriculum is industry-oriented. Graduates enter the professional world with an outstanding body of work, prepared to become innovative leaders in the field of package design. The M.S. in Package Design is an initial master’s degree that offers students structured courses on the decision-making process for new product and package develop­ment, featuring direction in package design, typography, brand development, marketing, structural packaging, packaging technology, fragrance packaging, and the business aspects of the package industry. The M.S. in Package Design is a full-time program with classes offered during the day as well as some evenings for the convenience of students. A minimum of 48 credits, completed within two years of study, is required for the M.S. Package Design degree. Students accepted typically hold undergraduate degrees in graphic design or related design fields, such as industrial and interior design, architecture, fine arts, and media arts. We also welcome applicants from non-design fields including communi­ cations and journalism, business, liberal arts, and the sciences. Up to six credits of qualifying courses may be required for applicants who do not meet all entrance standards but whose applications indicate a strong

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aptitude for graduate study. A portfolio review is required for admission. The M.S. in Package Design program educates students in creative discipline, technical skills, collab­­orative abilities, academic knowledge, and managerial comp­ etence. The comprehensive capstone thesis project demon­strates professional competence and includes extensive research, project formulation and production, and process documentation. Learning outcomes of the M.S. Package Design degree: ll Advanced professional competence, demonstrating depth of knowledge and achievement, in a well developed, defendable, and significant body of work ll Advanced capabilities with technologies, demonstrated in the creation, dissemination, presentation, docu­ mentation, and preservation of work ll The ability to think and plan independently ll An awareness of current issues and developments in package design and communications design and the basic desire, ability, and potential to contribute to the expansion of the field

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WORK BY SIMONE SIMIN LI (M.S. ’14)


WORK BY SANNA HELLSTEN (M.S. ’14)

WORK BY XINYI LI ( M.F.A. ’16)


WORK BY NING LI (M.S. ’16)

WORK BY VARIOUS STUDENTS, DEPARTMENTAL PUBLICATION, FALL ’14


WORK BY KRISTIN MYERS (M.F.A. ’15)

WORK BY CHRISTIANA THEOPHANOPOULOS (M.S. ’16), PHOTO BY MAX GORDON


WORK BY MIKI MURATA (M.S. ’15)

WORK BY MIRA ROJANASAKUL (M.F.A. ’12)


COMMUNICATIONS DESIGN FACULTY Barry Berger Associate Professor B.I.D., Pratt Institute; studied at Department of Defense, Defense Information School, Fort Slocum, New York. Jean Brennan Adjunct Professor, CCE B.A. Literature and Cultural Studies, University of California, Santa Cruz; M.S. Communications Design, Pratt Institute. Thomas Delaney Visiting Instructor A.A.S. Advertising Design/Computer Graphics, Fashion Institute of Technology. Antonio Di Spigna Professor B.F.A., Pratt Institute. David Frisco Adjunct Professor, CCE B.F.A. Graphic Design, University of Illinois, Chicago; M.F.A. Graphic Design, Yale University. Kevin Gatta Professor B.A. Fine Arts, Photography/Art History, Rhode Island College; M.S. Communications/Package Design, Pratt Institute. J. Roger Guilfoyle Adjunct Professor, CCE B.A. Classics, History and English, Creighton University. Richard Hall Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. (Hon.) Fine Art Painting, Bath Spa University, UK; M.F.A. Graduate Communications Design, Pratt Institute. William Hilson Adjunct Professor, CCE B.Arch., Pratt Institute; B.S. Design Graphics; M.S. Computer Graphics, New York Institute of Technology. Michelle Hinebrook Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A., College for Creative Studies; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art. Allen Hori Visiting Associate Professor B.F.A., University of Hawaii; M.F.A., Cranbrook Academy of Art. Tom Klinkowstein Adjunct Professor, CCE B.S. Photography, Rochester Institute of Technology; M.S. Television, Radio, Film, Syracuse University.

Christina Latina Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Savannah College of Art and Design; M.F.A., Pratt Institute.

CURRICULA

EunSun Lee Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., Graphic Design, School of Visual Arts; M.S. Communications Design, Pratt Institute.

Semester 1 DES-710A Graduate Studio: Visual Language A DES-720A Graduate Studio: Technology A DES-730A Graduate Studio: Transformation Design A DES-760A Graduate Seminar A HD-641 Origins of Contemporary Communications Design Credit subtotal

Alex Liebergesell Associate Professor B.F.A. Graphic Design, Kent State University; M.F.A. Graphic Design, Yale University. Katya Moorman Associate Professor B.A. Liberal Arts, SUNY Purchase; M.F.A. 2-D Design, Cranbrook Academy of Art. Ann Morris Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., M.A. Art, Hunter College, CUNY. Eric O’Toole Adjunct Associate Professor B.I.D. Industrial Design, M.F.A. Interactive Digital Arts, Pratt Institute. Santiago Piedrafita Associate Professor, Chair B.I.D., Universidade Estadual do Rio de Janeiro, Brazil; M.S. Communications Design, Pratt Institute. Marc Rosen Visiting Associate Professor B.F.A., Carnegie Mellon University; M.S., Pratt Institute; president, Marc Rosen Associates. Dr. Gaia Scagnetti Assistant Professor B.S., M.S. Communications Design, Ph.D. Multimedia Communication, Politecnico di Milano. Natalie Sims Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of California at Santa Barbara; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Ryan Waller Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A. Graphic Design, Rhode Island School of Design; M.F.A. Graphic Design, Yale University. Pirco Wolfframm Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE Diplom Design Visuelle Kommunikation, Hochschule für Gestaltung, Offenbach; M.F.A. Graphic Design, CalArts. Alisa Zamir Professor B.A., Central School of Arts and Crafts, London; post-graduate studies in design, City of London College; M.S., Pratt Institute.

Gusty Lange Adjunct Professor, CCE B.F.A. Graphics, Denison University; M.P.S. Creativity Development, Pratt Institute; M.S. Communications Design, Pratt Institute.

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121

M.F.A. in Communications Design

Semester 2 DES-741 DES-751 or DES-640 DES-791

3 3 3 3 3 15

Cross-Disciplinary Studio Design Writing

3

Design Management Thesis Research Elective Credits Credit subtotal

3 3 6 15

Semester 3 DES-710B Graduate Studio: Visual Language B DES-720B Graduate Studio: Technology B DES-730B Graduate Studio: Transformation Design B DES-760B Graduate Seminar B DES-794A M.F.A. Thesis Resource A DES-794B M.F.A. Thesis Resource B or HMS-697A Graduate Thesis Writing DES-796 M.F.A. Thesis I Credit subtotal Semester 4 DES-797 M.F.A. Thesis Production and Exhibition DES-799 M.F.A. Thesis II Elective Credits DES-795A M.F.A. Thesis Resource A DES-795B M.F.A. Thesis Resource B or DES-607 Portfolio Development Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 3 3 1

1 3 17

1 3 9 1

1 15 62

Prerequisite Courses DES-601 Design Process & Methodology 3 DES-602 Design Technology 3 DES-603 Design Ideation & Visualization 3 DES-604 Typography 3 Credit subtotal 12


M.S. in Package Design Semester 1 DES-618 DES-620 DES-625 DES-677 Semester 2 DES-619 DES-628 DES-630 HA-601 or HD-662

Typography I Visual Communications I Visual Perception Electronic Pre-press Credit subtotal

3 3 3 3 12

Typography II Structural Packaging Design Packaging: Graphics I History of Western Art

3 3 3

History of Communications Design 2 Credit subtotal 11

Semester 3 DES-629 Fragrance Packaging Research Workshop 3 DES-631 Packaging: Graphics II 3 DES-660 Directed Research 2 DES-680 Digital Design 3 Credit subtotal 11 Semester 4 DES-634 Marketing or DES-640 Design Management DES-699A Thesis I Credit subtotal Semester 5 HD-505 or HD-506 DES-699B

3 6 9

History of Modern Design Concepts of Design Thesis II Credit subtotal Total credits required

Prerequisite Courses DES-608 Design Procedures DES-676 Computer Graphic Systems

Communications Design

2 3 5 48

3 3

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Industrial Design

Chair Constantin Boym Acting Assistant Chair Audrey Lapiner Acting Assistant to the Chair Marcia Brown Office Tel: 718.636.3631  midasst@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ grad-industrial-design

In the last few years, the field of industrial design has gone through dramatic changes. We have seen the revolution in digital technology, which allowed billions of people around the globe to connect, communicate, and share information. We have witnessed a wave of mass creativity, which started to erase the old distinctions among consumers, producers, and designers by allowing wider audiences to participate in the creative process. We have observed the convergence of industrial design with scientific research—from biology and genetics to artificial intelligence and robotics—allowing things from the realm of science fiction to take shape in real life. We have at last begun to address problems of the “other 90 percent” of the world, trying to solve poverty, hunger, energy, health, and other troubling issues of the disadvantaged world population by design. We have come to realize our responsibility for the planet’s climate and limited resources, and for our handling of the environment, industry, and agriculture. The M.I.D. program is set to prepare students to become industry leaders capable of tackling the complex­ity of design problems in the 21st century. Whether working in corporations or acting as entrepreneurs, students will be able to create products, systems, and environments that help to innovate and improve everyday objects and situations. The M.I.D. program welcomes students without previous professional training in industrial design. Students come from the fields of art, architecture, or interior design, and often with degrees in business, engineering, law, or sociology. Industrial design graduate students are typically looking to deepen their knowledge and creative outlook. We select a diverse group from an international pool of students and encourage them to exploit their previous professional pursuits in this new context. In the process, students gain a solid understanding of design fundamentals, from aesthetic values of three-dimensional form to critical design thinking. In accordance with national accreditation standards, we structure our program to address design complexity, innovation, technology, and sustainable future planning, all in an interconnected global context. M.I.D. faculty members are professional educators and designers; many of them are principals of their own successful businesses and recipients of prestigious industry awards. Throughout their years of study, students are exposed to the cultural richness and diversity of New York City, with its world-class museums, galleries, and art and design events. Brooklyn, in particular, has recently become a hot spot for entrepreneurial craft and design culture,

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and students can learn a great deal from immersing themselves in the activities of this bustling contemporary design scene. In 2015, Pratt’s graduate program in Industrial Design was ranked in the top five international programs by both U.S. News & World Report, and QS World University Ranking. The Program’s Structure The M.I.D. degree is a six-semester, 60-credit program for all students, regardless of previous background, to promote collegiality and cohesion in each incoming group of graduate students. This cohesion is essential to a pro­ gram that creates a learning environment where “learning from one another” and teamwork happen, and where the richness of the program is enhanced by a strong sense of community. While our M.I.D. program is a generalist, humanist scheme designed to support the varying skills and interests of the students, we recognize that professors and students alike need to be able to share and articulate the structure and content of the program. Therefore, we have clearly designated three years of study as: first year “Core” (design thinking, ideation, process, skills), second year “Research” (methodology, topics, sources, electives, pre-thesis), and third year “Thesis” (major individual project). Students can take specialized studios that respond to their individual interests and pursuits. The entire curriculum is designed to offer all students the professional knowledge and skills in historical, societal, and global contexts that are necessary for becoming successful design professionals. The thesis provides the greatest possible freedom and opportunity for pursuit of a selected topic and is done under the direction of the faculty. Candidates are expected to demonstrate the full range of design skills and methodology in their thesis projects. Subjects range from consumer products and packaging to furniture and experiential design to the impact of emerging philosophies, materials, and technologies. Students register for six credits of thesis over one year, which culminates in a formal presentation to invited jurors followed by a presentation of the work at the annual design show, a public event attended by industry leaders and potential employers.

Imperial College in London and continues through the spring semester at Keio University in Tokyo. Simultaneously, this groundbreaking international study partnership allows students from London and Tokyo to spend a semester at Pratt. A one-semester option of the GID program is also available. At Keio, studies are devoted to media design and technology, using the school’s advanced facilities, including prototyping and robotics. In London, the curriculum focuses on engineering and invention. The Pratt comp­ onent emphasizes the core principles of industrial design. Pratt GID students then return to New York to complete their final two semesters of thesis work and required courses. In addition to their local studies, students at each location will collaborate on a large-scale international project. By capitalizing on the expertise of each school and the distinct cultures of the three locations, the GID program provides students a rich academic experi­ ence and a unique perspective on global design and entrepre­neurship that no single institution could provide. Applicants are expected to indicate their interest in the GID at the time of entering the M.I.D. program.

GID: Global Innovation Design Study Abroad Pratt M.I.D. students can choose the exciting option of spending their entire second year abroad for full credit. The second year at Pratt’s graduate program is dedicated to research, and students opting for GID are committed to doing their research abroad. The GID program starts in the fall semester at the Royal College of Art (RCA) and

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MORE SKY, THESIS PROJECT BY ALDANA FERRER GARCIA (M.I.D. ’15)


TWIN STOOLS BY LORETA HAAKER TORRES (M.I.D. ’17)

CLOUD BOWL BY LYNN LIN (M.I.D. ’17)


FURNITURE DESIGNS BY GRADUATE STUDENTS AT CAPPELLINI SHOWROOM


URBAN STROLLER, THESIS PROJECT BY YA LUN LEE (M.I.D. ’16)


INDUSTRIAL DESIGN FACULTY Lawrence Au Visiting Instructor B.I.D., Pratt Institute. Peter Barna Associate Professor B.Eng. (Electrical), Virginia Tech; M.I.D., Pratt Institute. Harvey Bernstein Adjunct Professor, CCE B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute. Meri Bourgard-Rohrs Visiting Professor, CCE A.A., Suffolk Community College; B.A., Hunter College; M.F.A. Painting, Pratt Institute. Constantin Boym Professor, Chair B.Arch., Moscow Architectural Institute, Moscow, Russia; M.Design, Domus Academy, Milan. Gina Caspi Visiting Professor B.A., Graphic Design, Hofstra University; M.I.D., Pratt Institute. Esther Beke Cohen Visiting Instructor B.F.A., M.I.D. Interior Design, Pratt Institute. Justin Crocker Visiting Instructor B.F.A., Columbia University; M.I.D., Pratt Institute. Lucia De Respinis Adjunct Professor, CCE B.I.D., Pratt Institute. Kathryn Filla Adjunct Professor, CCE B.I.D., M.I.D., Pratt Institute; postgraduate work, Bank Street College Graduate School of Education, MIT Advanced Visual Design Center. Kate Hixon Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE B.I.D. (Hon.), Pratt Institute. Michael Hobbs Visiting Instructor B.F.A. Illustration, Photographic Studies, Rhode Island School of Design. Matthew Hoey Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Temple University. Jeffrey Kapec Visiting Associate Professor B.I.D., Pratt Institute; Studied Space Analysis, Wire Problem, Relationships in Abstraction at School of Visual Arts. Robert Langhorn Adjunct Associate Professor Middlesex Polytechnic; Royal College of Art, London (Design Products).

Industrial Design

Jay Levy Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.Arch., Columbia University. Kate Lewis Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Industrial Design, Rochester Institute of Technology; M.A. Applied Imagination in the Creative Industries, Central Saint Martins. Jong S. (Mark) Lim Adjunct Professor, CCE B.F.A., Seoul National University; M.F.A. with distinction, Pratt Institute. Scott Lundberg Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE B.S., B.Arch., North Dakota State University; M.I.D., Pratt Institute.

Irvin Tepper Adjunct Professor, CCE B.F.A., Kansas City Art Institute; M.F.A., University of Washington. Jonathan Thayer Associate Professor B.I.D., Pratt Institute. William Jeffrey Tolbert Adjunct Associate Professor B.S. Biology, Millsaps College; B.F.A., Museum Art School; M.F.A., Yale University. Ignacio Urbina Polo Associate Professor M.S. Product Engineering, Universidad Federal de Santa Catarina, Brazil.

Frederick McSwain Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of North Carolina at Wilmington.

Rebecca Welz Adjunct Professor, CCE Studied at Boston Museum School; B.A., Empire State College.

Frank Millero Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Molecular Cell Biology, University of California at Berkeley; M.I.D., Pratt Institute.

Allen Wilpon Visiting Associate Professor B.Arch., University of Floriday, Gainesville; M.I.D. Pratt Institute; M.D. Domus Academy, Milan.

Katrin Mueller-Russo Professor Dipl. Des., Industrial Design, Hochschule für Bildende Künste Hamburg, Germany.

Laura Wing Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Azusa Pacific University; M.F.A., Parsons The New School for Design.

Karol Murlak Associate Professor B.A. Hon., Falmouth College of Art, UK; M.A. Hon., Ph.D., Academy of Fine Arts in Warsaw, Poland.

Henry Yoo Adjunct Professor, CCE B.B.A., University of Wisconsin at Madison; M.I.D., Pratt Institute.

William Niemeier Visiting Assistant Professor A.A.S., Fashion Institute of Technology. Judith Nylen Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Scripps College; M.L.S., M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Rebeccah Pailes-Friedman Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A. Fashion Design, Pratt Institute; M.I.D., Pratt Institute; Studied Computer Graphics and Graphic Design, School of Visual Arts; Studied Millinery Design, Fashion Institute of Technology. Peter Ragonetti Visiting Instructor B.F.A., University of Colorado at Denver; B.I.D., Pratt Institute. Michael Schafler Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Johns Hopkins University; M.I.D., Pratt Institute. Alex Schweder Visiting Associate Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.F.A., M.Arch., Princeton University; Fellow of Architecture, American Academy in Rome; Ph.D., University of Cambridge.

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CURRICULUM M.I.D. in Industrial Design Year 1 (Core) Semester 1 IND-612A Industrial Design Technology I (with Seminar) 3 IND-614A Graduate Color Workshop I (2-D) 2 IND-672 3-D I 2 IND-694 Drawing I or IND-515 Prototypes I 2 IND-608 History of Industrial Design 2 Credit subtotal 11 Semester 2 IND-612B Industrial Design Technology II (with Seminar) 3 IND-614B Graduate Color Workshop II (2-D) Elective (Graphics) 2 or IND-673 3-D II or IND-516 Prototypes II 2 IND-543 Digital Ideation or IND-541 Solidworks I 2 IND-615 Model Making or IND-690 Industrial Design Workshop I 2 IND-669 Business of Design for I.D. 2 Credit subtotal 13

INDC-624 Design Methodology INDC-626 Design Strategies INDC-628 Furniture Design INDC-630 Exhibit Design INDC-632 Tabletop Design INDC-660B Directed Research II Elective Credit subtotal

2 3 10

Year 3 (Thesis) Semester 5 IND-515 Prototypes I or IND-658 Special Project HD-668 Thesis Seminar IND-699A Thesis I Elective Credit subtotal

2 2 3 2 9

Semester 6 IND-699B Thesis II Elective Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 6 60

Year 2 (Research) Semester 3 IND-587 Sustainable Production Methods 2 IND-660A Directed Research I 2 Take 3 credits from the industrial design core courses. IND-620 Process/Product Studio IND-622 Interdepartmental Studio IND-624 Design Methodology IND-626 Design Strategies IND-628 Furniture Design IND-630 Exhibit Design IND-632 Tabletop Design IND-667A Global Research Seminar or IND-515 Prototypes I Elective Credit subtotal

2 2 11

Semester 4 IND-667B Global Research Seminar or IND-516 Prototypes II

2

Take 3 credits from the industrial design core courses. INDC-620 Process/Product Studio INDC-622 Interdepartmental Studio

Industrial Design

3

3

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Interior Design

Chair Alison B. Snyder Acting Assistant Chair Tania Sofia Branquinho Assistant to the Chair Aston Gibson Office Tel: 718.636.3630  Fax: 718.399.4440 int@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ interior-design-grad

The M.F.A. in Interior Design at Pratt Institute is located within the ultimate learning environment of New York City—the interior design capital of the United States. We present an inspiring and challenging course of study in an expanding and dynamic discipline. In 2017, the graduate interior design program was ranked first in the country by DesignIntelligence. Since 2006, we have been consistently ranked in the top three across the country. As one of the top graduate programs in the country, we inspire our students to become leaders by setting high standards for critical thinking, exemplary expression, professional aptitude, and responsible action in enhancing and transforming the human environment. The M.F.A. in Interior Design guides students in generating creative solutions that integrate an under­ standing of craft and making, material research, changing technologies, sustainable practice, current issues, and a critical understanding of the global cultural history and context affecting the interior environment. The program prepares students with a high level of critical inquiry and explorative capacity that will establish them as leaders and innovators in the field and, in turn, lead to an ongoing exploration of the larger potentials of interior design practice, education, and research. The M.F.A. degree concentrates on the preparation of individuals who are ready to contribute to the academic discipline as well as the profession. Our students are drawn from all parts of the world, with varying backgrounds and from a variety of disciplines, which creates an intel­ lectually and aesthetically stimulating environment in the studios. These students are a select group who come to Pratt to work hard and prepare to enter a profession in which the designer must be multifaceted and able to provide innovative design solutions. Our M.F.A. program allows students with different backgrounds to come together to study and create. Many come to the program for a career change, so classroom interchange is enhanced by the diversity of students. For instance, a student who comes from a background in economics has a very different approach from one coming from dance, and each has something to learn from the other. An important part of Pratt’s mission is to prepare graduates to become leaders in the profession, challenging and preparing our students to develop to their fullest potential. The M.F.A. curriculum brings a focus to the interior by concentrating on scale, use, and developing materiality in order to connect the practice of interior design to larger issues of inhabitation, cities, and society. Our faculty members are a mixture of practicing profes­sionals and academics with many levels of expertise. They bring real-world design experience into their creative classroom

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teaching. The program instills values in its students, not as mere competencies, but as opportunities for critical engagement in the contemporary world. In support of this transformative responsibility, the program fosters an inquisitive dialogue among its faculty and students, and open exchange with the world of designers, producers, and users of the built environment. We are committed to the application of current technology, to the educational experience, and to the support of analysis and research that contributes to the body of knowledge in the discipline.

are required to take a qualifying year of preparatory study, a total of 24 credits, before they continue the M.F.A degree. These students complete 84 credits in three years. A portfolio for the qualifying year of preparatory study is not required, however applicants are strongly encour­aged to submit samples of creative and/or profes­ sional work from relevant disciplines, such as: any of the fine arts, industrial design, fashion design, furniture making, exhibition work, communications design, or similar.

THE PROGRAM’S STRUCTURE The graduate Interior Design program at Pratt, like its undergraduate counterpart, is an architecturally oriented program with emphasis on spatial design as well as surface articulation. All aspects of space—scale, proportion, configuration, and light sources, as well as textures, materials, and colors—are studied in relation to their effects on the human spirit. The M.F.A. enriches the academic experience through emphasis on cultural and technological innovation, interdisciplinary collaboration, and theoretical and applied research. It is a degree program for students who wish to study interior design as an academic discourse as well as a professional endeavor. The curriculum allows students to develop areas of specialization with concentration options and will encourage interdisciplinary work and cross-disciplinary course registration. Concentrations include emerging technologies, sustainability, exhibition design, theory and self-directed topics. The M.F.A. allows for expanding the graduate experience and enhancing the student’s area of focus. Students are encouraged to take advantage of the many courses offered at Pratt that will enable them to fully develop their interests and talents. Electives may be chosen from virtually any department in the Institute; an enormous menu of courses is available for the pursuit of individual interests. The program culminates in a thesis project in the final year of study. The thesis provides the greatest possible freedom and opportunity for a student to pursue a selected topic in depth. Work is done under the direction of thesis advisers and is completed within one year. Applicants with an undergraduate degree in interior design, architecture, or other closely related design fields may be eligible to complete the M.F.A. in two years, a total of 60 credits; a portfolio is required. Applicants with undergraduate backgrounds that are unrelated to interior design or architecture, but whose applications indicate a strong aptitude for interior design graduate coursework,

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STUDENTS IN INTERIOR OPTIONS LAB INFLATABLES


WORK BY VICKY L. MO (M.F.A. ’16)

WORK BY ADRIAN CHAN (M.F.A. ’16)


WORK BY JAMEL WILLIAMS (M.F.A. ’17) AND TOM JAMIESON (M.I.D. ’17)


WORK BY CHENG LI (M.F.A. ’18)


INTERIOR DESIGN FACULTY Virna Abraham Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Interior Architecture, University of California; M.F.A. Lighting Design, Parsons The New School. Severino Alfonso Visiting Assistant Professor Superior Degree, Arch., Universidad Politecnica, Madrid, Spain; M.S. Advanced Architecture, Columbia University. Eric Ansel Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Painting and Drawing, Rhode Island School of Design; M.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.F.A. Painting and Drawing, School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Tarek Ashkar Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Berkeley; M.Arch., Harvard University Graduate School of Design. Peter Lind Barna Professor BSEE, Virginia Tech; M.I.D., Pratt Institute. Francesca Bastianini Visiting Instructor B.A. Theatre and Psychology, Smith College; M.A. Counseling Psychology, Lesley University; M.F.A. Architectural Lighting, Parsons. Jacob Bek Visiting Assistant Professor A.A. Design, Bard College at Simon’s Rock; B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.Sc. Emergent Technologies and Design, Architectural Association School of Architecture. David Black Visiting Assistant Professor B.Sc. Arch., Georgia Institute of Technology; M.Arch., University of Illinois, Chicago.

Der Sean Chou Visiting Assistant Professor B.B.A. Information Management, Fu Jen Catholic University, Taiwan; M.S. Information Systems, New York University; M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute. Annie Coggan Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Art and History, Bennington College; M.Arch., Southern California Institute of Architecture. Jim Conti Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A. Printmaking and Sculpture, Youngstown University; M.F.A. Expanded Arts, Art and Technology, Ohio State University. James Counts Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Kansas State University; M.S.A.A.D., Columbia University. Wendy Cronk Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Architecture and Economics, Washington University; M.Arch., Harvard University Graduate School of Design. Asli Erdem Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Interior Architecture and Environmental Design, Bilkent University; M.Arch., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Kim Farrah Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Fine Art, Western Michigan University; M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute. Phil Farrell Adjunct Professor B.F.A. Interior Design, Pratt Institute; M.S. Environmental Design.

Claudia Hernandez Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., California Polytechnic State University; M.S.A.A.D., GSAPP, Columbia University. Sarah Hill Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Fashion Design, Parsons School of Design; M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute. Lindsay Homer Visiting Associate Professor B.A. Studio Art, Bates College; M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute. Benjamin Howes Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.Eng. Product Architecture, Stevens Institute of Technology. Sheryl Kasak Adjunct Associate Professor B.F.A., B.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design; M.S.A.A.D., Columbia University. Ted Kilcommons Visiting Instructor B.A. English Literature, University of Texas. Olivia Knott Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Arch., University of Illinois at Chicago; M.Arch., Parsons The New School for Design. Eugene Kwak Visiting Associate Professor B.Arch., Carnegie Mellon University; M.S. Archi­ tecture and Urban Design, Columbia University. Chelsea Limbird Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Economics, Brown University; B.A. Architectural Studies, Brown University; M.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design.

Tania Branquinho Visiting Assistant Professor, Acting Assistant Chair B.F.A. Interior Design, New York School of Interior Design; M.Arch., Pratt Institute.

David Foley Visiting Professor B.A. Architectural Studies, University of Pittsburgh; M.Arch., University of Illinois; M.Arch. Urban Design, University of Notre Dame.

Nick Brinen Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Architecture, University of Florida, M.Arch., University of Texas at Austin.

Nancy Gesimondo Visiting Instructor B.A. Fine Arts, Queens College; M.F.A. Interior Design, Parsons The New School for Design.

Greg Bugel Visiting Assistant Professor M.Arch., Columbia University GSAPP, M.Arts, Museum Studies, Seton Hall University.

Randi Halpern Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Interior Design, New York Institute of Technology; Graduate Studies, Parsons Lighting.

Addy Madorsky Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Film and Television Production, New York University Tisch School of the Arts; M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute.

Mary A. Burke Adjunct Associate Professor B.A. Architectural History, Fordham University; B.Arch., City College School of Architecture; M.S. Historic Preservation, Columbia University.

Dalia Hamati Visiting Assistant Professor B.Sc. Arch., University of Bath; M.S.A.A.D., GSAPP, Columbia University.

Michael Maggio Visiting Assistant Professor B.P.S. Architecture, SUNY Buffalo; M.Arch., SUNY Buffalo.

Adam Hayes Visiting Instructor B.Arch., Rice University.

William Mangold Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A. Studio and Liberal Arts, Rhode Island School of Design; B.Arch. Design and Engineering, Rhode Island School of design; M.Phil. Social Science and Theory, The Graduate Center, CUNY; Ph.D. candidate in the Environmental Psychology program at The Graduate Center, CUNY.

Tania Chau Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Linguistics, University of Chicago; M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute. Ike Cheung Visiting Instructor, Lecturer B.Arch., Pratt Institute.

Interior Design

John Heida Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Architecture, Rice University; B.A. Microbiology, University of Montana.

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Jason Livingston Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Theatre Arts, University of Miami; M.F.A. Theatre Lighting Design, New York University. Cam Lorendo Adjunct Associate Professor Certificate of Design/Environmental Design, Parsons School of Design.


William McLoughlin Visiting Instructor B.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design/Brown University. Anthony Mekel Visiting Associate Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute. Francine Monaco Adjunct Associate Professor B.Arch., University of Cincinnati. John Nafziger Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Middle Eastern Studies, Franklin and Marshall College; M.Arch., Yale University. Robert Nassar Visiting Associate Professor B.F.A. Interior Design, Syracuse University. Latoya Nelson Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Business Administration, Georgetown University; M.F.A., George Washington University; M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania (specialty in Real Estate Development). Tetsu Ohara Visiting Assistant Professor Computer Science, University of California, Los Angeles; Architecture, University of California, Berkeley; Harvard University Graduate School of Design: Intensive Program. Jon Otis Professor B.A. English/Journalism, Moravian College; M.S. Interior Design and Architectural Studies, University of Massachusetts. Danny Pang Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. East Asian Literature, University of Florida; M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute. Leticia Pardo Rojo Visiting Assistant Professor M.S. Interior Design, Pratt Institute. Rachel Paupek Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Smith College; M.Arch., Rhode Island School of Design. Régis Péan Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Architecture and Engineering, Technical University Vienna, Austria; M.Arch., Technical University Vienna, Austria. Sal Raffone Visiting Assistant Professor B.S.Arch., Northeastern University; M.Arch., Harvard University Graduate School of Design; M.B.A., Columbia Business School. J. Woodson Rainey Jr. Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., University of Utah; B.Arch., University of Utah.

Interior Design

Christian Reitzke Visiting Assistant Professor Diplom-Ingenieur (professional degree in architecture), Munster, Germany; M.Arch., Pratt Institute. Ben Rosenblum Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Visual Arts and Politics, Oberlin College; M.S.Arch., University of California, Berkeley; M.Arch., Yale University. Rachely Rotem Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Israel Institute for Technology; M.S.A.A.D., Columbia University. Mary-Jo Schlachter Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Design of the Environment, University of Pennsylvania; M.Arch., University of Pennsylvania. Irina Schneid Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., M.Arch. II, Cornell University. Deborah Schneiderman Professor B.S. Design and Environmental Analysis, Cornell University; M.Arch., SCI-Arc, LA. Alex Schweder Visiting Associate Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.F.A., M.Arch., Princeton University; Ph.D. University of Cambridge, UK. Coren Sharples Visiting Assistant Professor B.S., University of Maryland, College of Business and Management; M.Arch., Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning, and Preservation.

Sarah Strauss Visiting Associate Professor B.A. Studio Art/Art History and Chemistry minor, Duke University; M.Arch., Yale University. Keena Suh Associate Professor B.A. English Literature, University of Illinois; M.Arch., Columbia University. Myonggi Sul Professor B.A. English Literature, Valparaiso University; M.S. Environmental Design, Pratt Institute. Karin Tehve Associate Professor B.Arch., Pennsylvania State University; M.Arch., Harvard University Graduate School of Design. Jack Travis Adjunct Professor B.Arch., Arizona State University, Temple; M.Arch., University of Illinois. Loukia Tsafoulia Visiting Assistant Professor M.S.A.A.D., GSAPP, Columbia University; Diploma in Architecture Engineering, School of Architecture, National Polytechnic University of Athens (NTUA), Greece; Ph.D. Candidate at NTUA. Kathryn van Voorhees Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. History and Criticism of Art and Visual Culture, Bates College; M.Arch., Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation. Kevin Walz Visiting Associate Professor The New York Studio School; Pratt Institute.

Hazel Siegel Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Textile Deign, Skidmore College; M.F.A. Art Education, Hunter College.

William Watson Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Economics, Princeton University; M.Arch., University of Texas at Austin.

Andrew Simons Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Graphic Design, Carnegie Mellon University.

Henry Weintraub Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. History, University of Michigan; M.Arch., Harvard University Graduate School of Design.

Alison B. Snyder Professor, Chair B.A. Architecture, Washington University; M.Arch., GSAPP Columbia University. Darius Somers Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute; M.S.A.A.D., Columbia University.

Alexandra Winton Visiting Associate Professor B.A. Art History, Smith College; M.A. Bard Graduate Center for Studies in Decorative Arts. Piotr Woronkowicz Visiting Instructor B.S. Product Design, Art Center College of Design, California.

Suzanne Song Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pennsylvania State University; M.S.A.A.D., GSAPP, Columbia University; M.A.S. Management Technology and Economics, ETH Zurich.

Edwin Zawadzki Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Applied Mathematics, Harvard University; M.Arch., Yale University.

Scott Sorenson Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Pratt Institute.

Michael Zuckerman Adjunct Professor B.Arch., B.S. Architecture, City College, New York.

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CURRICULUM M.F.A. in Interior Design Semester 1 (Qualifying) INT-601 Qualifying Design I INT-631 Qualifying Color and Materials INT-606 Qualifying Architecture Drawing HD-609 History of Interior Design I Credit subtotal

6 2 2 2 12

Semester 2 (Qualifying) INT-602 Qualifying Design II INT-604 Qualifying Construction INT-560 CADD I/AutoCad HD-610 History of Interior Design II Credit subtotal

6 2 2 2 12

Semester 3 INT-711 INT-713 INT-715 INT-717

6 3 3 3 15

Interior Design Studio Ideation and Representation Light, Color, and Material Interior Design Theory Credit subtotal

Semester 4 INT-722 Interior Design Options Studio INT-724 Construction and Fabrication INT-726 Environmental Technology and Sustainable Elements Interior Theory Elective Credit subtotal

6 3 3 3 15

Semester 5 INT-731 Interior Design Options Lab INT-799A Thesis II Elective Elective INT-9401 Internship or INT 733 Teaching Practicum Credit subtotal

1 16

Semester 6 INT-799B Thesis II INT-641 Professional Practice Elective Elective Credit subtotal Total credits required

6 2 3 3 14 60

3 6 3 3

NYSED requirements History of Interior Design I and II may be required for students whose undergraduate studies did not cover the subject matter. This will be determined by a review of an applicant’s transcripts and an interview with the academic adviser. *Accepted students may be required to complete a 24-credit qualifying year of preparatory study prior to entering the two year 60 credit M.F.A.

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Pratt was an amazing, amazing experience in my life. We had top faculty that inspired us. I use the foundation that I received at Pratt, but I take it in many different directions. Samuel Botero (B.F.A. Interior Design ’68), renowned interior designer; principal, Samuel Botero Associates, Inc.


School of Information

Library and Information Science (LIS) Museums and Digital Culture Data Analytics and Visualization Information Experience Design Advanced Certificate Programs

Dean Tula Giannini, Ph.D., M.L.S., M.M. si@pratt.edu Assistant to the Dean for Administrative Services Vinette P. Thomas, M.S.L.I.S. vthomas@pratt.edu Adviser for Academic Programs Quinn Lai, M.A., M.S.L.I.S. qlai@pratt.edu Office Tel: 212.647.7682  Fax: 212.367.2492 SI@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ academics/information



Our diverse programs prepare full‑time and part-time students for exciting and challenging careers as information professionals and digital innovators in libraries, archives, museums, and information design and visualization. Building upon Pratt’s national reputation as a leading school in art and design, we bring creativity and innovation to information science education. Our mission is to lead the information field, through teaching and research, in making connections with the arts, culture, and technology. We create knowledge, encourage knowledge sharing, and educate creative, critical, and socially responsible professionals who participate in, contribute to, and improve the information society. Located on West 14th Street, our facilities offer cutting-edge specialized labs and classrooms designed for participatory, hands‑on learning experiences. We work in collaboration with world-class New York City cultural institutions—across galleries, libraries, archives, and museums—to provide students with exceptional learning opportunities. Founded in 1890, our master’s in Library and Information Science (LIS) degree, a program fully accredited by the American Library Association, stands as the oldest LIS program in the United States. With dedication and vision, we are building upon our long and distinguished heritage in the information field by continuing to evolve and transform in order to offer cutting-edge and forward-looking programs that meet the information challenges of the 21st century. A survey of recent graduates showed that 95 percent had obtained professional positions within a year of graduation.

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Library and Information Science

Dean Tula Giannini, Ph.D., M.L.S., M.M. infosils@pratt.edu Assistant to the Dean for Administrative Services Vinette P. Thomas, M.S.L.I.S. vthomas@pratt.edu Adviser for Academic Programs Quinn Lai, M.A., M.S.L.I.S. qlai@pratt.edu

Office Tel: 212.647.7682  Fax: 212.367.2492 SI@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ academics/information

The School of Information’s programs in library and info­rm­­ ation science (LIS) attract students from top universities who come to study with leading information practitioners and researchers. Students benefit from the rich and immersive learning environment of the Master of Science in Library and Information Studies program and its cuttingedge curriculum that challenges them intellectually and creatively. Our full-time faculty members are widely recognized in the field. Connecting their research with teaching, faculty engage students in project-based and experiential learning. Our part-time faculty members are experts in practice and hold key positions at New York’s educational and cultural institutions across GLAM (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, and Museums), the rapidly emerging information design sector, and creative industries. We offer students a rich array of practicum, internships, and fellowship opportunities that connect them to the professional world of work. Students participate in a wide variety of student organ­­ izations to enhance their educational experience. Among the organizations they can join are the School of Inform­ ation student chapters of the American Library Association, Special Libraries Association, Association for Information Science and Technology, and Society of American Archivists. MASTER OF SCIENCE IN LIBRARY AND INFORMATION SCIENCE (M.S.L.I.S.) This program supports students’ learning and career goals in the information professions and is built around overarching areas of study that are at once interdisciplinary and converging. These are expressed through areas of concentration, advanced certificates, and dual-degree programs that offer students a range of choices and opportunities to be creative in planning their studies. Taking a user-centered 21st century approach to the field, expressed through a wide range of courses, the curriculum represents the information field of diverse media, formats, and activities with focus on information services, technology, organization, curation, preservation, conservation, dissemination, access, use, and management for today’s digital world. Course and Credit Requirements Students must complete 36 credit hours with a B average or better and meet other prescribed requirements of the Institute. Students entering with a master’s degree complete 30 credits. School of Information courses are 3 credits each and are offered in the morning, afternoon, and evening. The degree includes four core courses (12 credits) and eight elective courses (24 credits). The average time for degree completion is two years. Students must

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complete degree requirements within four years of the date of registering for their first course. The Core Curriculum All students must take the four-course core that prepares them for more advanced courses. Required courses: ll LIS 651 Information Professions ll LIS 652 Information Services and Sources ll LIS 653 Knowledge Organization ll LIS 654 Information Technologies Prior to enrolling in LIS 654 Information Technologies, students should possess baseline technology skills and be able to use the Microsoft Office suite, including Excel, Access, and PowerPoint, and various internet technologies. In addition to the four core courses, students must also take eight elective courses. Below is a sampling of our diverse elective course offerings: ll LIS 611 Information Policies and Politics ll LIS 630 Research Design and Methods ll LIS 643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design ll LIS 665 Projects in Digital Archives ll LIS 680 Instructional Technologies ll LIS 681 Community Building and Engagement ll LIS 697 Art Documentation ll LIS 697 Web Development Program-Level Student Learning Outcomes As students complete courses for the M.S.L.I.S. degree, they acquire knowledge and skills in five broad areas related to the information professions: 1. Research: Students carry out and apply research. 2. Communication: Students demonstrate excellent communication skills and create and convey content. 3. Technology: Students use information technology and digital tools effectively. 4. User-Centered Focus: Students apply concepts related to use and users of information and user needs and perspectives. 5. Reflective LIS Practice: Students perform within the framework of professional practice. Advanced Certificates A student can complete the degree while earning any of the following advanced certificates: ll Archives ll Conservation and Digital Curation ll Digital Humanities ll Museum Libraries ll User Experience

Library and Information Science

The e-Portfolio: A Graduation Requirement Each student entering the M.S.L.I.S. degree program is required to complete an e-Portfolio that must be approved by their adviser before graduation. The e-Portfolios reflect the culmination of students’ M.S.L.I.S. learning experiences. They provide students with the opportunity to showcase their best work from the courses they have taken at the School of Information and to demon­ strate that they have met the program-level student learning outcomes. The School encourages students to think of their e-Portfolios as vehicles for creatively expressing their achievements and learning experiences from the program, presenting their most innovative thinking, and demon­strating their professional skill set. E-Portfolios at Pratt run on the open-source Mahara platform and are supported by the Office of Educational Technology and the Technology Advisery Subcommittee on Teaching and Learning. We invite you to visit the e-Portfolio website at eportfolio.pratt.edu. Admissions Applicants must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited university. Applicants must have a superior scholastic record or otherwise give evidence of ability to perform work on the graduate level and are expected to offer evidence of maturity and leadership potential for the profession. All applicants must apply using the online application, upload the following items, and submit requests for recommendations online: ll Official transcripts of all previous postsecondary education ll A statement of purpose describing interest in the program as well as personal goals ll A current résumé/CV ll Request two letters of recommendation online from academic or professional sources International students whose first language is not English must submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The minimum required TOEFL score is 82 (Internet), IELTS of 6.5, and PTE score of 53. Students who are not international but whose first language is not English must submit the GRE, TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. Applicants may apply for nonmatriculated status if desired and take up to six credits. M.S.L.I.S. WITH LIBRARY MEDIA SPECIALIST (L.M.S.) PROGRAM LEADING TO NEW YORK STATE TEACHER CERTIFICATION *Please note, we are not accepting fall and spring 2017 students for the Library Media Specialist program (M.S.L.I.S. with L.M.S.).

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The Library Media Specialist program meets the needs of students who wish to become school librarians. Our L.M.S. specialization, accredited by the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP), leads to New York state teacher certification. At the School of Information, students may simultaneously work to complete both the M.S.L.I.S. degree and the education courses required for teacher certification. Students holding an M.S.L.I.S. degree may also complete the L.M.S. track with the School of Information Advanced Certificate. Through scholarship, fieldwork, and student teaching, L.M.S. candidates prepare for careers in New York City school libraries. To give students a richer experience through collaboration and interdisciplinary approaches, we work with the Department of Art and Design Education to meet program and certification requirements in the field of education. Course and Credit Requirements All L.M.S. students complete the 36-credit M.S.L.I.S. program. The following courses are required: ll Four core courses (LIS 651, 652, 653, 654) ll Six L.M.S. required courses (LIS 648, 676, 677, 680, 690, 692) ll Two electives To comply with New York State Education Department (NYSED) requirements for certification, students must have the requisite background in liberal arts and sciences, a determination that will be made before admission. In some cases, students may be required to earn any necessary credits as they complete their M.S.L.I.S. degree, either by taking relevant college-level courses or equivalency exams, such as College-Level Examination Program (CLEP) tests. NYSED also requires all teacher candidates to fulfill requirements beyond the M.S.L.I.S. degree, including: ll Pedagogical core coursework in education (ED 608 Roots of Urban Education, ED 610 Child and Adolescent Development, and LIS 691 Serving Students with Disabilities in the Library) ll Three noncredit seminars: Child Abuse Recognition as well as Life Safety and Prevention may be taken online; Dignity for All Students (DASA) must be taken in person. ll Four teacher-certification examinations: the Academic Literacy Skills Test (ALST), the Educating All Students test (EAS), the Content Specialty Test (CST) for school librarians, and edTPA

students with special needs. While taking LIS 690 and LIS 692, students will conduct 40 full days of student teaching. Admissions Applicants must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited university. Applicants must have a superior scholastic record or otherwise give evidence of ability to perform work on the graduate level and are expected to offer evidence of maturity and leadership potential for the profession. All applicants must apply using the online application, upload the following items, and submit requests for recommendations online: ll Official transcripts of all previous postsecondary education ll A statement of purpose describing interest in the program as well as personal goals ll A current résumé/CV ll Request two letters of recommendation online from academic or professional sources International students whose first language is not English must submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The minimum required TOEFL score is 82 (Internet), IELTS of 6.5, and PTE score of 53. Students who are not international but whose first language is not English must submit the GRE, TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. Applicants may apply for nonmatriculated status if desired and take up to six credits.

L.M.S. students must complete 100 hours of field observation in school libraries in at least eight different schools. At least 15 hours must be in schools that serve

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CURRICULA

M.S./M.F.A. in Library and Information Science/Digital Arts

M.S. in Library and Information Science Semester 1 LIS-651 LIS-652

Information Professions 3 Information Services and Sources 3 Elective Credits 3 Credit subtotal 9

Semester 2 LIS-653 LIS-654

Knowledge Organization Information Technologies Elective Credits Credit subtotal

3 3 3 9

Semester 3 Elective Credits Credit subtotal ­­Semester 4 Elective Credits Credit subtotal Total credits required

9 9

9 9 36

M.S. in Library and Information Science: Library Media Specialist Semester 1 LIS-651 LIS-653 LIS-648

Information Professions Knowledge Organizations Library Media Centers Credit subtotal

3 3 3 9

Semester 2 LIS-652 Information Services and Resources 3 LIS-654 Information Technologies 3 ED-610 Child Development 3 LIS-691 Serving Children and Youth with Disabilities 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 3 LIS-676 Literature and Literacy for Children 3 LIS-677 Literature and Literacy for Young Adults 3 Credit subtotal 6 Semester 4 LIS-690 ED-608

Student Teaching: Elementary The Roots of Urban Education Elective Credits Credit subtotal

3 3 3 9

Semester 5 LIS-692 LIS-680

Student Teaching: Secondary Instructional Technologies Elective credits Credit subtotal Total Credits required

3 3 3 9 45

Library and Information Science

Semester 1 LIS-651 Information Professions 3 DDA-572 Electronic Music and Sound or DDA-626 Audio for Digital Media 3 DDA-600 Digital Arts In Context 3 DDA-610 Fundamentals of Computer Graphics 3 DDA-616 Design for Interactive Media 3 Credit subtotal 15 Semester 2 LIS-652 LIS-653 DDA-500 DDA-585 DDA-622

Information Services and Sources 3 Knowledge Organization 3 Interactive Studio, or Interactive Installation 3 Interactive Media 3 Credit subtotal 12

Semester 3 LIS-654 Information Technologies 3 LIS Course from the list of “Required Electives” (See List) 3 DDA-620 Graphics Programming 3 DDA-625 Video Editing 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 4 LIS ourse from the list of C “Required Electives” (See List) 3 LIS Course from the list of “Recommended Electives” (See List) 3 DDA-645 Digital Imaging Studio 3 DDA-650 Thesis Research 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 5 LIS lective Course (Electives may be E selected from lists of required or recommended courses.) 3 DDA-614 3-D Modeling 3 DDA-660 Thesis I 3 Note: 6 credits of non-DDA courses required for the M.F.A. in DA degree are taken in the M.S. LIS program from list of M.S. LIS electives with asterisks (See List). DDA

Electives (See List) Credit subtotal

Semester 6 LIS Elective Course LIS Elective Course Electives may be selected from the below lists of required or recommended courses. DDA-587 Physical Computing DDA-660 Thesis II

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3 18

3 3

3 3

Credit subtotal Total credits required

17 6

Subtotals by Degree: M.S. in LIS M.F.A. in DA

30 45


Museums and Digital Culture

MASTER OF SCIENCE IN MUSEUMS AND DIGITAL CULTURE (M.S.) The 36-credit M.S. in Museums and Digital Culture prepares full-time and part-time students with the knowledge and skills for careers in the rapidly expanding field of museums in the digital age—in contrast to museum studies programs generally, which are generally concerned with the more traditional curatorial and administrative areas of museum work. This program, designed for the 21st-century information society constitutes the first museum master’s focusing on the use of digital technology and media in museums—physical, virtual, and on the web. Grounded in the theory and practice of information science and the related fields of museum informatics and digital cultural heritage, the M.S. in Museums benefits from the commonalities of digital information practices across galleries, libraries, archives, and museums.

Dean and Professor Tula Giannini, Ph.D., M.L.S., M.M. si@pratt.edu

Course and Credit Requirements Students must complete 36 credit hours with a B average or better and meet other prescribed requirements of the Institute. Students entering with a master’s degree complete 30 credits. School of Information courses are 3 credits each and are offered in the morning, afternoon, and evening. The program requires the completion of seven required courses (21 credits), including a culminating research project done in a two-course sequence over two semesters; three required elective courses (9 credits); and two open elective courses (6 credits). The average time for degree completion is two years. Students must complete degree requirements within four years of the date of registering for their first course. Drawing upon the School of Information’s long-standing programmatic focus on cultural informatics, the curriculum is concerned with how museums are using digital media, tools and technology across the full range of museum functions and activities; there are five study areas. Courses marked with an asterisk (*) are required.

Assistant to the Dean for Administrative Services Vinette P. Thomas, M.S.L.I.S. vthomas@pratt.edu

Museums and Digital Culture: Theory and Practice ll LIS 679 Museums and Digital Culture* ll LIS 681 Community Building and Engagement*

Adviser for Academic Programs Quinn Lai, M.A., M.S.L.I.S. qlai@pratt.edu

Museum Collections and Services: Digital Preservation and Curation ll LIS 663 Metadata, Description and Access* ll LIS 655 Digital Preservation and Curation One course (3 credits) from the following: ll LIS 629 Art Collections: Research and Documentation ll LIS 669 Digital Asset Management ll LIS 663 Metadata Description and Access

Office Tel: 212.647.7682  Fax: 212.367.2492 si@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu /academics/information

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ll LIS 670 Cultural Heritage Access and Description ll LIS 647 Visual Resources Management ll LIS 695 Photography Collections Digital Tools and Technology One course (3 credits) from the following: ll LIS 611 Information Policies and Politics ll LIS 657 Digital Humanities I ll LIS 658 Information Visualization ll LIS 665 Projects in Digital Archives ll LIS 666 Projects in Rare Books and Digitization ll LIS 668 Projects in Moving Image and Sound Archives ll LIS 680 Instructional Technologies

2.

User Experience, Education, and Information Design One course (3 credits) from the following: ll LIS 643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design ll LIS 644 Usability: Theory and Practice ll LIS 675 Museum and Library Education and Outreach

4.

Field Research and Practicum ll LIS 630 Research Design and Methods*— or ll LIS 608 Human Information Interaction ll LIS 698 Practicum/Seminar*

5.

For the remaining two open electives (6 credits), students may take any two courses offered by the School of Information or by other Institute departments (approval required). Advanced Certificates A student can complete the degree while earning any of the following advanced certificates: ll Archives ll Conservation and Digital Curation ll Museum Libraries ll Museum Studies (offered through the Department of History of Art and Design) Culminating Research Project Students are required to take a two-course sequence (LIS 630 Research Design and Methods, or LIS 608 Human Information Interaction, and LIS 698 Practicum/Seminar) in year two of the degree, during which they produce a research project. Through this coursework, students learn to apply research methods and carry out field research, which forms the basis of their culminating projects. Projects demonstrate students’ research abilities and mastery of the program-level student learning outcomes: 1. Theory and Practice: Students gain critical under­ standing of museum theory and practice for the digital

Museums and Digital Culture

3.

world and can demonstrate a broad knowledge of the field and its development from information science, museum informatics, and digital cultural heritage. Digital Collections and Services; Preservation and Curation: Students are able to digitize, describe, manage, and curate digital collections for access and use and related services, and to understand and apply digital preservation strategies and techniques, including preservation of digital art. Digital Technology and Tools: Students are able to use digital technology, tools, and social media effectively to enhance museum experiences and activities, and to engage, educate, and inform museum audiences. Fieldwork and Application: Students are able to carry out museum fieldwork using observation, data collection, and analysis focused on the museum’s digital activities and programs, and demonstrate how findings can be applied to enhance museum services, user experience, and engagement. Research: Students are able to use informationscience research methods, which they are able to apply to produce a culminating research digital project that is accessible on the web and that is based on their museum practicum.

Admissions Each applicant to the program must: ll hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited university in the humanities, social sciences, or sciences. ll submit an application form (www.pratt.edu/apply), nonrefundable application fee, and official transcripts. ll submit a statement of purpose (approximately two pages). ll submit a current résumé. ll provide two letters of recommendation from employers, professors, or others able to judge the applicant’s potential for graduate study. Exceptions will be considered on a case-by-case basis, with decisions made by the Admissions Committee, consisting of the program coordinator, the dean of the School of Information, and the adviser for academic programs. Applicants with a GPA below 3.0 must provide evidence of their ability to perform graduate-level work, which may include professional experience in a relevant industry. An in-person or telephone interview may be required; applicants will be contacted if an interview is deemed necessary. Applicants may apply for nonmatriculated status and take up to 6 credits.

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MUSEUMS AND DIGITAL CULTURE STUDENTS TESTING A NEW INTERACTIVE APP AT THE AMERICAN MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY


DIGITIZING COLOR NEGATIVES


International students whose first language is not English must submit a TOEFL score of at least 82 Internet. Students who are not international but whose first langu­age is not English must submit the GRE or TOEFL. The Adviser for Academic Programs will contact applicants if any of these actions are deemed necessary. For more information on the M.S. in Museums and Digital Culture, please visit www.pratt.edu/academics/ information/degrees/master-of-science-in-museumsand-digital-culture.

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CURRICULA M.S. in Museums and Digital Culture Semester 1 LIS-679 Museums & Digital Culture: Theory and Practice 3 LIS-681 Community Building and Engagement 3 LIS-663 Metadata, Description and Access 3 Credit subtotal 9 Semester 2 LIS-654 Information Technologies 3 LIS-655 Digital Preservation and Curation 3 Choose one course from the following: 3 LIS-669 Digital Asset Management LIS-670 Cultural Heritage Access and Description LIS-663 Programming for Cultural Heritage LIS-647 Visual Resources Management LIS-695 Photography Collections Credit subtotal 9 Semester 3 LIS-669 Digital Asset Management LIS-630 Information Science Research Elective Credit subtotal Semester 4 Choose one from the following: LIS-643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design LIS-608 Human Information Behavior LIS-644 Usability; Theory and Practice Elective LIS-698 Seminar/ Practicum with Research Project Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 3 9

3

3 3 9 36

Electives LIS-611 Information Policy LIS-657 Digital Humanities LIS-658 Information Visualization LIS-680 Instructional Technologies LIS-675 Museum and Library Education and Outreach LIS-629 Museums & Library Research at Metropolitan LIS-665 Projects in Digital Archives LIS-668 Projects in Moving Image and Sound Archives

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Data Analytics and Visualization

Dean Tula Giannini, Ph.D., M.L.S., M.M. infosils@pratt.edu Assistant to the Dean for Administrative Services Vinette P. Thomas, M.S.L.I.S. vthomas@pratt.edu Adviser for Academic Programs Quinn Lai, M.A., M.S.L.I.S. qlai@pratt.edu Data Analytics and Visualization Program Coordinator Chris Alen Sula, Ph.D. csula@pratt.edu Office Tel: 212.647.7682  Fax: 212.367.2492 infosils@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ academics/information

MASTER OF SCIENCE IN DATA ANALYTICS AND VISUALIZATION (M.S.) In the M.S. in Data Analytics and Visualization program, students learn how to transform raw data into meaningful information. Drawing on the School of Information’s strengths in information science and human-computer interaction (HCI), the program prepares students for work across the full life cycle of data, from collection and storage to analysis and visualization. This degree reflects the growing need for well-rounded data professionals who have strong statistical and technology skills combined with strengths in research, communication, and design. Students who complete this degree are able to: ll ask complex questions surrounding data and select and apply appropriate research methods to answer them; ll form reasonable interpretations of data and communi­ cate them effectively through visual and narrative means; ll choose and employ appropriate technologies for data collection, storage, manipulation, analysis, visualization, dissemination, and preservation, based on goals, tasks, and users; ll identify relevant users of data and design intuitive, meaningful, and engaging experiences for them; and ll consider the broad impact of data on society and raise critical questions about data, its interpretation and visualization, and the methods by which these are produced. Course and Credit Requirements Students must complete 36 credit hours with a B average or better and meet other prescribed requirements of the Institute. Students entering with a master’s degree must complete 30 credits. School of Information courses are 3 credits and are offered in the morning, afternoon, and evening. The program requires the completion of six required courses (18 credits) and six elective courses (18 credits), including at least one elective course from another department at Pratt. The program is designed to be completed in two years (three courses per semester) or three years (two courses per semester). Summer courses may reduce this time. Students must complete degree requirements within four years of registering for their first course. Courses marked with an asterisk (*) are required. Foundation (1 course, 3 credits) ll LIS 651 Information Professions* Core Curriculum (5 courses, 15 credits) ll LIS 640 Data Analytics and Publication* ll LIS 644 Usability Theory and Practice* ll LIS 658 Information Visualization*

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ll LIS 664 Programming for Cultural Heritage* ll LIS 696 Advanced Projects in Visualization* Institute-Wide Electives (1–2 courses, max 6 credits) Pratt Institute graduate-level courses (requires permission of Program Coordinator). Recommended departments include Digital Arts, Graduate Center for Planning, Graduate Communications Design, Humanities and Media Studies, Industrial Design, and Social Science and Cultural Studies. Electives (4–5 courses, 12–15 credits) ll LIS 608 Human Information Interaction ll LIS 613 e-Government: Information and Users ll LIS 628 Data Management ll LIS 630 Research Design and Methods ll LIS 637 Web Design and Production ll LIS 638 Web Development ll LIS 643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design ll LIS 646 Advanced User Experience Design ll LIS 654 Information Technologies ll LIS 657 Digital Humanities I ll LIS 659 Digital Humanities II ll LIS 680 Instructional Technologies ll LIS 682 Projects in Information Experience Design ll LIS 687 Geospatial Information Systems ll LIS 697 Special Topics (with permission of Program Coordinator) ll LIS 698 Practicum/Seminar

Spring 1 ll LIS 644 Usability Theory and Practice* ll LIS 658 Information Visualization* Fall 2 ll LIS 613 e-Government: Information and Users (or other elective) ll LIS 630 Research Design and Methods (or other elective) Spring 2 ll LIS 640 Data Analysis and Publication* ll LIS 687 Geospatial Information Systems (or other elective) Fall 3 ll HMS 540S 08 Data Politics and the Government of Algorithms (or other institute-wide elective) ll LIS 638 Web Development (or other elective) Spring 3 ll LIS 696 Advanced Projects in Visualization* Advanced Certificates A student can complete the degree while earning any of the following advanced certificates: ll Digital Humanities ll User Experience

Sample Two-Year Schedule (* = Required course) Fall 1 ll LIS 651 Information Professions* ll LIS 664 Programming for Cultural Heritage* ll LIS 644 Usability Theory and Practice* Spring 1 ll LIS 640 Data Analytics and Publication* ll LIS 658 Information Visualization* ll LIS 638 Web Development (or other elective) Fall 2 ll LIS 613 e-Government: Information and Users (or other elective) ll LIS 630 Research Design and Methods (or other elective) ll HMS 540S 08 Data Politics and the Government of Algorithms (or other institute-wide elective) Spring 2 ll LIS 696 Advanced Projects in Visualization* ll LIS 687 Geospatial Information Systems (or other elective)

Data Analytics and Visualization

Sample Three-Year Schedule (* = Required course) Fall 1 ll LIS 651 Information Professions* ll LIS 664 Programming for Cultural Heritage*

Digital Portfolio To graduate from the program, students must submit a digital portfolio that demonstrates their skills in the program’s five student learning outcomes: 1. Research: Students can develop complex questions surrounding data, and select and apply appropriate methods to answer them. 2. Communication: Students can formulate reasonable interpretations of data and share them effectively through visual and narrative means. 3. Technology: Students can choose and employ appro­ priate tools for data collection, storage, manipulation, analysis, visualization, dissemination, and preservation, based on goals, tasks, and users. 4. User-Centered Design: Students can identify relevant users and develop intuitive, meaningful, and engaging experiences for them.

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STUDENTS WORKING WITH THE TECHNOLOGY TUTOR

STUDENTS AND PROFESSOR CRAIG MACDONALD DISCUSS COURSEWORK


THE DEGREES OF BIOETHICS BY AMANDA FAVIA AND CHRIS ALEN SULA


5. Critical Perspectives: Students understand the broad impact of data on society and can raise critical questions about data, its interpretation and visual­ ization, and the methods by which these are produced. Admissions Applicants must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited university. Applicants must have a superior scholastic record or otherwise give evidence of ability to perform work on the graduate level and are expected to offer evidence of maturity and leadership potential for the profession. All applicants must apply using the on­line application, upload the following items, and submit requests for recommendations online: ll Official transcripts of all previous postsecondary education ll A statement of purpose describing interest in the program as well as personal goals ll A current résumé/CV ll Request two letters of recommendation online from academic or professional sources International students whose first language is not English must submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The minimum required TOEFL score is 82 (Internet), IELTS of 6.5, and PTE score of 53. Students who are not international but whose first language is not English must submit the GRE, TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. Applicants may apply for nonmatriculated status if desired and take up to six credits. Special Note for International Students: The DAV program is designated as a STEM program by the Depart­ ment of Homeland Security (DHS) and thus qualifies for the STEM optional practical training (OPT) extension for F-1 students. Student Work A sample of recent student work is available at www.research.prattsils.org/blog/topics/ information-visualization. For more information on the M.S. in Data Analytics and Visualization, please contact the Program Coordinator, Associate Professor Chris Alen Sula, at csula@pratt.edu.

Data Analytics and Visualization

159


CURRICULA M.S. in Data Analytics & Visualization Semester 1 LIS-651 Information Professions LIS-664 Programming for Cultural Heritage LIS-658 Information Visualization Credit subtotal Semester 2 LIS-640 LIS-644

Data Analysis & Publication Usability Theory and Practice Program Elective Credit subtotal

Semester 3 Program Electives All Institute Elective Credit subtotal Semester 4 LIS-696

Advanced Projects in Visualization Program Electives Credit subtotal Total credits required 

Data Analytics and Visualization

3 3 3 9

3 3 3 9

6 3 9

3 6 9 36

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Information Experience Design

Dean and Professor Tula Giannini, Ph.D., M.L.S., M.M. infosils@pratt.edu Assistant to the Dean for Administrative Services Vinette P. Thomas, M.S.L.I.S. vthomas@pratt.edu Adviser for Academic Programs Quinn Lai, M.A., M.S.L.I.S. qlai@pratt.edu IXD Program Coordinator Craig MacDonald, Ph.D. cmacdona@pratt.edu Office Tel: 212.647.7682  Fax: 212.367.2492 infosils@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/academics/ information

MASTER OF SCIENCE IN INFORMATION EXPERIENCE DESIGN (M.S.) The Master of Science in Information Experience Design (IXD) program is an innovative blend of the Information Science (IS), Human‑Computer Interaction (HCI), and User Experience (UX) disciplines. The IXD program educates full-time and part-time students with academic or professional backgrounds in the liberal arts, human­ ities, and social/behavioral sciences and prepares them for careers in the rapidly growing UX profession, which includes UX designers, information architects, interaction designers, UX researchers, usability analysts, and content strategists. With its empathetic, research-based, and humancentered approach to technology design, the IXD curriculum teaches students to be well-rounded UX professionals who are not just strong designers but also skilled researchers and communicators. Course and Credit Requirements Students must complete 36 credit hours with a B average or better and meet other prescribed requirements of the Institute. Students entering with a master’s degree must complete 30 credits. School of Information courses are 3 credits and are offered in the morning, afternoon, and evening. The program requires the completion of five required courses (15 credits) and seven elective courses (21 credits), including at least one elective course from another department at Pratt. The program is designed to be completed in two years (three courses per semester) or three years (two courses per semester). Summer courses may reduce this time. Students must complete degree requirements within four years of registering for their first course. Courses marked with an asterisk (*) are required. Foundation (1 course, 3 credits) ll LIS 651 Information Professions* IXD Core (2 courses, 6 credits) ll LIS 643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design* ll LIS 644 Usability: Theory and Practice* Technology Core (2 courses, 6 credits) Choose at least two: ll LIS 654 Information Technology (*Required unless student obtains a waiver) ll LIS 637 Web Design Production ll LIS 664 Programming for Cultural Heritage ll LIS 697 Special Topics (with permission of program coordinator)

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Institute-Wide Electives (1–2 courses, max 6 credits) ll Pratt Institute graduate-level courses (requires permission of program coordinator). Recommended departments include Digital Arts, Graduate Communications Design, Industrial Design, Arts and Cultural Management, and Design Management.

Sample Three-Year Schedule (* = Required course) Fall 1 ll LIS 651 Information Professions* ll LIS 643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design*

Electives (5–6 courses, 15–18 credits) ll LIS 608 Human Information Interaction ll LIS 630 Research Methods and Design ll LIS 640 Data Analysis and Publication ll LIS 646 Advanced User Experience Design ll LIS 657 Digital Humanities I ll LIS 658 Information Visualization ll LIS 659 Digital Humanities II ll LIS 665 Projects in Digital Archives ll LIS 680 Instructional Technologies ll LIS 681 Community Building and Engagement ll LIS 682 Projects in Information Experience Design ll LIS 687 Geospatial Information Systems ll LIS 696 Advanced Projects in Information Visualization ll LIS 697 Special Topics (with permission of program coordinator)

Spring 1 ll LIS 644 Usability: Theory and Practice* ll LIS 646 Advanced UX Design

Sample Two-Year Schedule (* = Required course) Fall 1 ll LIS 651 Information Professions* ll LIS 654 Information Technology* ll LIS 643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design*

Spring 2 ll LIS 637 Web Design Production (or other elective)* ll LIS 681 Community Building and Engagement (or other elective) Fall 3 ll LIS 664 Programming for Cultural Heritage (or other elective) ll LIS 630 Research Methods and Design (or other elective) Spring 3 ll LIS 657 Information Visualization (or other elective) ll LIS 697 Special Topics (or other elective)

Spring 1 ll LIS 644 Usability: Theory and Practice* ll LIS 646 Advanced UX Design ll LIS 681 Community Building and Engagement (or other elective) Fall 2 ll LIS 664 Programming for Cultural Heritage (or other elective)* ll LIS 630 Research Methods and Design (or other elective) ll DES 601 Design Process + Methodology (or other Institute-wide elective) Spring 2 ll LIS 657 Information Visualization (or other elective) ll LIS 637 Web Design Production (or other elective) ll LIS 697 Special Topics (or other elective)

Information Experience Design

Fall 2 ll LIS 654 Information Technology* ll DES 601 Design Process + Methodology (or other Institute-wide elective)

Digital Portfolio To graduate from the program, students must submit a web-based digital portfolio that demonstrates they have met the program’s four student learning outcomes: 1. Processes: Students select and employ a variety of design and evaluation methods in the context of a full user-centered design life cycle. 2. Tools: Students can use state-of-the-art software associated with all phases of the user-centered design process, from data collection and analysis to proto­ typing, evaluation, and documentation/reporting. 3. Experiences: Students can create intuitive, meaningful, and engaging digital products that are based on real user needs/goals and are consistent across channels and devices. 4. Stories: Students can use visual, written, and oral communication styles to craft compelling narratives and convey insights to diverse stakeholders.

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INFORMATION ARCHITECTURE STUDENTS SKETCHING WIREFRAME IDEAS


STUDENTS IN CLASS


Admissions Requirements Applicants to the program must hold a baccalaureate degree from an accredited university in the arts, human­ ities, social sciences, or sciences. Applicants must have a superior scholastic record or otherwise give evidence of ability to perform work on the graduate level and are expected to offer evidence of maturity and leadership for the profession. All applicants must apply using the online application and upload the following top three items and submit requests for recommendations online: ll Official transcripts of all previous postsecondary education ll A statement of purpose describing interest in the program as well as personal goals ll A current résumé/CV ll Request two letters of recommendation online from academic or professional sources International students whose first language is not English must submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The minimum required scores are: TOEFL of 82 (Internet), IELTS of 6.5, and PTE of 5f3. Students who are not international but whose first language is not English must submit the GRE, TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. Students may continue to apply after the January 5 deadline until the department is full. Applicants may apply for nonmatriculated status if desired and take up to six credits. Student Work Samples of recent student work and other course projects are available at ux.prattsils.org. For more information on the M.S. in Information Experience Design (IXD), please contact the Program Coordinator, Craig MacDonald at cmacdona@pratt.edu.

Information Experience Design

165


CURRICULA M.S. in Information Experience Design Semester 1 LIS-651 LIS-654 LIS-644

Information Professions Information Technology Usability Theory and Practice Credit subtotal

Semester 2 LIS-643 LIS-664 LIS-658

Information Architecture & Interaction Design 3 Programming for Cultural Heritage 3 Information Visualization 3 Credit subtotal 9

Semester 3 LIS-682 LIS-630

Projects in Information Experience Design Research Methods & Design All Institute Elective Credit subtotal

Semester 4 LIS-646 LIS-681 LIS-665

Advanced UX Design 3 Community Building & Engagement 3 Projects in Digital Archives 3 Credit subtotal 9 Total Credits required 36

Information Experience Design

3 3 3 9

3 3 3 9

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Advanced Certificate Programs

The School of Information offers several certificate programs that can be taken by students within their degree programs and/or by individuals who already hold library science or related graduate degrees and who wish to earn a specialization. Archives The Advanced Certificate in Archives (12 credits) can be earned as part of a student’s degree program or as a post-master’s certificate by those holding an M.L.S. from an ALA-accredited program. Designed to prepare students for careers in archives and related fields such as special collections, digital libraries, digital asset management, and museums, this course of study focuses on archival theory, practice, and research. Considered part of the broader field of cultural informatics, archives and digital archives have wide application in today’s information landscape. Two required courses: ll LIS 625 Management of Archives and Special Collections ll LIS 698 Practicum/Seminar

Dean and Professor Tula Giannini, Ph.D., M.L.S., M.M. si@pratt.edu Assistant to the Dean for Administrative Services Vinette P. Thomas, M.S.L.I.S. vthomas@pratt.edu Adviser for Academic Programs Quinn Lai, M.A., M.S.L.I.S. qlai@pratt.edu Office Tel: 212.647.7682  Fax: 212.367.2492 si@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/academics/ information

Two electives (6 credits) from recommended archives courses: ll LIS 632 Conservation and Preservation ll LIS 634 Conservation Lab (at Brooklyn College) ll LIS 635 Archives Appraisal ll LIS 655 Digital Preservation and Curation ll LIS 661 Art Documentation ll LIS 663 Metadata, Description, and Access ll LIS 664 Programming for Cultural Heritage ll LIS 665 Projects in Digital Archives ll LIS 668 Projects in Moving Image and Sound Archives ll LIS 669 Digital Asset and Media Management ll LIS 670 Linked Open Data for Libraries, Archives, and Museums ll LIS 686 Performing Arts Collections ll LIS 689 Rare Books and Special Collections ll LIS 694 Film and Media Collections ll LIS 695 Photography Collections (summer only) Conservation and Digital Curation The Advanced Certificate in Conservation and Digital Curation (12 credits) prepares students with the knowledge and skill sets needed to work in the field of conservation and digital curation across galleries, libraries, archives, and museums (GLAM), as well as institutions and corporations with significant holdings, both physical and digital. The curriculum is designed for today’s information society in which digital tools and emerging technologies are increasingly being used across all aspects of this growing

167


field—from conservation of rare books, manuscripts, art on paper, photography, and film and video, to the digital curation of collections and exhibitions, focusing on their organization, description, access, digitization, and use. This 12-credit, four-course program is arranged by three study areas. Required courses: Conservation (choose two) ll LIS 632 Conservation and Preservation ll LIS 634 Conservation Lab at Brooklyn College ll LIS 655 Digital Preservation and Curation Digital Curation (choose one) ll LIS 629 Art Collections: Research and Documentation at The Metropolitan Museum of Art ll LIS 647 Visual Resources Management ll LIS 669 Digital Asset and Media Management ll LIS 670 Linked Open Data for Libraries, Archives, and Museums ll LIS 697 Art Documentation ll LIS 665 Projects in Digital Archives ll LIS 666 Projects in Rare Books and Digitization ll LIS 668 Projects in Moving Image and Sound Archives Field Experience and Research Project ll LIS 698 Practicum/Seminar Digital Humanities The Advanced Certificate in Digital Humanities (12 credits) reflects the latest trends in the intersection of digital humanities and the information professions, including digital cultural heritage; data collection, analysis, and visualization; instructional technology and pedagogy; user experience; and the changing natures of research, publication, and outreach in the digital age. Courses emphasize the special role of information professionals in supporting digital humanities research, teaching, and professional activities. Required courses: ll LIS 657 Digital Humanities I ll LIS 659 Digital Humanities II Two electives (6 credits) from recommended digital humanities courses Digital Content ll LIS 665 Projects in Digital Archives ll LIS 647 Visual Resources Management ll LIS 655 Digital Preservation and Curation

Advanced Cerificate Programs

ll LIS 668 Projects in Moving Image and Sound Archives ll LIS 669 Digital Asset and Media Management Research ll LIS 658 Information Visualization ll LIS 687 Geographic Information System ll LIS 640 Data Analysis and Publication ll LIS 630 Research Design and Methods User Experience (UX) ll LIS 644 Usability: Theory and Practice ll LIS 643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design ll LIS 646 Advanced User Experience Design ll LIS 682 Projects in Information Experience Design Special Topics ll LIS 611 Information Policy and Politics ll LIS 628 Data Management and Services ll LIS 633 Strategic Leadership and Management ll LIS 663 Metadata, Description, and Access ll LIS 664 Programming for Cultural Heritage ll LIS 680 Instructional Technologies ll LIS 681 Community Building and Engagement Museum Libraries The Advanced Certificate in Museum Libraries (12 credits) is an innovative program designed for students con­sider­ ing careers in museum libraries and related cultural insti­tu­ tions, such as research and academic libraries. Students who envision themselves working in today’s dynamic information environment—as leaders in the museum field—gain the necessary skills to forge new connections between museum libraries, both real and virtual, and users. They also learn to integrate digital collections and services with physical places and resources, as well as provide user education and outreach in global networked environments. This 12-credit, four-course program is arranged by four study areas. Four Required Courses: Research and Curatorial Practice (choose one) ll LIS 629 Art Collections: Research and Documentation at The Metropolitan Museum of Art ll LIS 632 Conservation and Preservation ll LIS 637 Conservation Lab at Brooklyn College ll LIS 655 Digital Preservation and Curation ll LIS 647 Visual Resources Management ll LIS 670 Linked Open Data for Libraries, Archives, and Museums ll LIS 697 Art Documentation ll LIS 667 Art Librarianship ll LIS 686 Performing Arts Librarianship ll LIS 688 Institute on Map Collections

168


ll LIS 695 Photography Collections ll LIS 697 London Summer School: The Arts and Digital Culture

ll LIS 697 Special Topics (with permission) ll LIS 698 Practicum/Seminar (with permission) ll LIS 699 Independent Study (with permission)

Digital Technology (choose one) ll LIS 664 Programming for Cultural Heritage ll LIS 697 Web Development ll LIS 643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design ll LIS 644 Usability: Theory and Practice ll LIS 666 Projects in Rare Books and Digitization ll LIS 679 Museums and Digital Culture: Theory and Practice

School Library Media Specialist *Note—we are not accepting students for this program for the academic year 2017-2018. The Post-Master’s Certificate for School Library Media Specialist prepares those who hold the M.S.L.I.S. to complete the requirements for New York State Teacher Certification as library media specialists (L.M.S.) in order to work as certified school librarians in public schools. The program requires the completion of 21 LIS credits and 6 pedagogical core credits. Candidates with New York State Teaching Certification may be eligible to waive the pedagogical core credits, with permission from the program coordinator.

Education and Outreach (choose one) ll LIS 675 Museum and Library Education and Outreach ll LIS 671 Community Building and Engagement Field Experience ll LIS 698 Practicum/Seminar User Experience In the User Experience (UX) Advanced Certificate program (12 credits), students will learn how to design usable, useful, and desirable digital products from a user-centered perspective. While UX is a field in its own right, UX skills are becoming increasingly important within the LIS profes­sion as libraries, museums, archives, and information organizations expand their digital offerings. Drawing from the Human-Computer Interaction (HCI) discipline, students in the UX Advanced Certificate program will be trained in the methods used to understand users and their contexts and how to apply that knowledge to the design and evaluation of interactive technologies. Required courses: ll LIS 643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design ll LIS 644 Usability: Theory and Practice ll LIS 682 Projects in Information Experience Design or ll LIS 698 Practicum/Seminar One elective from recommended UX courses; Choose one course from the list below: ll LIS 608 Human Information and Interaction ll LIS 630 Research Design and Methods ll LIS 665 Projects in Digital Archives ll LIS 658 Information Visualization ll LIS 697 Special Topics (with permission) Fieldwork Electives ll LIS 646 Advanced User Experience Design ll LIS 682 Projects in Information Experience Design

Advanced Cerificate Programs

Required LIS courses: ll LIS 648 Library Media Centers ll LIS 676 Literature and Literacy for Children ll LIS 677 Literature and Literacy for Young Adults ll LIS 680 Instructional Technology ll LIS 690 Student Teaching I Grades 1-6 ll LIS 691 Serving Children and Youth with Disabilities ll LIS 692 Student Teaching II Grades 7-12 Required pedagogical core coursework: ll ED 608 Roots of Urban Education ll ED 610 Child and Adolescent Development Library and Information Studies The LIS Advanced Certificate may be completed by those who already hold the M.S.L.I.S. and is designed for information professionals who wish to gain new skills for libraries in the digital world, in areas ranging from digital libraries and services to digital information design, social media, and policy. This 30-credit program consists of eight 3-credit courses and 6 credits of independent research on a topic selected by the student, about which the student writes a paper supervised by School of Information faculty. Internships and Practicum Thanks to our close working relationships with New York City’s cultural institutions across libraries, archives, museums, nonprofits, and the information sector—such as The Metropolitan Museum, Brooklyn Museum, Frick, MoMA, New York and Brooklyn Public Libraries, and many others—students can choose from a wide range of wonderful practicum sites. We strongly encourage students to participate in order to acquire the experience

169


they will need to bridge to the professional world of work. The practicum is taken for graduate credit (LIS 698, 3 credits) and must be supervised by a professional. Students in their second year of study may apply to the School of Information fellowship program, a two-semester practicum scholarship. Internships are undertaken outside of the degree program. Arrangements for internships are between the student and the institution. Students will find an array of internships posted on the School of Information Google group and may also seek out other internship opportunities according to their interests and needs. International Programs Florence Summer Program Offered in partnership with Studio Art Centers International (SACI), the program consists of two 3-credit courses taught by leading Italian scholars and practitioners in Florence: ll Florentine Art and Culture: Museum and Library Research and Documentation immerses students in the arts and culture of Florence through expert teaching and discussion, featuring on-site learning in the museums and libraries of Florence. Students are guided in their exploration of the city’s magnificent architecture, sculpture, and design. Through digital capture (students take their own photographs of art objects) and curation, each student creates a digital thematic exhibition drawn from studies in the course. The program’s activities and projects teach students advanced skills in digital curation for cultural heritage. ll Cultural Heritage Conservation is an atelier studio course. It features hands-on conservation work for art on paper and rare books. Students create books in classical rare-book style.

Scholarships and Fellowships Merit Scholarships for New Students These scholarships are awarded at the time of admission and are renewable for the second year of study for students who maintain a 3.0 GPA. The scholarship will not renew beyond two years of study. Students must be full-time (minimum of nine credits per semester). Endowed Scholarships All currently enrolled School of Information students who are continuing their studies in the upcoming academic year are eligible to apply. Scholarships are competitively awarded based on academic achievement in the School of Information programs. Students must be registered for a minimum of 6 credits in the semester in which they apply and for the semester in which the scholarship is awarded. Applications are accepted in late spring. Fellowships The School of Information currently offers a number of fellowships in partnership with New York City museums. These are the Watson Library at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Museum Library and Archives, NYARC/ MoMA, the Frick Art Reference Library, the Guggenheim Museum Archives, and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Each fellowship requires the completion of a yearlong internship (120 hours per semester) and is accompanied by a scholarship in the amount of $5,000.

London Summer School: The Arts and Digital Culture This 3-credit, two-week course offered in partnership with King’s College London (KCL) features visits to London’s world-class GLAM institutions (Galleries, Libraries, Archives, and Museums), curatorial talks and current exhibitions, a symposium, and lectures at KCL’s Department of Digital Humanities by faculty and other international leaders in the field of the arts and digital culture. The program explores GLAM with on-site visits in the context of digital culture and digital tools and tech­ nologies, and how they and are being used in the physical and virtual space of GLAM institutions to enhance user engagement, education, and experience.

Advanced Cerificate Programs

170


STUDENTS IN CLASS


CURRICULA Advanced Certificate in Archives Semester 1 LIS-625

Management of Archives and Special Collections Credit subtotal

Semester 2 LIS Elective (See list below) Credit subtotal

3 3

3 3

Semester 3 LIS Elective (See list below) Credit subtotal

3 3

Semester 4 LIS-698 Seminar and Practicum Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 12

LIS Elective courses LIS-632 Conservation and Preservation LIS-650 Principles of Records Management LIS-663 Metadata LIS-665 Projects in Digital Archives LIS-669 Management of Electronic Records LIS-686 Performing Arts Librarianship LIS-688 Map Collections LIS-689 Rare Books and Special Collections LIS-694 Film and Media Collections LIS-695 Photography Collections LIS-634 Conservation LIS-635 Archives Application LIS-655 Digital Preservation LIS-668 Projects and Moving LIS-670 Cultural Heritage LIS-697 Special Topics in Research Local Histories LIS-697 Special Topics in Cultural Heritage Conservation

Advanced Certificate in Library and Information Studies LIS-699

Independent Study LIS Elective Courses (8) (See Concentration Advisor) Credit subtotal Total credits required

6 24 30 30

Advanced Certificate in Library Media Specialist Semester 1 LIS-648 LIS-676 LIS-690

Library Media Centers 3 Literature and Literacy for Children 3 Student Teaching I 3

Advanced Cerificate Programs

Credit subtotal

Semester 2 LIS-677 LIS-680 LIS-692

Literature and Literacy for Young Adults Instructional Technology Student Teaching II Credit subtotal Total credits required

9

3 3 3 9 18

Advanced Certificate in User Experience Semester 1 LIS-643 LIS-644

Information Architecture and Interaction Design Usability Theory and Practice Credit subtotal

3 3 6

Semester 2 Topic Elective Credit subtotal

3 3

Semester 3 Fieldwork Elective Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 12

Topic Electives LIS-608 Human Information Behavior LIS-630 Information Science Research LIS-646 Advanced User Experience Design LIS-665 Projects in Digital Archives LIS-658 Information Visualization Fieldwork Electives LIS-682 Projects in Information Experience Design LIS-698 Practicum

Advanced Certificate in Conservation and Digitial Curation Semester 1 Choose two courses from list below: LIS-632 Conservation and Preservation LIS-634 Conservation Lab at Brooklyn College: Slava Polishchuck LIS-655 Digital Preservation and Curation Semester 2 LIS-698 Practicum/Seminar Choose one course from: LIS-629 Museum Library Research LIS-647 Visual Resources Management LIS-669 Digital Asset Management LIS-670 Cultural Heritage Description and Access LIS-665 Projects in Digital Archives

172

LIS-666 LIS-668

Project in Rare Books and Digitization Projects in Moving Image and Sound Archives Total credits required

12

Advanced Certificate in Digital Humanities Semester 1 LIS-657

Digital Humanities I Elective Credit subtotal

3 3 6

Semester 2 LIS-659

Digital Humanities II Elective Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 6 12

Elective Courses Digital Cultural Heritage LIS-655 Digital Preservation and Curation LIS-662 Advanced Cataloging/Classification LIS-663 Metadata: Description and Access LIS-664 Programming for Cultural Heritage LIS-665 Projects in Digital Archives LIS-668 Projects in Moving Image and Sound Archiving LIS-670 Cultural Heritage Description and Access LIS-689 Rare Books and Special Collections Data Collection, Analysis, and Visualization LIS-630 Information Science Research LIS-658 Information Visualization LIS-697 Special Topics: Data Analysis and Publication LIS-697 Special Topics: Geospatiallnformation Systems Instructional Technology and Pedagogy LIS-673 Literacy and Instruction LIS-680 Instructional Technologies User Experience and Human-Information Behavior LIS-608 Human-Information Behavior LIS-643 Information Architecture and Interaction Design

Advanced Certificate in Museum Libraries Four courses are needed in order to obtain the Advanced Certificate in Museum Libraries. This certificate is for students who have already graduated and obtained an MLS, whether from Pratt-SILS or another accredited library school. 1 course is required: LIS-698

Seminar and Practicum

3


Semester 1 LIS Elective from the following courses: Curatorial LIS-629 Museum Library Research 3 LIS-632 Conservation and Preservation LIS-667 Art Librarianship LIS-686 Performing Arts Librarianship LIS-688 Map Collections LIS-689 Rare Books and Special Collections LIS-697 Special Topics in Florentine Art and Culture Credit subtotal 3 Semester 2 LIS Elective from the following courses: Digital Technology LIS-643 Information Architecture LIS-665 Projects in Digital Archives LIS-680 Instructional Technologies LIS-693 Digital Libraries LIS-697 Special Topics in London/ E-Publishing LIS-651 Web Design Credit subtotal

3

3

Semester 3 LIS-675 Museum and Library Education Outreach Credit subtotal

3 3

Semester 4 LIS-698 Seminar and Practicum Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 12

Advanced Cerificate Programs

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SCHOOL OF INFORMATION FACULTY Johanna Bauman Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. History, George Mason University; M.A., Ph.D. Art History, University of Virginia; M.L.S., Queens College, CUNY. Jason Baumann Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Eugene Lang College The New School for Liberal Arts; M.F.A., City College of New York; M.L.S., Queens College, CUNY. Amber Billey Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., The School of the Art Institute of Chicago; M.S.L.I.S., Pratt Institute. Anthony Cocciolo Associate Professor B.S. Computer Science, University of California at Riverside; Ed.D., Ed.M., M.A. Communi­ cation, Computing and Technology in Education, Teachers College, Columbia University.

Jessica Hochman Assistant Professor Ph.D. Philosophy and Education and Cultural Studies, Teachers College, Columbia University; M.A. Instructional Technology and Media in the Program of Scientific Foundations. Emily Holmes Visiting Assistant Professor B.S.N., Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences; M.L.S., Simmons College. Jennifer Hubert-Swan Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. English, Olivet Nazarene University; M.L.S., Wayne State University. Matthew Knutzen Assistant Professor B.A. Geography, University of California, Berkeley; M.F.A. Abstract Cartography and Artists’ Books, Pratt Institute.

Maria Cristina Pattuelli Associate Professor Advanced degree (master’s equivalent) Philosophy, University of Bologna, Italy; Advanced degree (master’s equivalent) Cultural Heritage Studies, University of Bologna, Italy; Ph.D., University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Slava Polishchuk Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.F.A., Brooklyn College, CUNY. Deborah Rabina Professor Ph.D., Rutgers University. Charles Rubenstein Professor B.S., Richmond College, CUNY; M.S., Polytechnic Institute Brooklyn; M.L.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D., Polytechnic Institute New York.

Lisa Kropp Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Adelphi University; M.L.S., Queens College.

Kenneth Soehner Visiting Associate Professor B.A., New York University; M.A., M.L.S., Columbia University.

Anthony Cucchiara Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., St. Francis College; M.B.A., Long Island University at Brooklyn; M.L.S., Pratt Institute.

Irene Lopatovska Associate Professor B.S., Kiev State University; M.L.S., University of North Texas; Ph.D. Information Science, Rutgers University.

Chris Alen Sula Assistant Professor B.A. Philosophy and English, Augustana College; M.Phil. Philosophy, The Graduate Center, CUNY; Ph.D. International Technology and Pedagogy.

Sara Devine Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Classical Civilization, Emory University; M.A. Museum Studies, George Washington University.

Laura Lutz Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. English, Willamette University; M.L.S., University of Arizona.

Cynthia Tobar Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Hunter College; M.A., The New School; M.S.L.I.S., Pratt Institute.

Deirdre Donohue Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., State University of New York at New Paltz; M.L.S., Pratt Institute.

Craig MacDonald Assistant Professor B.A. Statistics, The College of New Jersey; M.S. Applied and Mathematical Statistics, Rutgers University; Ph.D. Information Studies, Drexel University.

Jeremiah Trinidad-Christensen Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Geography, University of Washington; M.L.S., Long Island University.

Emily Drabinski Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Political Science, Columbia University; M.A. Composition and Rhetoric, Long Island University; M.L.S., Syracuse University. Nancy Friedland Visiting Associate Professor B.A., University of Massachusetts at Amherst; M.A., New York University; M.L.S., Rutgers University. Barbara Genco Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Canisius College; M.L.S., Pratt Institute. Tula Giannini Professor, Dean B.M., M.M., Manhattan School of Music; M.L.S., Rutgers University; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College. Joshua Hadro Visiting Instructor B.A. Philosophy, Columbia University; M.L.S., Pratt Institute. Alexis Hagadorn Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Barnard College; Advanced Certificate in Library and Archives Conservation, Columbia University; M.L.S., Columbia University.

School of Information Faculty

Monica Maceli Assistant Professor B.A., Bryn Mawr College; M.S.I.S., Drexel University; Ph.D., Drexel University. Susan L. Malbin Visiting Instructor B.A. History, Barnard College; M.L.S., State University of New York at Albany; Ph.D. Comparative History, Brandeis University. David Marcinkowski Visiting Associate Professor B.A. Philosophy and Religion, Kean University; M.A. Media Studies, The New School. Seoud M. Matta Dean Emeritus D.L.S., Columbia University. Matthew Miller Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. History of Art, Ohio State University; M.S. History of Art, Pratt Institute; M.S.L.I.S., Pratt Institute. Jacob Nadal Visiting Assistant Professor M.L.S., Indiana University at Bloomington.

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Kyle Triplett Visiting Instructor B.S. Political Science, Grand Valley State University; M.S.L.I.S., Pratt Institute. Kevin B. Winkler Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., San Diego State University; M.A., Hunter College, CUNY; M.L.S., Columbia University. William Ying Visiting Associate Professor B.S., Cornell University; Ph.D., Columbia University.



I thoroughly enjoyed my studies in the School of Information program, and I really believe the courses prepared me well for my leap into the professional library world. Gina Halkias-Seugling (M.S.L.I.S. ’07)


School of Liberal Arts and Sciences

History of Art and Design Media Studies Performance and Performance Studies Writing Classes in the Liberal Arts

Dean Andrew W. Barnes, Ph.D. las-dean@pratt.edu Assistant to the Dean Sincere Brooks sbroo397@pratt.edu Office Tel: 718.636.3570  Fax: 718.399.4586 www.pratt.edu/las



The mission of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences is to enable students to explore areas of knowledge and reflect critically and creatively on aesthetic forms and on intellectual and cultural practices. Graduates can conduct research, substantiate arguments, and communicate in the broadest possible socio­ historical, literary, and scientific contexts. The school’s primary goal is for its students to make continuing contri­butions as critical thinkers and creative professionals. On the graduate level, the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers the M.A. in Media Studies, the M.S. in History of Art and Design, the M.F.A. in Writing, and the M.F.A. in Performance and Perform­ ance Studies. Our graduate programs are unique to a liberal arts school located within an art and design institution in that they work with and interrogate social spaces that are configured and reconfigured using a creative lens influenced by artists, designers, and architects. In addition, the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences offers graduate classes for students majoring in the fine arts, digital arts, communications design, and architecture, among others. Our faculty members in the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences are nation­ally and internationally known creative artists, performers, writers, scholars, critics, and scientists who have chosen to be at Pratt because our inherent cross-/transdisciplinary nature gives us the freedom to fundamentally rethink the way we approach our given subjects. The School of Liberal Arts and Sciences also provides English language support for international students in the full‑time Intensive Certificate of English Proficiency program and the Summer Certificate Program (IEP, CEP, and SCP). The courses in these programs help students to prepare for academic and studio courses by incorporating elements of literature, as well as critical theories and examinations of the visual arts. The SCP is strongly recommended for students whose TOEFL score is below 600 (PbT). Students who complete the SCP program are not required to take the placement exam. Finally, our Writing and Tutorial Center gives support to students in their graduate thesis by giving them the tools to better articulate and present their final projects.

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History of Art and Design

Chair John Decker, Ph.D. Acting Assistant Chair Evan Neely, Ph.D. Assistant to the Chair Jill Song Office Tel: 718.636.3598 ha@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ history-of-art-design-grad

Pratt Institute is an exceptional place to study the history of art and design. Our landmarked campus attracts leading artists, designers, historians, and theorists and is only minutes from the studios, galleries, private collections, libraries, and museums that make New York a premier center of art and design. Our faculty is composed of distinguished scholars and mentors who focus on the intellectual and professional growth of our students. They bring a broad range of expertise and different methodologies to the classroom. In addition, about half of our faculty also has extensive museum and curatorial experience. Their expertise, dedi­cation, and original thinking are evident in our curric­ ulum, in the academic opportunities and professional connections faculty members create for their students, and most importantly, are reflected in the quality of our students’ work. Explore our degree options and you will find students studying 16th-century frescoes in Venice, 20th-century product design, and 21st-century performance art at the New Museum. Students come from a wide range of backgrounds and leave with knowledge, experience, and a professional network that will inform and support their careers for many years. Every graduate student’s program includes “behindthe-scenes” experiences, not only at exhibitions and museums, but also in the Institute itself. Connections with other departments in all areas of fine arts and design— interior, industrial, communications, and fashion—offer a unique platform for an interaction between practitioners and theoreticians. Our students witness the making of art and design firsthand, which adds a real-life perspective to their scholarly studies. The History of Art and Design Department offers exciting lectures and seminars on a wide range of approaches, from connoisseurship to the most recent theo­retical approaches. Frequent excursions and internships result from our extensive working relation­­ ships with the city’s museums, galleries, and cultural organ­izations and are a crucial part of the curriculum. GRADUATE DEGREES The History of Art and Design Department offers the M.A. degree, requiring 36 credits as described below, and a thesis. Two dual-degree programs requiring 30 credits are available: History of Art and Design with Fine Arts, leading to M.A./M.F.A. degrees, and History of Art and Design with Library and Information Science, leading to M.A./M.S. degrees.

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Advanced Certificate in Museum Studies The Certificate in Museum Studies complements the M.A. degree in the History of Art and Design by offering both a solid base in art and design history and practical, in-depth experience in the museum world. History of Art and Design courses are augmented by Pratt’s School of Information and Department of Art and Design Education. Many members of our faculty are museum professionals who bring their expertise and experience to the classroom. As part of the program, students do two internships at major New York institutions. The certificate is intended to give graduates an “edge” for those who seek museum employment. The certificate is available to graduate students enrolled in the History of Art and Design master’s program as well as those in the dual programs with the Department of Fine Arts and the School of Information and is only awarded upon completion of those master’s degrees. Courses for the certificate may be taken within the credits required for the M.A. degree. Materials, Techniques, and Conservation Art’s historical concern with materials and techniques exists naturally in connection with studio programs in the practice of art. This is an emphasis in all our courses, but it takes specific form in a required Materials and Conservation course. In addition, issues related to conservation problems in Venetian art history are explored with the help of local experts on-site in our Venice program. Pratt in Venice Pratt in Venice is a six-week summer program that takes place in June and July. Art History of Venice (HA590I, 3 credits) and Materials and Techniques of Venetian Art (HA600I, 3 credits) are offered together with Painting (Art 590I, 2–3 credits) and Printmaking/Drawing (Art 591I, 2–3 credits). Graduate and undergraduate students enroll for six to nine credits. We collaborate with the Università Internazionale dell’Arte and the Scuola Internazionale di Grafica in Venice. Group visits to Padua and Bassano/ Maser are included. The program fosters interaction between art history and the studio arts through group events, faculty/student discussions, visiting lecturers, and just by being there together. Participants experience the visual riches of Venice and have the opportunity to conduct research in extraordinary museums and libraries.

History of Art and Design

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CLASS TRIP TO THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, NEW YORK

CLASS TRIP TO THE METROPOLITAN MUSEUM OF ART, NEW YORK


CURRICULA M.A. in History of Art and Design Semester 1 HA-602 Theory and Methodology 3 Art History (Film/Design Electives) 3 Art History (Architecture Electives) 3 Elective Credits 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 2 HA-650 Materials, Techniques, and Conservation 3 Art History (Non-Western 3 Electives) Art History (Renaissance/ Baroque Electives) 3 Elective Credits 3 Credit subtotal 12 Semester 3 Art History (Pre-Renaissance Electives) 3 Art History (20th Century/ Impressionism Electives) 3 Elective Credits 3 Credit subtotal 9 Semester 4 HA-605 Thesis Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 36

M.A./M.S. in History of Art and Design/Library and Information Science Semester 1 LIS-651 Information Professions LIS-652 Information Services and Sources HA-602 Theory and Methodology or HA-650 Materials, Techniques, and Conservation Art History Elective Credit subtotal

3 3

3 2 11

Semester 4 Semester 5

Art History Elective Library Science Elective Credit subtotal

6 6 12

Art History Elective Library Science Elective Credit subtotal

5 6 11

Semester 6 HA-605 Thesis Credit subtotal Total credits required

3 3 60

M.A./M.F.A. in History of Art and Design/Fine Arts Theory, Criticism, and History of Art, Design, and Architecture Requirements Semester 1 HA-602

Theory and Methodology Studio Elective Studio Major Art Criticism/Analysis/History Liberal Arts Elective Credit subtotal

3 3 3 3 3 15

Semester 2 HA-650 Materials, Techniques, and Conservation 3 Studio Elective 3 Studio Major 3 Art Criticism/Analysis/History 3 Liberal Arts Elective 3 History of Art and Design Elective 3 Credit subtotal 18 Semester 3 FA-650A

Thesis 1 5 Studio Elective 3 Art Criticism/Analysis/History 3 History of Art and Design Elective 3 Credit subtotal 14

Semester 4 FA-601 FA-650B

Thesis Statement I 2 Thesis II 5 Studio Elective 3 History of Art and Design Elective 3 Credit subtotal 13

Semester 2 LIS-653 Knowledge Organization LIS-654 Information Technologies HA-602 Theory and Methodology or HA-650 Materials, Techniques, and Conservation Art History Elective Credit subtotal

3 2 11

Semester 5 History of Art and Design Electives 12 Credit subtotal 12

Semester 3 Art History Elective Library Science Elective Credit subtotal

6 6 12

Semester 6 HA-605 Thesis Credit subtotal Total credits required

History of Art and Design

3 3

184

3 3 75

(For the M.A. degree—one elective in each of the distribution requirement fields: Film/Photo/ Design, Architecture, Non-Western, PreRenaissance, Renaissance through 18th Century, 19th/20th/21st Centuries)

Advanced Certificate in Museum Studies Required core courses: HA-560 Museology HA-610 Internship HA-610B Internship A choice of 6 elective credits from: HA-600I Materials and Techniques of Venice, Pratt in Venice Program ADE-524 Student Teaching in the Gallery LIS-629 Museum and Library Research LIS-632 Conservation and Preservation ACM-621 Strategic Marketing ACM-622 Fundraising for the Arts and Culture ACM-624 Arts and Cultural Education ACM-642 Nonprofit Law and Governance ACM-651 Finance and Financial Reporting for Nonprofit Managers Total credits required

3 6 6

3 2 3 3 2 2 2 2 2 21


Media Studies

Chair Arlene Keizer, Ph.D. Coordinator Jonathan Beller jbeller@pratt.edu Administrative Assistant Andrea Bott abott33@pratt.edu Office Tel: 718.687.5770 www.pratt.edu/ grad-media-studies

The Graduate Program in Media Studies at Pratt, offered at the Brooklyn campus, is situated in the uniquely vibrant environment of an art, design, and architecture school. Students who value both the intellectual and creative sides of media studies are encouraged to apply. Media Studies is an intensive program developed in relation to Pratt’s art, design, and archi­tecture environ­ ment and to the burgeoning mediascape, lively social space, and theoretical scene of Brooklyn and New York City. Classes are small, following both the seminar and workshop formats, and all classes are taught by professors. The program has been conceived and instituted in a way that understands that media emergence is rapidly trans­ forming experience, society, and knowledge. It is designed to foster the investigation of many of the signifi­cant social, political, cultural, economic, and aesthetic questions of our time by drawing both on the historical record with regard to media forms and on cutting-edge theory regard­ ing gender and sexuality, race, nationality, political economy, aesthetic form, screen studies, and the like. THE PROGRAM’S STRUCTURE The program emphasizes studies of media in their various forms, including film, video, television, radio, writing, and computer-mediated forms of convergence. Students study the logics and logistics of media and mediation, and they explore cultural technologies of expression, repre­sent­ation, and manipulation, along with the aesthetic, economic, and political contexts in which such media nec­es­sarily operate. Students gain expertise in media history, theory, and practice, and in textual analysis, interpretation, and semiotics. The Master of Arts in Media Studies graduate program consists of 30 credits, taken over three semesters, and a thesis. The program can be completed in three semesters if the student finds a final thesis/project topic during the first year and prepares to complete it in the third semester. Even so, an extra semester is generally recommended to allow more time to find, explore, and develop the thesis/ project that will best serve the student’s particular interests. The core sequence for the M.A. consists of Mediologies I and II (six credits total) and Encounters I and II (two credits total), Practices I and II (elective courses totaling six credits), seminars and project courses (electives totaling 12 credits), an internship course (optional), and a final thesis with a required Final Project/Thesis Workshop (four credits total). Mediologies courses (HMS-650A/B) provide students with crucial critical and theoretical tools; students take a sequence of two required introductory courses during their first year. These courses are designed for students

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with substantial experience in media studies as well as students with less exposure. Practices courses comprise a range of electives, including those taught in other programs, such as Digital Arts. These courses enable students to acquire basic competence in media aesthetics and production. Encounters courses (HMS-549A/B) enable students to engage directly with others working in media fields, and with timely issues and ideas, in an open-discussion “salon” environment. The Final Project/Thesis Workshop (HMS-659A) offers an intensive, small support group in which students can develop and write their thesis; students who want more time to finish their thesis may take HMS-659B (Thesis in Progress). Students may also choose to undertake an internship for academic credit (HMS-9700, 9701, 9702, 9703) and professional enrichment. In addition to the core courses described above, the program offers a range of electives in areas of special­ ization and interdisciplinary constellations within media studies, enabling students to develop particular areas of concentration, first through coursework and then in their one-on-one work with thesis advisers. Faculty represent areas that include new media; documentary studies; global media; media and the urban environment; media and performance; music/sound studies; media/ attention economies; media ecology; archaeology of (new) media; and media, activism, and social change. Elective seminars run in the format of small discussion courses focused on individual or team presentations on the analysis of texts, films, objects, themes, and theories. Elective project courses are semester-long laboratory/ workshops in which students and one or more faculty members—in any one of several departments—engage a topic, idea, interface, space, or modality focusing on the interface between the theorization and production of media objects. Foci will vary based upon specific expertise and interests of involved faculty and students. Each year in late April, the Media Studies program hosts a conference, Mediologies, which includes present­ ations of work and works-in-progress by students, faculty, and guest presenters. Seminar courses being offered in the spring enable students to develop papers and projects specifically for presentation at Mediologies.

1. A statement of purpose in which they describe their interest in the program 2. 10–20 pages of relevant writing sample(s), with emphasis on analytical writing about media 3. Transcripts of undergraduate coursework 4. Two letters of recommendation All applicants must follow the standard admissions process for graduate programs at Pratt. See www.pratt.edu/apply.

ADMISSIONS REQUIREMENTS Applications for admission to the Master of Arts in Media Studies are due January 5 for the following fall; the program accepts fall entrants only. Applicants should have a B.A., B.S., or B.F.A. from an accredited institution. Candidates must submit:

Media Studies

186


STUDENTS IN CLASS


CURRICULA M.A. in Media Studies Semester 1 HMS-650A HMS-549A

Methodologies I Encounters I All-Institute Electives Credit subtotal

3 1 6 10

Semester 2 HMS-549B HMS-650B

Encounters II All-Institute Electives Methodologies II Credit subtotal

1 6 3 10

Semester 3 HMS-659A

Thesis Workshop All-Institute Electives Credit subtotal Total credits required 

4 6 10 30

Media Studies

188


Performance and Performance Studies

Chair Arlene Keizer, Ph.D. Administrative Assistant Andrea Bott abott33@pratt.edu Coordinator Tracie Morris, M.F.A., Ph.D. tmorris@pratt.edu 718.636.3607 Office DeKalb Hall 316

Through the simultaneous development of practice and study, students earning an M.F.A. in Performance and Performance Studies at Pratt are grounded in creative practices with a strong emphasis on theory that they can apply directly to their creative work. The program, offered on the Brooklyn campus, is guided by a set of principles about the integral nature and impor­tance of performance, community, art practice, theory, and politics. Students explore the ways in which effective per­form­ance is artistically engaging and is a catalyst for scholarship and social change. This new degree was developed with a wide range of practitioners, scholars, and students in mind, includ­ing recent undergraduates; pro­fessionals in the field who are seeking terminal career credentials; working performers and artists who seek to gain a more critical/theoretical depth and background (as well as new performance skills) for their work; scholars with some artistic training who seek to complement their work with training in performance technique; and students from other disciplines who understand the opportunities they can gain by focusing on the performative dimensions of their fields. With an M.F.A. in Performance and Performance Studies from Pratt, artist-scholars will be able to: (1) work as artists and performance practitioners; (2) work as teachers in colleges/universities and other institutions in a variety of fields—such as theater, performance studies, art criticism, movement, philosophy, perform­ance art, interdisciplinary art forms, and creative writing— and in community settings, arts education and youth programs, as well as other venues; (3) work as curators, arts administrators, art critics, or production staff, and in media; and (4) pursue a Ph.D. in a range of fields, including performance studies; cultural studies; theater; studies of gender, ethnicity, and queerness; and others. THE PROGRAM’S STRUCTURE The goal of the M.F.A. in Performance and Performance Studies is to develop students as artists and thinkers. Students will move from a basic command of the field of performance practice as well as theory to become active artists/scholars who contribute to the field’s evolution. Students in the program will take four semesters, or 60 credits, of courses. Of these, 33 credit hours will be in required courses, and 27 in electives selected based on students’ needs and interests. Throughout, students will combine study in perform­ance practice with theo­ retical inquiry in performance studies. After taking a series of foundation courses in the first year, students will develop their own body of work in the second year. In their last semester, the students will focus on rounding out the

189


competencies they are building and on refining their con­ cluding academic and performance art presentations. We also offer opportunities for students to work with community-based and larger institutional arts organizations in which performance and constructs of performativity are central. The students will work intimately to serve these communities in conceptual and practical contribu­ tions to art practice and community empowerment for underserved populations. The Performance and Performance Studies program is anchored by a series of core, required classes: (1) Introduction to Performance Theory (PPS 650a), where students focus on conceptual underpinnings of the field; (2) Introduction to Performance Practice (PPS 651a), providing core competencies in crucial aspects of perform­ance and presentation; (3) workshops with an artist-in-residence (PPS 549a), on cross-cultural per­ formance (PPS 550a), and on community-based practice (PPS 550b); (4) a Critical Writing course (PPS 652a) to support scholarly writing skills, increasingly vital as a component both of creative/collaborative processes and professional practice; and (5) Thesis/Project Workshops (PPS 659a and 659b) to support students in developing viable and fully realized visions and incarn­ ations of their own work. Students will also take Open Electives (totaling 27 credits), which will be theory and practice seminars offered by full- and part-time faculty and covering a wide range of topics and areas. As part of the program’s com­mu­­ni­ty focus, students are also strongly encour­aged to do an internship to fulfill one of their electives. The required second-semes­ter workshop on community-based practice will provide import­ant preparation and, in some cases, specific venues and contacts to accommodate a broad range of interests. In addition to providing support through the structure of courses of the program, the P+PS M.F.A. strongly encourages connections for our students and graduates that will prepare them for successful careers in the field. The support system includes opportunities for internships, mentorships, networking, visiting artists, scholars-inresidence, and present­ations attended by influencers in performance and performance studies.

of undergraduate coursework; and (4) two letters of recommendation. Collaborative pairs will be welcomed, but each member must apply separately under the above guidelines. All applicants must follow the standard admissions process for graduate programs at Pratt. See www.pratt.edu/applying.

ADMISSIONS REQUIREMENTS Applicants for admission to the Master of Fine Arts (fall entrance only) will have a B.A., B.S., or B.F.A. from an accredited institution. Candidates must submit: (1) a state­ ment of purpose in which they describe their interest in the program as well as their own goals and preparation; (2) 10-20 pages of relevant writing sample(s); (3) transcripts

Performance Studies

190


CLAIRE LEDOYEN (B.F.A. WRITING ’16) AS CAMILLE IN CHARLES LUDLAM’S CAMILLE


CURRICULA M.F.A. Performance and Performance Studies Semester 1 PPS-549A PPS-550A PPS-650A PPS-651A

Workshop With Visiting Artist in Residence Performance Across Cultures Introduction to Performance Studies Introduction to Performance Practice All Institute Elective Credit subtotal

Semester 2 PPS-549A PPS-550B

Workshop With Visiting Artist in Residence Approaches to Community Based Practice Performance Theory Elective Performance Practice Elective All Institute Elective Credit subtotal

Semester 3 PPS-549A PPS-652A PPS-659A

Workshop with Visiting Artist in Residence Critical Writing/Performance & Performance Studies Thesis/Project Workshop I Departmental Elective All Institute Elective Credit subtotal

3 3 3 3 15

Semester 4 PPS-659B

Thesis/Project Workshop II All Institute Elective Credit subtotal Total credits required

6 9 15 60

Performance Studies

3 3 3 3 3 15

3 3 3 3 3 15

3

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Writing

Chair Arlene Keizer, Ph.D. Coordinator Christian Hawkey chawkey@pratt.edu Administrative Assistant Andrea Bott abott33@pratt.edu Office Tel: 718.687.5770 www.pratt.edu/grad-writing

The Pratt M.F.A. in Writing, offered on the Brooklyn campus, is a new and unique two-year program specifically designed to support and encourage intellectually rigorous and inspired writing practices that are philosophically, culturally, and politically informed. The premise of the program is that writing can be transformative at all scales, from the personal to the social, and we aim to incubate such cosmopolitan, local, pleasurefilled, and potentially revolutionary poetic practices. Our approach to the 39-credit M.F.A. curriculum emphasizes inter­disciplinary group critiques (with core faculty, guest artists, and peers engaging in weekly discus­ sions and presentations of student work). Addi­tion­ally, students take part in one-on-one guided mentorships, civic and urban exploration and fieldwork, and seminars in literature, media studies, performance, experimental practices, activism, and critical theory, The Pratt M.F.A. therefore offers contemporary writers the tools and the support they need to build a practice that is responsive and adaptive (and even a form of resist­ ance) to our rapidly evolving environmental and political times and to the enormous shifts taking place in media technologies. What can writing become, now that the landscape for its production, distribution, and exchange includes not only books and journals, but also internet platforms, digital technologies, video, audio, PDFs, blogs, and social media? This program engages a vision of writing that is not genre-specific but, rather, inclusive of multiple modes of inscription—from fiction to poetry, performance to nonfiction, translation to cultural criticism, investigative journalism to digital media, documentary to science fiction. There is also a special focus on alternate or hybrid approaches to writing, with hybridity defined as a set of interactive processes that can potentially generate new social spaces. What avant-garde experiments, what research, what interventions, what archives, what speech acts, what literary and artistic traditions, what genres, what media technologies, what theoretical frames, what narratives, and what materials are most suited to your artistic inquiries? We will help you figure that out as you begin to establish a creative practice that is sustainable across a lifetime of change. Our core faculty of writers is di­verse and inter­na­ tionally renowned. Their work traverses and often combines numer­ous disciplines: activism, performance art, trans­lation, media and cultural theory, theater, and fine art. Our course of study em­phasizes collaboration, radical peda­gogy, admini­strative transparen­cy, and non-hierarchical learning.

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Course of Study The Graduate Program in Writing M.F.A. consists of several core classes and seminars taken over four semesters (two years), with the goal of producing a final manuscript, performance, or collaborative event. There are three notable features of the program. First, the heart of the program is a once-a-week core class, the Writing Studio, which is an open, democratic forum dedicated to the col­lective critique and discussion of stu­dent works in progress. Second, each student is offered one-on-one guided mentorship with a chosen faculty member. Third, the program provides students with support and guidance to extend their cultural productions and research interests into the world in the form of fieldwork residencies: ongoing residencies conducted in collaboration with an outside institution, community organization, archive, occupational domain, or activist group. Other notable features of the Pratt M.F.A. in Writing include: ll Student-led collaborative writing practice seminars that explore the intersections of writing, research, activism, radical pedagogy, and critical theory. ll Sustained focus on 21st-century modes of authorship, including: activism, transdisciplinary and cross‑genre experiment, performance, innovative uses of new media, investigative and research techniques, conceptual frameworks, collaborative methods, and site-specific approaches. ll A course of study stressing a writing process that takes into account the material and technological aspects of writing, the human body that produces it, and the larger social, sexual, histori­cal, economic, racial, and cultural contexts in which and through which all imaginative writing takes place. ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS Applications for admission to the Master of Fine Arts program are due January 5 for the following fall; the program accepts fall entrants only. Applicants should have a B.A., B.S., or B.F.A. from an accredited institution. Candidates submit (1) a state­ment of purpose in which they de­scribe how their writing interests align with the vision of the program; (2) 10–20 pages of relevant writing samples of any genre; (3) transcripts of undergraduate coursework; and (4) two letters of recommendation. To apply, follow the standard admission process for graduate programs at Pratt: www.pratt.edu/apply.

Writing

194


STUDENT IN CLASS


CURRICULA M.F.A. in Writing Semester 1 WR-600A WR-602A WR-601

Mentored Studies I Writing Practices I The Writing Studio Writing Elective Credit subtotal

1 3 4 2 10

Semester 2 WR-600B WR-601

Mentored Studies II The Writing Studio HMS Elective Writing Elective Credit subtotal

1 4 3 2 10

Semester 3 WR-601 WR-602B WR-603A

The Writing Studio Writing Practices II Fieldwork Residency I Writing Elective Credit subtotal

4 3 1 2 10

Semester 4 WR-601 WR-603B WR-604A

The Writing Studio Fieldwork Residency II Final Thesis Project Credit subtotal Total credits required

4 4 1 9 39

Writing

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Pratt provides a well-rounded education in the liberal arts that encompasses Humanities and Media Studies, Mathematics and Science, Social Science and Cultural Studies, and the History of Art and Design. In addition, the Institute supports international students in gaining the English language skills they need to pursue their education and to interact as vital members of the community. The Graduate Programs in the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences are one-of-a-kind: programs that rethink disciplinary boundaries and take advantage of their location within a leading art and design institution. We do things differently here.

Classes in the Liberal Arts

Humanities and Media Studies Chair Arlene Keizer, Ph.D. Assistant Chair Kathryn Cullen-Dupont kcullend@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Danielle Skorzanka dskorzan@pratt.edu Coordinator Jonathan Beller, Ph.D. jbeller@pratt.edu Writing Coordinator Christian Hawkey chawkey@pratt.edu Performance and Performance Studies Coordinator Tracie Morris, M.F.A., Ph.D. tmorris@pratt.edu Social Science and Cultural Studies Chair Macarena Gomez-Barris mgomezba@gmail.com Assistant Chair Eric Godoy egodoy2@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Sophia Straker-Babb ss@pratt.edu

History of Art and Design Chair John Decker, Ph.D. Acting Assistant Chair Evan Neely, Ph.D. Assistant to the Chair Jill Song Mathematics and Science Chair Carole Sirovich, Ph.D. csirovic@pratt.edu Assistant to the Chair Margaret Dy-So sci@pratt.edu Intensive English Program Director Nancy Seidler nseidler@pratt.edu Certificate of English Proficiency Coordinator Dana Gordon dgordon@pratt.edu Assessment and Educational Technology Coordinator Rachid Eladlouni reladlou@pratt.edu Assistant to the Director Fanny Lao hlao@pratt.edu cep@pratt.edu

MASTER OF ARTS IN MEDIA STUDIES The graduate program in Media Studies offers freedom and flexibility for students to design their program of study. We offer exciting and challenging opportunities for students to confront the most pressing issues of our time: questions around social justice, sustaina­bility, race, sexuality, nationalism, militarization, economics, and celebrity. The curriculum emphasizes studies of media in various forms, including film, video, television, radio, writing, smartphones, and other computerized forms of media convergence. Along­side their theoretical investigations, students are also encouraged to become media makers. MASTER OF FINE ARTS IN WRITING A new and unique two-year program, the Pratt M.F.A. in Writing is specifi­cally designed to support and en­cour­age intellectually rigorous and inspired writing practices that are philosophically, culturally, and politically informed. The premise of the program is that writing can be trans­ form­ative at all scales, from the personal to the social. We aim to incubate such radically cosmopolitan, resolutely local, pleasure-filled, and potentially revolutionary poetic practices. Our innovative approach to the M.F.A. curriculum emphasizes interdiscipli­nary group critiques with core faculty, guest artists, and peers engaging in weekly discussions and presentations of student work. MASTER OF FINE ARTS IN PERFORMANCE AND PERFORMANCE STUDIES Through the simultaneous develop­ment of practice and study, students earning an M.F.A. in Performance and Performance Studies at Pratt are grounded in creative practices with a strong emphasis on conceptual framing, and develop a theoretical foundation they can apply directly to their work. The program is guided by a set of princi­ples about the integral nature and importance of performance, com­mun­ity, and politics. Students explore

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how effective theater is both artistically engaging and a catalyst for social change. MASTER OF SCIENCE IN THE HISTORY OF ART AND DESIGN The graduate studies in the History of Art and Design provide students with the skills and knowledge to pursue careers as art and design historians and professionals in museums, gal­leries, and libraries, or to pursue graduate work at the doctoral level. Through comprehensive study of global art and design within historical and cultural contexts and intensive research and scholarship in specialized areas, students develop a critical under­ standing of the field as well as research and ana­lytical skills. Graduates demonstrate excellence in independent and critical thinking and understanding of the historical roles and responsibilities of art and design. Internships at museums, libraries, non­profit art organizations, and galleries provide opportunities for students to work in professional areas of their interests and prepare for future careers. The department also offers two dual degrees: M.S./M.F.A. with Fine Arts, and the M.S./M.S. with Information and Library Sciences. RESOURCES IN THE SCHOOL OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES Intensive English Program The Intensive English Program (IEP) provides academic English language instruction to matriculated graduate and undergraduate students. In addition, two certificate programs run under the IEP’s umbrella: the full-time Certificate (CEP) and Summer (SCP) programs. The mission of all programs in the IEP is to support successful matriculation of international students by providing appropriate English language instruc­tion. Internal assess­ ment and advise­ment ensure students’ proper place­ ment in English-language courses, as well as successful matriculation and degree attainment. The curriculum includes art, design, and architecture content and is enhanced by direct expo­sure to related cultural experiences and language-learning technology. Pratt Institute and the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences welcome interna­tional students and offer an array of programs and services to improve Englishlanguage skills and academic readiness. All international students with TOEFL scores below 600 (PbT), 250 (CBT), or 100 (iBT)—including transfer students—whose first language is not English must demonstrate proficiency in English by taking an English Placement Test upon arri­ving at the Institute. The Intensive English Program (IEP) in

Classes in the Liberal Arts

the Language Resource Center on Pratt’s Brooklyn campus administers the test. This placement test consists of a reading test, a writing test, and a personal interview with an IEP faculty member. Students assessed at the exempt level of English proficiency satisfy their Intensive English require­ment and may enroll in all Institute courses without restriction. Students who are assessed as being in need of English instruction must register in con­secutive Intensive English courses (including summer IEP classes should they wish to take other Institute cour­ses during those sessions) until they achieve exempt status based on IEP exit proficiency criteria. Students whose proficiency is assessed at or below Level 5 are required to enroll full-time in the Certificate of English Proficiency (CEP) program. Any graduate inter­na­ tional student who has been enrolled in one Intensive English course without having expempted from (passed) the program will be moved to probationary status during his/her second semester. Students who have registered for two (fall and spring) se­mesters and who do not assess at the exempt level may be required to withdraw voluntarily from Pratt or register for the full-time CEP program. Good communication skills are essential to academic success at Pratt Institute. Instruction in the IEP emphasizes language use for general academic and specific purposes in the professions in which Pratt specializes, namely art, design, architecture, and information and library science. IEP faculty are trained and experienced in teaching English as a second language, as well as in integrating art and design content into their courses. Our classes are small (8 to 12 students per session), and enrolled international students benefit from their use of the Language Resource and Writing and Tutorial Centers for additional language learning practice. For information on the Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL) requirements at Pratt Institute, please refer to the catalog listing for particular schools and departments. New international students are strongly encouraged to enroll in IEP summer courses in order to be fully prepared for the academic requirements of their degree programs. The Certificate of English Proficiency Program The Certificate of English Proficiency (CEP) program at Pratt Institute is a one‑year English-language program located at our Brooklyn campus. Students whose TOEFL scores fall below the admission minimums estab­lished by Institute degree programs may apply to the CEP for full-time English-language instruction. At the end of the two-semester program of English study, those students

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STUDENT STUDYING IN THE PRATT LIBRARY


completing CEP coursework receive a certificate of English language proficiency. Courses focus on speaking, listening, reading, and writing within the context of art and design, as well as TOEFL preparation. For more information on Pratt’s Intensive and Certificate English programs, con­tact IEP administrative offices at 718.636.3450, visit the IEP website at www.pratt.edu/iep, or email IEP at cep@pratt.edu. Laboratories and Computer Facilities The science laboratories (chemistry, physics, biology), located in the Activities Resource Center, are inter­ disciplinary research facilities. Sophisticated instru­ ments and equipment are available, and graduates are encouraged to use them under faculty supervision. Computer facilities are available for use by all students of the Institute. Specialized facilities are employed in the sciences. Writing and Tutorial Center The Writing and Tutorial Center provides free tutoring for all Pratt students in English, math, physics, art history, the­sis preparation, and other academic areas. Special assistance is provided for students for whom English is a second language. Small-group and regularly scheduled one-on-one conver­sation sessions are also offered. The Writing and Tutorial Center staff consists of a director, faculty and staff tutors, and trained student peer tutors. The director coordinates scheduling and appointments in all areas. Any faculty member, staff member, or adviser may recommend students who need assistance. The Writing and Tutorial Center is located in North Hall 101. Appointments can be made by phone, Skype IM, or in person.

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SCHOOL OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES FACULTY History of Art and Design Sonya Abrego Visiting Assistant Professor M.Phil. Decorative Arts, Design History and Material Culture Studies, Bard Graduate Center; Ph.D., Bard Graduate Center. Kira Albinsky Visiting Instructor B.A., Boston College; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.

Heather Horton Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., DePauw University; M.A., Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Susan Karnet Visiting Instructor B.F.A., School of Visual Arts, New York City; M.F.A., Hunter College, CUNY. Dara Kiese Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Modern History, University of Minnesota; M.Phil., Ph.D. Art History, The Graduate Center, CUNY.

Karen Bachmann Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Sculpture/Jewelry, Pratt Institute; M.A. History of Art, Purchase College, SUNY.

Vivien Knussi Adjunct Instructor B.A., M.A., Tufts University; Ph.D., Columbia University; studied American Art and Photography at Columbia University.

Lisa Banner Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Princeton University; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

Joseph Reid Kopta Visiting Instructor B.F.A., M.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D. candidate, Temple University.

Ágnes Berecz Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Université Paris 1 (Panthéon-Sorbonne).

Gayle Rodda Kurtz Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Stanford University; M.A., Hunter College; Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY.

Liam Considine Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., New York University, Institute of Fine Arts. Corey D’Augustine Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Visual Arts and Biochemistry, Oberlin College; M.A. Art History, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

Tiffany Lambert Visiting Instructor Thomas La Padula Adjunct Professor B.F.A., Parsons The New School for Design; M.F.A., Syracuse University.

Evan Neely Adjunct Assistant Professor, Acting Assistant Chair B.F.A. Fine Arts, Parsons The New School for Design; M.Phil., M.A., Ph.D. Art History, Columbia University. Caterina Pierre Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Brooklyn College, CUNY; M.A., Hunter College, CUNY; M.Phil., Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Joyce Polistena Adjunct Professor, CCE M.A. Art History, Hunter College; Ph.D., M. Phil., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Elena Rossi-Snook Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Cinema, SUNY at Binghamton; M.A. Film Archiving, University of East Anglia. Ann Schoenfeld Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Dorothy Shepard Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., Southern Methodist University; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College. Elizabeth St. George Visiting Instructor B.A., Kent State University; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Bard Graduate Center. Adédoyin Teriba Visiting Assistant Professor B.Arch., Federal University of Technology, Minna, Nigeria; M.Arch., University of Oklahoma; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Princeton University.

Ed DeCarbo Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE M.A., University of Chicago; M.A., Ph.D., Indiana University.

Anca Lasc Assistant Professor B.A. History and Theory of Art and Literature, Jacobs University, Bremen, Germany; M.A., Ph.D., University of Southern California.

John Decker Chair M.A., University of California, Santa Barbara; Ph.D., University of California, Santa Barbara.

Michele Licalsi Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.A., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

Peter De Staebler Assistant Professor A.B., Bowdoin College; M.A., Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

William Lorenzo Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Brooklyn College.

Alice Walkiewicz Visiting Instructor B.A., University of Kansas; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, CUNY.

Elizabeth Meggs Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Communications Arts and Design, Illustration, Virginia Commonwealth University.

Bor-Hua Wang Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., University of Kansas; Ph.D., Columbia University.

Juan Monroy Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Film Studies, University of California at Santa Barbara; M.A., Ph.D., Cinema Studies, New York University.

Sarah Wilkins Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Vanderbilt University; M.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D., Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey.

Eva Díaz Associate Professor M.A., Ph.D., Princeton University. Mary Douglas Edwards Adjunct Professor, CCE M.L.S., M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University. Diana Gisolfi Professor B.A., Radcliffe/Harvard; M.A., Ph.D., University of Chicago. Frima Fox Hofrichter Professor M.A., Hunter College; Ph.D., Rutgers University.

Marsha Morton Professor M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty

201

Jack Toolin Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Photography, Ohio University at Athens; M.F.A. Photography, Performance, and Installation, San Jose State University.

Karyn Zieve Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Wellesley College; M.A., University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.


Media Studies Jonathan Beller Professor B.A., Columbia University; Ph.D., Duke University. Allen Feldman Visiting Professor M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Ira Livingston Professor B.A., Manchester College; Ph.D., Stanford University. Mendi Obadike Assistant Professor B.A., Spelman College; Ph.D., Duke University. Minh-Ha Pham Assistant Professor Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley. Ethan Spigland Professor M.F.A., Tisch School of the Performing Arts; Maîtrise University of Paris VIII. Christopher Vitale Associate Professor B.A., SUNY at Binghamton; Ph.D., New York University.

Performance and Performance Studies Donald Andreasen Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A. Playwriting, The New School. Youmna Chlala Associate Professor B.A., University of California at Santa Cruz; M.F.A., California College of the Arts. Steven Doloff Professor, Lecturer in Intensive English B.A., Stony Brook University; M.Phil., Ph.D., CUNY Graduate Center. Lisabeth During Associate Professor, Philosophy B.A., Wesleyan University; M.Th., King College, University of London, London; Ph.D., Trinity College, Cambridge University. James Hannaham Associate Professor B.A. Art, Yale University; M.F.A. Fiction/ Screenwriting,The Michener Center for Writers, University of Texas, Austin. Ann Holder Associate Professor, History B.A., Hampshire College; Ph.D., Boston College. May Joseph Professor, Global Studies Ira Livingston Professor Ph.D. English, Stanford University.

Tracie Morris Professor; Coordinator, Performance and Performance Studies B.A. Political Science, M.F.A. Poetry, Hunter College, CUNY; Ph.D. Performance Studies, New York University. Mendi Obadike Assistant Professor B.A., Spelman College; Ph.D., Duke University. Martha Wilson Visiting Associate Professor

Liberal Arts Faculty Andrew W. Barnes Dean, School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Gloriana Russell Assistant to the Dean

Intensive English Channing Burt Lecturer, Intensive English B.A. French and Romance Philology, Columbia University; M.A. TESOL, Teachers College, Columbia University. Diane Cohen Visiting Instructor Maura Conley Tutor, Writing, Thesis Rachid Eladlouni Lecturer, Intensive English; Assessment and Educational Technology Coordinator B.A., Ibn Tofail University (Morocco); M.A., Hunter College. Cynthia Elmas Lecturer, Intensive English B.A. French Literature, Rutgers University; M.A. TESOL, Hunter College; graduate studies, Art History, Rutgers University. Nada Gordon Lecturer, Intensive English; CEP Coordinator M.A., University of California at Berkeley.

Darleen Lev Lecturer, Intensive English M.F.A. Fiction Writing, University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop. Allegra Marino Shmulevsky Lecturer, Intensive English B.A. French Language and Literature, English Literature, and Studio Art, Tulane University; M.A. Applied Linguistics, Teachers College, Columbia University. Helen McNeil Lecturer, Intensive English M.A. TESOL, New York University. Jon Pauley Lecturer, Intensive English Eric Rosenblum Lecturer, Intensive English; Visiting Instructor B.A. English, Ohio University; M.F.A. Fiction Writing, Syracuse University. Nancy Seidler Director, Intensive English B.A., Brooklyn College; M.A. TESOL, Monterey Institute of International Studies. Gloria Steil Adjunct Instructor B.A., University of California at Berkeley; M.A., New York University. Sam Tomasello Lecturer, Intensive English B.F.A., Academy of Art University. Nichole Van Beek Lecturer, Intensive English

Humanities and Media Studies Dena Al-Adeeb Visiting Instructor Donald Andreasen Adjunct Associate Professor M.F.A. Playwriting, Actors Studio, The New School. Saul Anton Adjunct Assistant Professor

Thomas Healy Lecturer, Intensive English M.A., University of Ireland; studied at Takabijustu School of Art, Tokyo, and Massachusetts Institute of Art, Boston.

Emily P. Beall Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. English and Ethnic Studies, University of California at Berkeley; M.A., A.B.D. English, University of Washington at Seattle

Kimberly Kern Lecturer, Intensive English B.F.A. Art History, University of Texas at Austin; M.A. TESOL, Hunter College (CUNY).

Jonathan Beller Professor B.A. English, Columbia University; Ph.D. Literature, Duke University.

Elizabeth Knauer Visiting Assistant Professor

Caterina Bertolotto Visiting Associate Professor Laurea in Pedagogia, University of Turin, Italy.

Fanny Lao IEP and CEP Enrollment and Advisement Coordinator B.A., Connecticut College; M.A. International Education, New York University.

Jennifer Miller Professor

School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty

202

Stephanie Boluk Assistant Professor Warren Burdine Visiting Assistant Professor


Melissa Buzzeo Visiting Assistant Professor Diana Cage Visiting Assistant Professor Philip Carroll Visiting Instructor Lis Cena Visiting Assistant Professor Peter Chamedes Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D. English Literature. Youmna Chlala Associate Professor B.A., University of California at Santa Cruz; M.F.A., California College of the Arts. Diane Cohen Visiting Instructor B.F.A. Writing, Pratt Institute; M.A. English, Brooklyn College. Ellen Conley Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Pennsylvania State University; M.S., Wagner College. Kathryn Cullen-DuPont Assistant Chair B.A. English, New York University; M.F.A. Creative Writing, Goddard College. Maria Damon Chair, Humanities and Media Studies B.A. Humanities and Arts, Hampshire College; Ph.D. Modern Thought and Literature, Stanford University. Amanda Davidson Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. English Literature, B.A. Interdisciplinary Studies, University of California at Berkeley; M.F.A. Creative Writing, M.A. English Literature, San Francisco State University. Pierre Alexandre de Looz Visiting Assistant Professor Don Doherty Visiting Instructor; Tutor B.A., Hunter College, CUNY; New York University. Steven Doloff Professor; Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., Stony Brook University; M.Phil., Ph.D., CUNY Graduate Center. Claire Donato Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. (Summa cum laude) English Writing, University of Pittsburgh; M.F.A. Literary Arts, Brown University. Thom Donovan Visiting Instructor

Rachid Eladlouni Visiting Assistant Professor; Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., Ibn Tofail University (Morocco); M.A., Hunter College. Laura Elrick Associate Professor; Lecturer, Intensive English; Tutor B.A. Media and Communication, University of Southern California; M.A. Liberal Studies, The Graduate Center, CUNY.

Interdisciplinary Studies, Concordia University, Montreal, PQ. Sean Kelly Visiting Instructor B.A., Loyola College, University of Montreal. David D. Kim Visiting Instructor Elizabeth Knauer Visiting Assistant Professor

Sacha E. Frey Adjunct Instructor

Christoph Kumpusch Adjunct Assistant Professor

John Gendall Visiting Instructor B.S. Molecular Biology, University of Colorado; M.D.E.S. with distinction, Architectural History and Philosophy, Harvard University Graduate School of Design.

Krystal Languell Adjunct Associate Professor B.A. English, Indiana University; M.F.A. Creative Writing and Poetry, New Mexico State University

Daniel Gerzog Professor B.A., M.A., A.B.D., New York University. Amy Guggenheim Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE B.S. Education, M.A. Performance Writing, New York University; Post-graduate study: Screenwriting, The New School for Social Research. Paul Haacke Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Comparative Literature, Brown University; Ph.D. Comparative Literature, University of California, Berkeley. Christian Hawkey Professor B.S., M.A., New York University; M.F.A., University of Massachusetts. Kwame Heshimu Visiting Instructor; Tutor B.A. English (specialization in writing), New York University. Jeffrey Hogrefe Associate Professor B.A., University of California at Berkeley.

Susan Bee (Laufer) Visiting Associate Professor Rachel Levitsky Associate Professor B.A. American Social History, SUNY at Albany; M.F.A. Poetics, Naropa University. Ellen Levy Visiting Associate Professor B.A. English and Creative Writing, Princeton University; M.A. English, Columbia; Ph.D. English, Vanderbilt University. Ira Livingston Professor Ph.D. English, Stanford University. Jennifer Miller Professor Tracie Morris Professor B.A. Political Science, M.F.A. Poetry, Hunter College, CUNY; Ph.D. Performance Studies, New York University. Cecilia Muhlstein Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., M.A., California State University at Los Angeles. Uche Nduka Visiting Assistant Professor

Samantha Hunt Professor B.A. English, University of Vermont; M.F.A. Writing, Warren Wilson College.

Mendi Lewis Obadike Assistant Professor B.A., Spelman College; Ph.D., Duke University.

Dexter Jeffries Adjunct Instructor B.A., Queens College, CUNY; M.A., CUNY; Ph.D., CUNY, Graduate Center.

Robert Obrecht Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Berklee College of Music, Sarah Lawrence College.

Jeffrey T. Johnson Visiting Instructor B.A. (with honors) English Literature (German Literature minor), UC Berkeley; M.F.A. Creative Writing, The New School.

Kristin Pape Adjunct Assistant Professor

Adeena Karasick Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. (Hon.) English, University of British Columbia; M.A. English, York University; Ph.D Critical

School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty

203

Jean-Paul Pecqueur Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. Liberal Arts, The Evergreen State College; M.A. English Literature, New Mexico State University; M.F.A. Poetry, The University of Washington.


Alba Potes Visiting Assistant Professor D.M.A. in Composition, Temple University. Evan Rehill Adjunct Instructor B.A. Creative Writing, San Francisco State University; M.F.A. Creative Writing, San Francisco State University. Eric Rosenblum Visiting Instructor; Lecturer, Intensive English B.A. English, Ohio University; M.F.A. Fiction Writing, Syracuse University. Eliza Schrader Visiting Instructor B.A. English, Macalester College; M.F.A. Fiction, School of the Arts, Columbia University. Sharon Snow Visiting Instructor B.A., Vassar College; M.A., French Literature, Columbia University. Ethan Spigland Associate Professor B.A. Fine Arts, Literature, Yale University; Maîtrise, Philosophy, University of Paris VIII; M.F.A. Film, New York University. Gloria Steil Adjunct Instructor B.A., University of California at Berkeley; M.A., New York University. Yijue Sun Visiting Assistant Professor Holly Tavel Visiting Instructor B.A., The New School; M.F.A., Brown University. Barbara Turoff Adjunct Assistant Professor Laurea (Italian doctorate) Modern Foreign Languages, Universitá di Bologna, Italy; Ph.D. Italian Literature, New York University. Suzanne Verderber Associate Professor B.A. Comparative Literature, Dartmouth College; M.A./Ph.D. Comparative Literature and Literary Theory, University of Pennsylvania. Christopher Vitale Associate Professor B.A. Philosophy and Comparative Literature, SUNY at Binghamton; Ph.D. Comparative Literature, New York University. Elizabeth Williams Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Middlebury College; M.F.A., Columbia University. Thad Ziolkowski Professor; Coordinator, The Writing Program B.A., George Washington University; Ph.D., Yale University.

Mathematics and Science Damon Chaky Associate Professor B.S., Ph.D., Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute. Barbara Charton Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Brooklyn College; M.S., M.L.S., Pratt Institute. Eleonora Del Federico Professor Licenciada (equivalent to M.S. degree), University of Buenos Aires, Argentina; Ph.D., University of Massachusetts at Amherst. Anatole Dolgoff Adjunct Professor B.S., Hunter College, CUNY; M.S., Miami University. Margaret Dy-So Assistant to the Chair Aman Gill Assistant Professor B.S., Integrative Biology and History, University of California at Berkeley; Ph.D. candidate in Ecology and Evolution, Stony Brook University. Christopher Jensen Associate Professor B.A., Pomona College; Ph.D., Stony Brook University. Cindie Kehlet Associate Professor M.S., Ph.D., University of Aarhus. Steve Kreis Adjunct Associate Professor B.S., University of Missouri; M.A., Hunter College, CUNY. Richard Leigh Visiting Professor B.A., Oberlin College; Ph.D., Columbia University. Jemma Lorenat Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., San Francisco State University; M.A., CUNY Graduate Center; Ph.D. candidate in History and Math, Simon Fraser University and Université Pierre et Marie Curie, Paris. Tiffany Liu Lab Technician Ágnes Mócsy Associate Professor M.Sc., University of Bergen, Norway; Ph.D., University of Minnesota. Mark Rosin Assistant Professor M.S. Physics, Bristol; Ph.D. Applied Mathematics, Cambridge University. Carole Sirovich Chair B.S., Brooklyn College; M.S., Ph.D., New York University.

School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty

204

Gerson Sparer Professor B.S., Brooklyn College; M.S., Ph.D., Courant Institute. Oscar Strongin Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Columbia University. Vincent Tedeschi Visiting Instructor B.A., M.S., Stony Brook University. James Wise Visiting Instructor B.A., Hunter College; M.A., Brooklyn College. Daniel Wright Assistant Professor B.S., Pennsylvania State University; M.S., University of California at San Diego; Ph.D., Stanford University.

Social Science and Cultural Studies Sameetah Agha Associate Professor, History B.A., Smith College; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale University. Dory Aghazarian Visiting Instructor, History B.A., Columbia University; M.A., Fordham University; Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, CUNY. Alheli Alvarado-Diaz Visiting Instructor, History B.A., Johns Hopkins University; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Columbia University. Robert Ausch Adjunct Associate Professor, Psychology B.A., New York University; M.A., City College, City University of New York; Ph.D., Graduate Center, CUNY. Josh Blackwell Visiting Instructor, Fashion and Design History B.A., Bennington College; M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts. Francis Bradley Assistant Professor, History B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of Wisconsin at Madison. B. Ricardo Brown Professor, Cultural Studies; Coordinator, Critical and Visual Studies B.A., Simon’s Rock College of Bard; M.A., Syracuse University; M.Phil., Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Josiah Brownell Assistant Professor, History; Coordinator, World History Program B.A., Western Michigan University; M.A., London School of Economics; J.D., University of Virginia Law School; Ph.D. Political Science, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London.


Tom Buechele Visiting Instructor, Cultural Studies B.A., SUNY at Purchase; M.A., Queens College, CUNY; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, CUNY. Caitlin Cahill Assistant Professor, Politics and Geography B.A., Middlebury College; M.A., Hunter College; M.Phil., Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Paul Dambowic Adjunct Instructor B.A., New York University; M.A., Yale University. Mareena Dareedia Visiting Instructor, Cinema Studies B.F.A., York University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute. Corey D’Augustine Visiting Instructor, Theory and Practice B.A. Visual Arts and Biochemistry, Oberlin College; M.A. Art History, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Lisabeth During Associate Professor, Philosophy B.A., Wesleyan University; M.Th., King College, University of London; Ph.D., Trinity College, Cambridge University. Barbara Duarte Esgalhado Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.A., Rutgers University; Ph.D., Columbia University. John Frangos Adjunct Assistant Professor, History B.A., M.A., Queens College; M.A., C.W. Post Campus, Long Island University; Ph.D., New York University. Eric Godoy Assistant Chair and Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Rollins College; M.A., Ph.D. The New School for Social Research.

Estelle Horowitz Professor Emerita, Economics Gregg M. Horowitz Professor, Philosophy; Chair B.A., Sarah Lawrence College; M.A., Boston University; Ph.D., Rutgers University. May Joseph Professor, Global Studies B.A., M.A., Madras Christian College; M.A., Ph.D., University of California at Santa Barbara. Svetlana Jovic Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.A., M.A., University of Belgrade, Serbia; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center , CUNY. Shelley Juran Professor, Psychology B.A., M.A., Brooklyn College; Ph.D., CUNY. Marina Kaneti Visiting Instructor, History B.A., Columbia University; M.S., School of Social Work, Columbia University. Josh Karant Adjunct Assistant Professor, Philosophy and Food Studies B.A., Pomona College, M.A., The New School; M.A., Rutgers University; Ph.D., University of Maryland. Kathleen C. Kelley Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., St. John’s College; M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Todd Kesselman Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Trinity College; M.A. The New School for Social Research. Annie Khan B.A., Columbia University; M.A., City College of New York; Ph.D. candidate, SUNY at Stony Brook.

P.J. Gorre Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Villanova University; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, The New School for Social Research.

Hunter Kincaid Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.S., University of Washington; M.A., University of Chicago.

Monica A. Grandy Visiting Assistant Professor, Psychology B.A., Sarah Lawrence College; Ph.D., CUNY.

Elizabeth Knauer Visiting Instructor, Cultural Studies Ph.D. candidate, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University.

Mitchell Harris Adjunct Assistant Professor, History B.F.A., SUNY at Purchase; M.A., M.Phil, CUNY. Gabriel Hernández Visiting Instructor, History B.A., City College of New York; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, SUNY at Stony Brook.

Gerald Levy Visiting Instructor, Economics B.A., New York University; M.A., The New School for Social Research.

Ann Holder Associate Professor, History B.A., Hampshire College; Ph.D., Boston College.

Luka Lucic Assistant Professor, Psychology and Diaspora Studies B.A., City College of New York; M.Phil., The Graduate Center, CUNY.

Travis Holloway Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Belmont College; M.A., Boston College, M.F.A., New York University; Ph.D., SUNY at Stony Brook.

John McGuire Adjunct Instructor, Philosophy B.A., New York University; M.A., The New School University.

School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty

205

Erum Naqvi Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.Sc. (Hon.) Philosophy and Economics, London School of Economics; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Temple University. Darini Nicholas Adjunct Instructor, Anthropology B.A., University of Louisville; M.A., Goddard College; Ph.D., The New School University. Cheol-Soo Park Visiting Instructor, Economics B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Seoul National University; Ph.D., The New School University. Irving Perlman Professor Emeritus, History B.A., Brooklyn College; M.B.A., J.D., New York University. Robert Richardson Adjunct Assistant Professor, Philosophy B.A., Wheaton College; M.A., ABD, Pennsylvania State University. Uzma Z. Rizvi Assistant Professor, Anthropology and Urban Studies B.A., Bryn Mawr College; M.A., Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. John Santore Professor Emeritus, History B.A., M.A., Temple University; Ph.D., Columbia University. Zachary Sapolsky Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.A., University of Rochester; M.A., Ph.D., Long Island University. Ritchie Savage Visiting Instructor, Sociology B.S., Bradley University; M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Paul Schweigert Visiting Instructor, History B.S., North Carolina State University; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, CUNY. Noah Simmons Visiting Instructor, History Licence Histoire de l’Art et d’Archéologie, Maîtrise Histoire de l’Art et d’Archéologie, Sorbonne Paris IV-Université de Paris; M.A., Columbia University School of International and Public Affairs; Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Michelle Standley Visiting Instructor, History B.A., Brigham Young University; Ph.D., New York University. Jeff Surovell Adjunct Assistant Professor, History B.A., M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University. Jennifer Telesca B.A., University of Richmond; M.A., University of Connecticut at Storrs; M.A., Ph.D., New York University.


Kumru Toktamis Adjunct Assistant Professor, Sociology B.A., Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey; M.A., Ph.D., The New School University. Basil Tsiokos Visiting Instructor, Theory and Practice B.A., Stanford University; M.A., New York University. Murtaza Vali Visiting Instructor, Art Theory B.S., Johns Hopkins University; M.A., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Zhivka Valiavicharska Assistant Professor, Social and Political Theory B.A., M.A., National Academy of Arts, Sofia, Bulgaria; Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley. Ron Van Cleef Visiting Instructor, History A.B., Syracuse University, Maxwell School of Citizenship; M.A., City College of New York; Ph.D. candidate, Stony Brook University .

Critical and Visual Studies Sameetah Agha Associate Professor, History B.A., Smith College; M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale University. Josh Blackwell Visiting Instructor, Fashion and Design History B.A., Bennington College; M.F.A., California Institute of the Arts. Francis Bradley Assistant Professor, History B.A., M.A., Ph.D., University of Wisconsin at Madison. B. Ricardo Brown Professor, Cultural Studies; Coordinator, Critical and Visual Studies B.A., Simon’s Rock College of Bard; M.A., Syracuse University; M.Phil., Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Josiah Brownell Assistant Professor, History; Coordinator, World History Program B.A., Western Michigan University; M.A., London School of Economics; J.D., University of Virginia Law School; Ph.D., Political Science, School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. Tom Buechele Visiting Instructor, Cultural Studies B.A., SUNY at Purchase; M.A., Queens College; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, CUNY. Caitlin Cahill Assistant Professor, Politics and Geography B.A., Middlebury College; M.A., Hunter College; M.Phil., Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Mareena Dareedia Visiting Instructor, Cinema Studies B.F.A., York University; M.F.A., Pratt Institute.

Corey D’Augustine Visiting Instructor, Theory and Practice B.A. Visual Arts and Biochemistry, Oberlin College; M.A. Art History, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

Luka Lucic Assistant Professor, Psychology and Diaspora Studies B.A., City College of New York; M.Phil., The Graduate Center, CUNY.

Lisabeth During Associate Professor, Philosophy B.A., Wesleyan University; M.Th., King College, University of London; Ph.D., Trinity College, Cambridge University.

Erum Naqvi Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.Sc. (Hon.), Philosophy and Economics, London School of Economics; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Temple University.

Barbara Duarte Esgalhado Visiting Instructor, Psychology B.A., Rutgers University; Ph.D., Columbia University.

Darini Nicholas Adjunct Instructor, Anthropology B.A., University of Louisville; M.A., Goddard College; Ph.D. candidate, The New School University.

Eric Godoy Assistant Chair and Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Rollins College; M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Gabriel Hernández Visiting Instructor, History B.A., City College of New York; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, SUNY at Stony Brook. Ann Holder Associate Professor, History B.A., Hampshire College; Ph.D., Boston College. Travis Holloway Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Belmont College; M.A., Boston College, M.F.A., New York University; Ph.D., SUNY, Stony Brook. Gregg M. Horowitz Professor, Philosophy; Chair B.A., Sarah Lawrence College; M.A., Boston University; Ph.D., Rutgers University. May Joseph Professor, Global Studies B.A., M.A., Madras Christian College; M.A., Ph.D., University of California at Santa Barbara. Shelley Juran Professor, Psychology B.A., M.A., Brooklyn College; Ph.D., CUNY. Josh Karant Adjunct Assistant Professor, Philosophy and Food Studies B.A., Pomona College, M.A., The New School; M.A., Rutgers University; Ph.D., University of Maryland. Kathleen C. Kelley Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., St. John’s College; M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Todd Kesselman Visiting Instructor, Philosophy B.A., Trinity College; M.A., The New School for Social Research. Elizabeth Knauer Visiting Instructor, Cultural Studies Ph.D., Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University.

School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty

206

Uzma Z. Rizvi Assistant Professor, Anthropology and Urban Studies B.A., Bryn Mawr College; M.A., Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania. Ritchie Savage Visiting Instructor, Sociology B.S., Bradley University; M.A., Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Jennifer Telesca Assistant Professor B.A., University of Richmond; M.A.,University of Connecticut at Storrs; M.A., Ph.D., New York University. Kumru Toktamis Adjunct Assistant Professor, Sociology B.A., Middle East Technical University, Ankara, Turkey; M.A., Ph.D., The New School University. Basil Tsiokos Visiting Instructor, Theory and Practice B.A., Stanford University; M.A., New York University. Murtaza Vali Visiting Instructor, Art Theory B.S., Johns Hopkins University; M.A. Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Zhivka Valiavicharska Assistant Professor, Social and Political Theory B.A., M.A., National Academy of Arts, Sofia, Bulgaria; Ph.D., University of California at Berkeley. Sal A. Westrich Professor, History B.A., City College of New York; M.A., University of Wisconsin; M.A., Harvard University; Ph.D., Columbia University. Rebecca Winkel Visiting Assistant Professor, Psychology M.A. Columbia University; M.A., Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary; Ph.D., The New School for Social Research. Iván Zatz Díaz Associate Professor, Globalization B.A., SUNY at Purchase; M.F.A., New York University; Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Carl Zimring Associate Professor, History and Sustainability B.A., University of California at Santa Cruz; M.A., Ph.D., Carnegie Mellon University.


History of Art and Design Sonya Abrego Visiting Instructor M.Phil. Decorative Arts, Design History and Material Culture Studies, Bard Graduate Center; Ph.D., Bard Graduate Center. Kelly Rae Aldridge Visiting Instructor B.A. Art History, Colorado State University; M.A. Art History and Criticism, Ph.D. candidate, Stony Brook University. Lisa Banner Visiting Associate Professor B.A., Princeton University; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Ágnes Berecz Visiting Assistant Professor Ph.D., Université Paris I (Panthéon-Sorbonne). Sam Bryan Adjunct Associate Professor B.A., Dartmouth College; M.A., Howard University; D.A. History, Carnegie Mellon University. Corey D’Augustine Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Visual Arts and Biochemistry, Oberlin College; M.A. Art History, Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Ed DeCarbo Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., University of Chicago; M.A., Ph.D., Indiana University. Eva Díaz Assistant Professor M.A., Ph.D., Princeton University. Dorothea Dietrich Professor, Chair B.A., M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D., Yale University.

Heather Horton Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., DePauw University; M.A., Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

Marsha Morton Professor M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

Susan Karnet Visiting Instructor B.F.A., School of Visual Arts, New York City; M.F.A., Hunter College, CUNY.

Evan Neely Adjunct Assistant Professor B.F.A. Fine Arts, Parsons The New School For Design; M.Phil., M.A., Ph.D. Art History, Columbia University.

Dara Kiese Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Modern History, University of Minnesota; M.Phil., Ph.D. Art History, The Graduate Center, CUNY. Vivien Knussi Adjunct Instructor B.A., M.A.,Tufts University; Ph.D., Columbia University; studied American Art and Photography at Columbia University. Gayle Rodda Kurtz Adjunct Associate Professor, Assistant Chair B.A., Stanford University; M.A., Hunter College; Ph.D., CUNY Graduate Center. Marilyn Kushner Visiting Professor B.A., M.A., University of Wisconsin at Milwaukee; Ph.D. Modern Art, Northwestern University. Thomas La Padula Adjunct Professor B.F.A., Parsons The New School for Design; M.F.A., Syracuse University. Anca Lasc Assistant Professor B.A. History and Theory of Art and Literature, Jacobs University Bremen, Germany; M.A., Ph.D. Art History, University of Southern California. Jacob Lewis Visiting Instructor M.A. History of Art, Williams College; Ph.D. Art History, Northwestern University.

Mary Douglas Edwards Adjunct Professor, CCE M.L.S., M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University.

Rael Lewis Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Swarthmore College; Ph.D., Stanford University.

Charles Eppley Visiting Instructor B.A. Art History and Music, Hiram College; M.A. Art History and Criticism, Ph.D. candidate, Stony Brook University.

Michele Licalsi Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., M.A., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.

Diana Gisolfi Professor B.A., Radcliffe/Harvard; M.A., Ph.D., University of Chicago. Dimitri Hazzikostas Assistant Professor M.A., Ph.D., Columbia University. Frima Fox Hofrichter Professor M.A., Hunter College; Ph.D., Rutgers University.

William Lorenzo Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A., Brooklyn College. Elizabeth Meggs Visiting Instructor B.F.A. Communications Arts and Design, Illustration, Virginia Commonwealth University. Juan Monroy Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Film Studies, University of California at Santa Barbara; M.A. Cinema Studies, Ph.D. candidate, Cinema Studies, New York University.

School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty

207

Nicholas Parkinson Visiting Instructor B.A. Philosophy, DePauw University; M.A. Philosophy, Ph.D., Art History and Criticism, Stony Brook University. Joyce Polistena Adjunct Professor, CCE M.A. Art History, Hunter College; Ph.D., M. Phil., The Graduate Center, CUNY. Katarina V. Posch Associate Professor M.A., University of Applied Arts, Vienna, Austria; Ph.D., Tokyo University of Fine Arts and Music, Japan. Elena Rossi-Snook Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Cinema, SUNY at Binghamton; M.A. Film Archiving, University of East Anglia. Ann Schoenfeld Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., The Graduate Center, CUNY; received a CUNY Dissertation Fellowship. Dorothy Shepard Adjunct Associate Professor M.A., Southern Methodist University; Ph.D., Bryn Mawr College. Elizabeth St. George Visiting Instructor B.A., Kent State University; M.A., Ph.D. candidate, Bard Graduate Center. Jack Toolin Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Photography, Ohio University at Athens; M.F.A. Photography, Performance, and Installation, San Jose State University. Alice Walkiewicz Visiting Instructor B.A., University of Kansas; M.Phil., Ph.D. candidate, The Graduate Center, CUNY. Bor-Hua Wang Adjunct Assistant Professor M.A., University of Kansas; Ph.D., Columbia University. Sarah Wilkins Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Vanderbilt University; M.S., Pratt Institute; Ph.D., Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. Karyn Zieve Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Wellesley College; M.A., University of Pennsylvania; Ph.D., Institute of Fine Arts, New York University.


The Writing Program Saul Anton Adjunct Assistant Professor Ph.D., Princeton University. Emily Beall Adjunct Assistant Professor, CCE B.A. English and Ethnic Studies, University of California at Berkeley; M.A., A.B.D. English, University of Washington at Seattle. Priscilla Becker Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. Music and Philosophy, Brown University; M.F.A. Poetry, Columbia University. Jonathan Beller Professor; Coordinator, Graduate Program in Media Studies B.A. English, Columbia University; Ph.D. Literature, Duke University. Caterina Bertolotto Adjunct Professor M.A. equivalent Università agli Studi di Torino. Christopher Bollen Visiting Instructor B.A., Columbia University. Peter Catalanotto Visiting Associate Professor B.F.A. Art and Design, Pratt Institute. Diane Cohen Visiting Instructor B.F.A. Writing, Pratt Institute; M.A. English, Brooklyn College. Gabriel Cohen Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. English, Wesleyan University, Connecticut. Jon Cotner Visiting Instructor B.A. Humanities, Shimer College; M.A., St. John’s College; Ph.D. Poetics, SUNY at Buffalo. Cameron Crawford Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Fiber and Material Studies, School of the Art Institute of Chicago; M.F.A. Art Theory and Practice, Northwestern University. Kathryn Cullen-DuPont Assistant Chair, Humanities and Media Studies B.A. English, New York University; M.F.A. Creative Writing, Goddard College. Maria Damon Professor, Chair Ph.D. Modern Thought and Literature, Stanford University; B.A. Humanities and Arts, Hampshire College. Amanda Davidson Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. English Literature, B.A. Interdisciplinary Studies, University of California at Berkeley; M.F.A. Creative Writing, M.A. English Literature, San Francisco State University.

Steven Doloff Professor; Lecturer, Intensive English B.A., Stony Brook University; M.Phil., Ph.D., Graduate Center, CUNY.

Jeffrey Hogrefe Associate Professor B.A. Critical Theory, University of California at Berkeley.

Claire Donato Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. (summa cum laude) English Writing, University of Pittsburgh; M.F.A. Literary Arts, Brown University.

Mary-Beth Hughes Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. English, Marymount Manhattan College.

Laura Elrick Associate Professor B.A. Media and Communication, University of Southern California; M.A. Liberal Studies, The Graduate Center, CUNY. Wes Enzinna Visiting Instructor B.A., Temple University; M.A., University of California at Berkeley. Allen Feldman Visiting Associate Professor B.A., M.A. Anthropology, Ph.D. Anthropology, The New School for Social Research. John Gendall Visiting Instructor B.S. Molecular Biology, University of Colorado; M.D.E.S. with distinction, Architectural History and Philosophy, Harvard University Graduate School of Design. John Glassie Visiting Instructor B.A., The Johns Hopkins University. David Gordon Visiting Instructor M.F.A. Writing, M.A. English and Comparative Literature, Columbia University. Amy Guggenheim Adjunct Associate Professor, CCE B.S. Education, M.A. Performance Writing, New York University; Post-graduate study: Screenwriting, The New School for Social Research. Paul Haacke Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Comparative Literature, Brown University; Ph.D. Comparative Literature, University of California, Berkeley. James Hannaham Associate Professor B.A. Art, Yale University; M.F.A. Fiction/ Screenwriting, The Michener Center for Writers at the University of Texas, Austin.

Samantha Hunt Professor B.A. English, University of Vermont; M.F.A. Writing, Warren Wilson College. Lucy Ives Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. English, Harvard University; M.F.A. Poetry, Iowa Writers’ Workshop; Ph.D., A.B.D. Comparative Literature, New York University. Jeff T. Johnson Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. (hon.) English Literature (German Literature minor), University of California at Berkeley; M.F.A. Creative Writing, The New School. Adeena Karasick Adjunct Associate Professor B.A. (Hon.) English, University of British Columbia; M.A. English, York University; Ph.D Critical Interdisciplinary Studies, Concordia University, Montreal, PQ. Caitlin Kelly Visiting Instructor B.A., University of Toronto. Sean C. Kelly Visiting Instructor B.A., Loyola College, University of Montreal. Krystal Languell Adjunct Associate Professor B.A. English, Indiana University; M.F.A. Creative Writing and Poetry, New Mexico State University. Jennifer W. Leung Visiting Assistant Professor B.S. Biochemistry, University of California at Los Angeles; M.Arch. I, Princeton University. Rachel Levitsky Professor; Associate Coordinator, M.F.A. in Writing B.A. American Social History, SUNY at Albany; M.F.A. Poetics, Naropa University. Ellen Levy Visiting Associate Professor B.A. English and Creative Writing, Princeton University; M.A. English, Columbia; Ph.D. English, Vanderbilt University.

Ryan Fischer-Harbage Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Kalamazoo College; M.F.A., Bennington College.

Ira Livingston Professor Ph.D. English, Stanford University.

Christian Hawkey Professor B.S., M.A., New York University; M.F.A., University of Massachusetts.

Robert Lopez Assistant Adjunct Professor B.F.A., New York Institute of Technology; M.F.A., The New School for Social Research.

Jason Helm Visiting Assistant Professor M.F.A. Creative Writing, Sarah Lawrence College.

School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty

208


Max Ludington Visiting Instructor B.A., University of Minnesota; M.F.A., Columbia University.

Eliza Schrader Visiting Instructor B.A. English, Macalester College; M.F.A. Fiction, School of the Arts, Columbia University.

Melissa Milgrom Visiting Assistant Professor B.Phil., Miami University, Oxford, Ohio; M.A. American Civilization, University of Pennsylvania.

Adrian Shirk Visiting Instructor B.F.A. Writing for Performance, Publication and Media, Pratt Institute; M.F.A. Creative Writing, University of Wyoming.

Thad Ziolkowski Professor; Coordinator, The Writing Program B.A., George Washington University; Ph.D., Yale University.

Timothy M. Simonds Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Architectural Studies, Performance Studies, M.A. Performance Studies, Brown University.

Gina Zucker Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., Washington University; M.F.A., The New School.

Tracie Morris Professor; Coordinator, Performance and Performance Studies B.A. Political Science, M.F.A. Poetry, Hunter College, CUNY; Ph.D. Performance Studies, New York University. Anna Moschovakis Adjunct Associate Professor B.A. Philosophy, University of California at Berkeley; M.A. Comparative Literature, The Graduate Center, CUNY; M.F.A. Writing, Bard College’s Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts. Cecilia Muhlstein Adjunct Assistant Professor, Tutor B.A., M.A., California State University at Los Angeles. Bill Obrecht Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A., Berklee College of Music, Sarah Lawrence College. Shelly Oria Visiting Professor B.A., Tel Aviv University; M.F.A., Sarah Lawrence College. Matteo Pasquinelli Visiting Assistant Professor M.A. Philosophy, University of Bologna; Ph.D., Queen Mary University of London. Jean-Paul Pecqueur Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. Liberal Arts, The Evergreen State College; M.A. English Literature, New Mexico State University; M.F.A. Poetry, The University of Washington. Minh-Ha T. Pham Assistant Professor B.A. English, University of California at Santa Barbara; Ph.D. Comparative Ethnic Studies with a Designated Emphasis in Visual Culture Studies, University of California at Berkeley. Evan Rehill Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Creative Writing, San Francisco State University; M.F.A. Creative Writing, San Francisco State University. Eric Rosenblum Adjunct Assistant Professor B.A. English, Ohio University; M.F.A Creative Writing, Syracuse University. Jonathan Santlofer Visiting Assistant Professor B.F.A. Painting/Art History, Boston University; M.F.A. Painting/Art History, Pratt Institute.

Ethan Spigland Professor B.A. Fine Arts, Literature, Yale University; Maîtrise, Philosophy, University of Paris Vlll; M.F.A. Film, New York University. Justin Taylor Visiting Assistant Professor B.A., University of Florida; M.F.A., The New School. Holly Tavel Visiting Instructor B.A., The New School; M.F.A., Brown University. Johnny Temple Visiting Instructor B.A., Wesleyan College. Barbara Turoff Adjunct Assistant Professor Laurea (Italian doctorate) Modern Foreign Languages, Universitá di Bologna, Italy; Ph.D. Italian Literature, New York University. Suzanne Verderber Associate Professor B.A. Comparative Literature, Dartmouth College; M.A./Ph.D. Comparative Literature and Literary Theory, University of Pennsylvania.

Uljana Wolf Visiting Assistant Professor B.A./M.A. German Studies, English Literature, Cultural Studies, Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany.

Writing and Tutorial Center Randy Donowitz Director of the Writing and Tutorial Center Terri Bennett Tutor Priya Chandrasekoran Tutor, Writing, Thesis Diane Cohen Assistant to the Director Maura Conley Tutor, Writing, Thesis Brian Cook Tutor Amanda Davidson Tutor Elizabeth (Lol) Fow Adjunct Instructor; Tutor, Thesis, Graduate Writing Dominica Giglio Tutor, Writing, Art History

Christopher Vitale Associate Professor B.A. Philosophy and Comparative Literature, SUNY at Binghamton; Ph.D. Comparative Literature, New York University.

Heather Green Tutor, Writing, Thesis, Conversation

Ellery Washington Associate Professor DEUG to DEA (Diplôme d’Etudes Appliquées)— M.A. equivalent, Contemporary French Literature, Comparative Thesis; Université de Paris I – Panthéon – Sorbonne.

Kwame Heshimu Visiting Instructor; Tutor, Writing

Kyle Waugh Visiting Instructor B.A. English, University of Kansas; M.A. American Studies, University of Kansas; Ph.D. English, The Graduate Center, CUNY.

Evan Rehill Visiting Instructor; Tutor, Writing, Thesis

Marisa Williamson Visiting Assistant Professor B.A. Visual and Environmental Studies, Harvard University; M.F.A. Fine Art, California Institute of the Arts.

School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Faculty

209

Joseph Herzfeld Lecturer Intensive English; Tutor, Writing

Cecilia Muhlstein Adjunct Assistant Professor; Tutor, Writing, Thesis

Zachary Slanger Tutor


As a queer writer of color, finding a safe space that not only allows me to be myself, but to use that self to fight systems of oppression is a dream I never thought would come true. Adriana L. Green (M.F.A. Writing ’17)


Graduate Admissions

Graduate Admissions Financial Aid Tuition and Fees Registration and Academic Policies Student Affairs Libraries Board of Trustees Administration Academic Calendar Directions Index

Vice President for Enrollment Judith Aaron 718.636.3743 jaaron@pratt.edu

Graduate Admissions Counselor Brian Mulroney 718.230.6887 bmulrone@pratt.edu

Director of Graduate and International Admissions Natalie Capannelli ncapanne@pratt.edu0 718.636.3551

Office of Admissions Myrtle Hall, 2nd floor 718.636.3514 or 800.331.0834 Fax: 718.399.4242 www.pratt.edu/admissions

Graduate Admissions Counselor TBD 718.636.3551

Questions? Ask Pratt’s “Virtual Adviser” at www.pratt.edu/ask.



Pratt Institute welcomes applications from all qualified students, regardless of age, sex, religion, race, color, creed, national origin, or disability. Admissions committees base their decisions on a careful review of all credentials submitted by the applicant. Although admission stand­ ards at Pratt are high, extraordinary talent may sometimes offset a lower grade point average or test score. If a student is not accepted, this decision is not a negative reflection of the student’s chances for successful completion of similar studies at another institution, nor does it preclude the student’s eventual admission to the Institute. The Office of Graduate Admissions is open weekdays from 9 AM to 5 PM from September through May, and from 9 AM to 4 PM during June, July, and August. GUIDED CAMPUS TOURS Guided campus tours of the Brooklyn campus are scheduled Monday and Friday at 10 AM, 12 PM, and 2 PM. Tuesday and Thursday tours are scheduled at 10 AM and 2 PM. Schedule a campus tour online at www.pratt.edu/ visit, call our Visit Coordinator at 718.636.3779 or 800.331.0834, or email us at visit@pratt.edu. Prospective graduate applicants or students are encouraged to contact their academic department directly to discuss the program and see the facilities. GRADUATE MERIT-BASED SCHOLARSHIPS Incoming students will be evaluated by their academic department for merit-based scholarships upon accep­ tance. These are renewable for the duration of the program for students who maintain a 3.0 GPA. There is no application form. Assistantships are awarded to some second-year students. All recipients must be full-time (nine credits minimum per semester). GRADUATE ADMISSIONS All applicants to graduate programs at Pratt must have received a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the United States or have been awarded the equivalent of the bachelor’s degree from an inter­na­ tional institution of acceptable standards. International students should see the “Accepted International Students” section for additional requirements. Deadline for Applications Completed applications for most programs (including letters of reference, statement of purpose, transcripts, and portfolio) should be submitted by January 5 for fall entrance. Some programs will accept applications after the deadline if there is room. See the “Department

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Requirements” section for specific deadline information as well as for information on programs that accept students in the spring. Applicants for the spring semester must apply by October 1 (September 1 for international app­licants) and by November 1st for the Low Residency Program in Creative Arts Therapy. Applications received after that time will be considered only if there is room in a particular program. GENERAL CREDENTIALS Application Forms Graduate applicants are required to apply online at www.pratt.edu/apply. Please use your full legal name on all documents and do not use nicknames or middle names. Application Requirements The online application, hosted by CollegeNET, as well as various requirements, may be found at www.pratt.edu/ apply. Please note: Pratt’s application enables applicants to request recommendation letters and upload trans­ cript(s) online. Writing samples, for those departments that require them, will be uploaded on the application. Visual portfolios are submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. See www.pratt.edu/apply for instructions on submitting your application and supporting documents. Candidates for graduate admission must submit the following: 1. Online graduate application with nonrefundable $50 application fee at www.pratt.edu/apply. (International students must pay a $90 application fee.) Graduate students are required to apply online. 2. Unofficial transcripts from all institutions attended after graduation from secondary school. Make sure each transcript contains the school name and your name before uploading it to the application. Inter­national students must have all transcripts officially translated into English. (Both the unofficial original and the English translation must be uploaded online at our application site.) Students who have studied outside the US in an educational structure different from that in the US (three-year degrees, for example) are asked to submit a World Education Services (WES) (www.wes.org) evaluation to expedite their application processing. WES evaluations do not include trans­lations. The documents must be officially translated into English before they are submitted to WES or any other reputable education evaluation service, e.g., your embassy. 3. Supporting documents: The following documents should be submitted electronically on the online

Graduate Admissions

application site at www.pratt.edu/apply. Please include the following: A. Two letters of recommendation from employers, professors, or others able to judge your potential for graduate study in the specific program to which you are applying. Recommendation letters are submitted online. See www.pratt.edu/apply. (If your references prefer not to submit online, please ask them to seal their letter in an envelope, sign across the flap, and mail their references to Pratt Institute, Office of Graduate Admissions, 200 Willoughby Avenue, Brooklyn, NY 11205.) Make sure to contact your references and request a recommendation letter from them. Let them know the process is online. B. Additional writing sample (required by City and Regional Planning, Urban Placemaking and Manage­ ment, Sustainable Environmental Systems, Historic Preservation, Media Studies, History of Art, Design, Architecture, Perform­ance and Performance Studies, Dance Therapy, and Writing only) may be uploaded at the application site. C. Résumé (required for Design Management, City and Regional Planning, Urban Placemaking, Sustainable Environmental Studies, and all School of Information degree programs; optional for all other graduate programs) should be uploaded to the application site. D. Statement of purpose stating your long-range goals, interest in the chosen discipline, and reason for applying to the programs. The statement of purpose, which must be 250–500 words, should be uploaded to the application site. 5. TOEFL score, PTE score, or IELTS score for international applicants whose native language is not English. Unless otherwise indicated by a specific department, the minimum required TOEFL score is 550 (paper)/213 (computer)/79 (internet), PTE score of 53, and the required IELTS score is 6.5. Please make sure that you register for a test that will enable you to submit your scores by the application deadline. It generally takes four to six weeks to receive the scores. The Pratt Institute code for TOEFL is 2669. Check www.toefl.org for information on testing sites. 6. Portfolio: Check under “Department Requirements” for the portfolio requirements for your specific program. Applicants from China In order to provide an in-person interview opportunity for all Chinese applicants interested in Pratt Institute and to process your application faster, we have partnered with Vericant. Vericant will conduct video interviews and short writing samples with our applicants in Mainland China.

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Vericant does not evaluate candidates but instead posts the interviews online for our admissions team to review. The Vericant interview will form part of your application package if you opt to be interviewed. Although the Vericant interview is not mandatory, we highly recommend it, as it will give you an excellent opportunity to showcase your skills and professionalism to our admissions team. To learn more about Vericant and to schedule an interview, please visit Vericant’s website at www.students. vericant.com. Vericant provides interviews in the following cities: Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Chengdu, Chongqing, Dalian, Guangzhou, Hangzhou, Nanjing, Qingdao, Wuhan, Xi’an, and Zhengzhou. Mailing Documents Submit any print documents in one envelope, if possible, and mail to: Office of Graduate Admissions Pratt Institute 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 admissions@pratt.edu Tel: 718.636.3514 or 800.331.0834 Fax: 718.399.4242

providing evidence of their interest in architecture or their visual sensibility through the media of their choice— photography, drawing, essays, videos, etc. Portfolios must be submitted on-line at pratt.slideroom.com. The GRE is required. The GRE code is R2669. TOEFL of 550 (79 Internet) is required. Advanced Standing (Architecture First-Professional M.Arch) Advanced standing is awarded to applicants with exemplary design capabilities and who have taken studios, structures and media-based classes equivalent to those offered in year one prior to entrance. It is awarded at the discretion of the Admissions Committee and the Chairperson of Graduate Architecture and Urban Design. Applicants should have received a bachelor’s degree in architecture equivalent to a Bachelor of Science. Applicants must present a portfolio providing evidence of design work from multiple architecture design studios. Students interested in applying for advanced standing need to designate this on their Statement of Purpose in the appli­ cation. Interviews may be scheduled for students request­ ing advanced standing on campus, off-campus, by Skype, or by phone. Portfolios must be submitted online at pratt.slideroom.com. The GRE is required. The GRE code is R2669.

SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE

Architecture M.S. Post-Professional (summer entrance only), Brooklyn Campus This program is three semesters long, beginning in early June and ending in spring. Applicants must have earned a Bachelor of Architecture (five-year B.Arch.) from an accredited school of architecture or the international equivalent. Applicants should submit all materials as early as possible in order to ensure that there is enough time to review and make decisions and, in the case of international students, to get the I-20. Ideally, applicants (particularly international applicants) should submit all materials, including portfolio, by December 1. Applications will be accepted after the deadline of January 5 only if there is room. A digital portfolio should be submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. A TOEFL score of 550 (79 internet) is required.

Architecture First-Professional M.Arch. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants must have received a bachelor’s degree from an institution in the US that is accredited by a recognized regional association or have been awarded the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree from an international institution of acceptable standards. Applicants must present a portfolio

Architecture and Urban Design M.S. Post-Professional (summer entrance only), Brooklyn Campus This program is three semesters long, beginning in early June and ending in spring. Applicants must have earned a Bachelor of Architecture (five-year B.Arch.) from an accredited school of architecture or the international

If you plan to send your documents by messenger, please do so before December 24 or after January 2. Pratt closes for winter break during that time. We strongly suggest making photocopies of all mailed forms for your own records. Please use your full legal name on the application and on all documents, and not nicknames or middle names, so that we are able to match TOEFL scores, transcripts, etc. with your application. Department Requirements Graduate programs have different professional requirements. See the following section for specific specific program requirements.

Graduate Admissions

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equivalent. Applicants should submit all materials as early as possible in order to ensure that there is enough time to review and make decisions and, in the case of international students, to get the I-20. Ideally, applicants (particularly international applicants) should submit all materials, including portfolio, by December 1. Applications will be accepted after the deadline of January 5 only if there is room. A digital portfolio should be submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. A TOEFL score of 550 (79 internet) is required. Historic Preservation M.S. (fall and spring entrance), Brooklyn Campus Applicants are welcome from all fields of study. Appli­ cants should have received their bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the US or the equivalent from an international institution of acceptable standards. Applications will be accepted after the deadline until the program is full. A TOEFL score of 550 (79 internet) is required for international students. Applicants must submit, in addition to the general application require­­ments: (1) a résumé and (2) an extended piece of writing to support their application for advance study. The writing sample may be a term paper or report done for work depending on the applicant’s background and is not required to be related to historic preservation. Applicants may also submit additional material that they feel contributes to their application, such as work sample or portfolio. The GRE or GMAT is optional; neither is required. All documents but a visual portfolio should be uploaded to the application. Visual portfolio should be submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. TOEFL of 575 (90 internet) is required for international students. City and Regional Planning M.S. (fall and spring entrance), Brooklyn Campus Applicants are welcome from all fields of study. Applicants should have received their bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the US or the equivalent from an international institution of acceptable standards. Applications will be accepted after the deadline until the program is full. TOEFL of 575 (90 internet) is required for international students. Applicants must submit, in addition to the general application requirements: (1) a résumé and (2) an extended piece of writing to support their appli­cation for advance study. The writing sample may be a term paper or report done for work depending on the applicant’s background and is not required to be related to planning. Applicants may also submit additional material that they feel contributes to their application, such as work sample or portfolio. The GRE or GMAT is optional;

Graduate Admissions

neither is required. All documents but a visual portfolio should be uploaded to the application. Visual portfolio should be submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. Sustainable Environmental Systems M.S. (fall and spring entrance), Brooklyn Campus Applicants are welcome from all fields of study. Applicants should have received their bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the US or the equivalent from an international institution of acceptable standards. Applications will be accepted after the deadline until the program is full. A TOEFL score of 550 (79 internet) is required for international students. Applicants must submit, in addition to the general application require­ ments: (1) a résumé and (2) either a writing sample or visual portfolio, depending on their background. The writing sample or portfolio should indicate an interest in or awareness of issues to be addressed in this program. The GRE or GMAT is optional; neither is required. Applications will be accepted after the deadline if there is room. All documents, except a visual portfolio, should be uploaded to the application. Visual portfolios should be submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. Urban Placemaking and Management M.S. (fall entrance), Brooklyn Campus Applicants are welcome from all fields of study. Applicants should have received their bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution in the US or the equivalent from an international institution of acceptable standards. Applications will be accepted after the deadline until the program is full. A TOEFL score of 575 (90 internet) is required for international students. Applicants must submit, in addition to the general application require­ ments: (1) a résumé and (2) an extended piece of writing to support their application for advanced study. The writing sample may be a term paper or a report done for work, depending on the applicant’s background, and is not required to be related to placemaking. Applicants may also submit additional material that they feel contributes to their application, such as a work sample or portfolio. The GRE or GMAT is optional; neither is required. All documents, except a visual portfolio, should be uploaded to the application. Visual portfolios should be submitted at pratt.slideroom.com. Facilities Management M.S. (fall and spring entrance), Manhattan Campus Applicants should have a bachelor’s degree in architecture, construction management, engineering, business, or interior design. Applicants in other fields are eligible but

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may be required to take non-credit courses in building technology unless they have acquired equivalent knowledge through non-academic experience. The GRE or GMAT is optional; neither is required. Applications will be accepted after the deadline if there is room. TOEFL of 550 (79 internet) is required. Real Estate Practice M.S. (fall and spring entrance), Manhattan Campus Applicants should have a bachelor’s degree in business, political science, urban planning, architecture, construc­ tion management, engineering, or interior design. Applicants in other fields are eligible but may be required to take noncredit courses in building technology unless they have acquired equivalent knowledge through nonacademic experience. Applications will be accepted after the deadline until the program is full. A TOEFL score of 79 internet is required for international students whose first language is not English. Applicants must submit, in addition to the general application requirements, a statement of purpose outlining their professional interest in real estate and community develop­ment. The GRE or GMAT is optional; neither is required. International applicants whose native language is not English must submit a minimum TOEFL score of 550 (paper) or 79 (internet), or an IELTS score of 6.5.

date of completion. The Graduate Admissions Committee is looking for work that shows the artist’s conceptual and aesthetic direction, as well as the potential for successful growth over the two years of the program. Candidates whose applications are completed and submitted by the January 5 deadline will be given priority consideration for merit scholarships. A TOEFL score of 550 (79 internet) is required for international students whose first language is not English. Digital Arts M.F.A. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited U.S. college, university, art/design school, or the equivalent degree from a recognized international institution. Successful applicants will submit a strong visual portfolio demonstrating a conceptual and aesthetic focus in art or animation. No reviews are done in person, but applicants are encouraged to arrange a visit to the department by calling 718.636.3411. Applicants must submit 12–15 pieces of work in traditional or digital media online at pratt.slideroom.com. The Graduate Admissions Review Committee is interested in work that reflects creativity, technical facility, and the conceptual skills to develop a sophisticated body of work. A TOEFL score of 550 (paper)/213 (computer)/79 (internet) is required for international students.

SCHOOL OF ART Fine Arts M.F.A. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited U.S. college, university, art/design school, or the equivalent degree from a recognized international institution. It is not required that applicants have majored in studio art as undergraduates, only that they demon­strate their readiness for the challenges of M.F.A. studies. The 60-credit M.F.A. program in Fine Arts comprises four consecutive 15-week fall/spring semesters and begins in the fall. We welcome visits to Pratt at any time, and interested applicants (or potential applicants) should contact Nat Meade, Assistant Chair of Fine Arts, to schedule an appointment and a tour of facilities/studios (tel: 718.636.3792, email: nmeade@pratt.edu). In addition to complying with Pratt’s general graduate admissions requirements, applicants to the Fine Arts M.F.A. program must upload the following materials to pratt.slideroom.com: (1) a portfolio of up to 20 wellselected images (including detail views) of works made in the last 2–3 years; and (2) information for each image, including the work’s title, dimensions, materials used, and

Graduate Admissions

Art Therapy and Creativity Development M.P.S. (fall entrance for academic-year program and spring entrance for low-residency program), Brooklyn Campus Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree, preferably in studio art or psychology. Applicants must have 18 under­ graduate credits in studio art, to include coursework in drawing, painting, 3-D media, ceramic/clay work, and 12 credits in psychology, to include coursework in general, developmental, and abnormal psychology and theories of personality. A portfolio of 12 to 15 slides or digital images (submit online at pratt.slideroom.com) is required of all applicants. Applicants are contacted for an interview when all credentials have been received. A TOEFL score of 600 or 100 (internet) is required of all international students. No TOEFL waivers will be issued unless student’s first language is English. ance/Movement Therapy M.S. (fall entrance D for academic-year program and spring entrance for low-residency program), Brooklyn Campus Applicants must have a bachelor’s degree, preferably in dance or psychology. Prerequisites are 12 credits in

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psychology, to include general, developmental, and abnormal psychology, and theories of personality; and coursework in anatomy/kinesiology. Students must also have extensive experience in at least two idioms of dance, one of which must be modern dance. Students must have experience in body/mind modalities, such as meditation, yoga, or body therapy. A written synopsis of the applicant’s dance training and experience must be submitted with the application. These programs require a personal interview, part of which will include move­ment. A TOEFL score of 600 or 100 (internet) is required of all international students. No TOEFL waivers will be issued unless student’s first language is English. Arts and Cultural Management M.P.S. (fall entrance only), Manhattan Campus Applicants must demonstrate experience and interest in applying the arts to shape our shared world. The program provides the strategic leadership skills to enable participants to manage, market, innovate, resource, and run a creative enterprise and to use the arts to connect culture, community, and commerce. The required state­ ment of purpose should reflect the applicant’s personal vision of how this program fits in with his/her personal and professional goals, including how the applicant hopes to use the skills he/she acquires in this program. The statement should be no more than 500 words, or two pages. A TOEFL score of 600 or 100 (internet) is required for international students. Design Management M.P.S. (fall entrance only), Manhattan Campus Applicants must demonstrate experience and interest in applying design to shaping our shared world. The program provides the strategic leadership skills to enable participants to manage, market, innovate, resource, and run creative enterprises and shape sustainable strategic ad­van­ tages for their firms. The required state­ment of purpose should reflect the applicant’s personal vision of how this program fits in with his/her personal and profes­sional goals, including how the applicant hopes to use the skills he/she acquires in this program. The statement should be no more than 500 words, or two pages. Ideally, applicants should have an undergraduate degree in one of the design disciplines and a minimum of three years of professional experience. We also consider social media managers, engineers, material scientists, and others whose work con­verges with design. A résumé is also required. A TOEFL score of 600 or 100 (internet) is required of international students. Applications will be accepted throughout the semester.

Graduate Admissions

rt and Design Education M.S. (Initial/Professional A Teaching Certification) (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus A 38-credit program open to individuals with a bachelor’s degree or the equivalent, with a minimum of 25 credit hours in art, design, and/or the history of art from an accredited higher education institution or the equivalent of a bachelor’s degree from an international institution of acceptable standards. Art and Design Education Professional M.S. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus A 34-credit-hour program open to individuals who already have their Initial Certification as a Teacher of Visual Arts or those currently enrolled in the M.F.A. program at Pratt or have prior teaching experience. Art and Design Education Advanced Certificate (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus A 24-credit-hour program open to individuals with an M.F.A. degree or those currently enrolled in the M.F.A. program at Pratt. All applicants must submit a portfolio of 15 images of work (submit online at pratt.slideroom.com). The required written statement of purpose is given significant consider­ ation. Applicants are contacted for a Skype interview when all credentials have been received. A TOEFL score of 600 or 100 (internet) is required for international students. All applicants are encouraged to schedule a visit to the department by calling 718.636.3637 or emailing hlewis@pratt.edu, or by attending one of our open houses. Note: New York State now requires that candidates for teacher education leading to certification submit stan­dardized test scores as part of the application process. Applicants for the M.S. Initial and Professional Degrees for fall 2017 must submit official scores from the GRE or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). Your GRE or MAT scores are factored into our holistic assessment of your potential capacity to become a teacher of art and design. The standardized test scores are only a partial indicator of your potential, and as such, do not outweigh your other qualifications. Applicants for the M.S. Initial and Professional degrees for fall 2017 must submit official scores from the GRE or Miller Analogies Test (MAT). The Art and Design Education programs are New York State Education Department (NYSED) “approved teacher preparation programs” and meet the new requirements for New York State Initial Teacher Certification in Visual Arts PreK–12. However, in order to be recommended for New York State Initial/Professional Certification in Visual Arts PreK–12, candidates must also have completed

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a three-credit course in child and adolescent psych­ ology and a three-credit course in a foreign language. These courses may be taken at Pratt or transferred from another postsecondary school. Candidates must also have completed the following workshops: Child Abuse Identification Workshop; School Violence Prevention and Intervention Workshop; and Training in Harassment, Bullying, Cyberbullying, and Discrimination in Schools: Prevention and Intervention. These workshops must be taken with a provider approved by NYSED. Passing scores are also required on the following tests and assessments: Educating All Students (EAS), Academic Literacy Skills Test (ALST), Content Specialty Test (CST), and Education Teacher Performance Assessment (edTPA). SCHOOL OF DESIGN Industrial Design M.I.D. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants should submit a portfolio online at pratt.slideroom.com, including both text (descriptions, problem statement, etc.) and images (from development sketches to finished work). The portfolio must contain examples of drawing as a communication tool, threedimensional objects, and a basic understanding of design executed through presentation and layout. Showing both the process and execution of a project along with problem solving and research is recommended. Please include any additional materials that tell the story of who you are as a creative person. The M.I.D. program is highly collab­orative and includes students from a wide variety of back­grounds; therefore, in your written statement, discuss aspects of your personal character and background that would contribute to and benefit from a collaborative learning environment. A TOEFL score of 575 (paper)/233 (computer)/90 (internet) is required. M.I.D. students can choose the exciting option of spending their entire second year abroad for full credit. The Global Innovation Design program (GID) starts in the fall semester at Keio University in Tokyo and continues in the spring semester at the Royal College of Art (RCA) and Imperial College in London. Applicants are expected to indicate their interest in GID at the time of entering the M.I.D. program. Please include an additional statement about your goals and aspirations for international study at GID. Interior Design M.F.A. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants with an undergraduate degree in interior design, architecture, or other closely related design fields may be

Graduate Admissions

eligible to complete the M.F.A. in two years, a total of 60 credits. A portfolio is required. Applicants with under­ graduate backgrounds that are unrelated to interior design or architecture, but whose applications indicate a strong aptitude for interior design graduate coursework are required to take a qualifying year of preparatory study, a total of 24 credits, before they continue the M.F.A degree. These students complete 84 credits in three years. A port­ folio for the the qualifying year of preparatory study is not required, however applicants are strongly encouraged to submit samples of creative and/or professional work from relevant disciplines, such as: any of the fine arts, industrial design, fashion design, furniture making, exhibition work, communications design, or similar (make sure to attribute your specific contribution in group projects and/or professional work). Submit the portfolio to pratt.slideroom.com. We do not schedule interviews in person, but applicants are encouraged to arrange a visit to the department by calling 718.636.3630. A TOEFL score of 575 (paper) or 90 (internet) is required of international students. Communications Design M.F.A. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants must be highly motivated individuals who hold an undergraduate degree in graphic design or related design field such as industrial or interior design, archi­tect­ ure, fine arts or media arts, but we also give serious con­sider­ation to applicants with degree/backgrounds from non-design degrees as well, such as communications and journalism, business, liberal arts, and the sciences. Up to six credits of qualifying courses may be required for applicants who do not meet all entrance standards but whose applications indicate a strong aptitude for graduate study. All applicants must submit a portfolio of work to be reviewed by an Admissions Committee comprised of faculty. Work included in the portfolio may be self-generated, professional assignments, or course assignments done in an undergraduate or graduate program. Your portfolio should contain between 12 and 20 examples of your best work, including drawings, paintings, prints, graphic design, websites, photographs, videos, animations, three-dimensional sculptures or models, or computergenerated artwork. The intent of this portfolio review is for you to demonstrate creative potential, and give us enough information about you to determine whether or not this program is appropriate for you. Most important, the Graduate Admissions Committee will determine if you demonstrate the potential to successfully complete the Master’s degree program.

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1. Submit portfolio online at pratt.slideroom.com. 2. For international applicants whose first language is not English, a minimum TOEFL score of 575 (paper) or 90 (internet) is required. Package Design M.S. (fall entrance only), Manhattan Campus Applicants should hold an undergraduate degree in graphic design or a related design field, such as industrial or interior design, architecture, fine arts, or media arts, but we welcome applications from individuals with degrees/ back­grounds in non-design fields—such as business, liberal arts, and the sciences—who demonstrate a strong aptitude for graduate study. A qualifying program of an additional six credits of prerequisite classes may be required for these applicants. All applicants must submit a portfolio of work to be reviewed by an admissions committee composed of faculty. Work included in the portfolio may be personal work, professional assignments, or course assignments done in an undergraduate or graduate program. Your port­ folio should contain between 12 and 20 examples of your best work in traditional or digital media. In addition to the portfolio, the written statement of purpose is given significant consideration. The portfolio review is intended to give you the opportunity to demon­strate creative potential and the potential to successfully complete the master’s degree program in Package Design. Submit online at pratt.slideroom.com. For international applicants whose first language is not English, a minimum TOEFL score of 575 (paper)/233 (computer)/90 (internet) is required. SCHOOL OF INFORMATION Library and Information Science M.S. (fall, spring, and summer entrance), Manhattan Campus Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university. The applicant must have a superior scholastic record or otherwise give evidence of ability to perform work on the graduate level. Applicants are expected to offer evidence of maturity and leadership potential for the profession. All applicants must apply using the online application and include: ll transcripts of all previous postsecondary education ll a statement of purpose describing interest in the program as well as personal goals ll a current résumé/CV ll two letters of recommendation from academic or professional sources An in-person or telephone interview may be required. Applicants will be contacted by the School of Information

Graduate Admissions

if an interview is deemed necessary. International students whose first language is not English must submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The minimum required TOEFL score is 82 (internet). The minimum required IELTS is 6.5, and the minimum required PTE score is 53. Students who are not international but whose first language is not English must submit the GRE, TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The School of Information accepts applications on a rolling basis. If courses are full, applicants will be moved to the following semester. Museums and Digital Culture M.S. (fall and spring entrance), Manhattan Campus Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university. The applicant must have a superior scholastic record or otherwise give evidence of ability to perform work on the graduate level. Applicants are expected to offer evidence of maturity and leadership potential for the profession. All applicants must apply using the online application and include: ll transcripts of all previous postsecondary education ll a statement of purpose describing interest in the program as well as personal goals ll a current résumé/CV ll two letters of recommendation from academic or professional sources An in-person or telephone interview may be required. Applicants will be contacted by the School of Information if an interview is deemed necessary. International students whose first language is not English must submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The minimum required TOEFL score is 82 (internet). The minimum required IELTS is 6.5, and the minimum required PTE score is 53. Students who are not international but whose first language is not English must submit the GRE, TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The School of Information accepts appli­ cations on a rolling basis. If courses are full, applicants will be moved to the following semester. Data Analytics and Visualization M.S. (fall and spring entrance), Manhattan Campus Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university. The applicant must have a superior scholastic record or otherwise give evidence of ability to perform work on the graduate level. Applicants are expected to offer evidence of maturity and leadership potential for the profession. All applicants must apply using the online application and include: ll transcripts of all previous postsecondary education

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ll a statement of purpose describing interest in the program as well as personal goals ll a current résumé/CV ll two letters of recommendation from academic or professional sources An in-person or telephone interview may be required. Applicants will be contacted by the School of Information if an interview is deemed necessary. International students whose first language is not English must submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The mini­ mum required TOEFL score is 82 (internet). The minimum required IELTS is 6.5, and the minimum required PTE score is 53. Students who are not international but whose first language is not English must submit the GRE, TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The School of Information accepts applications on a rolling basis. If courses are full, applicants will be moved to the following semester. Information Experience Design M.S. (fall and spring entrance), Manhattan Campus Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university in the arts, humanities, social sciences, or sciences. The applicant must have a superior scholastic record or otherwise give evidence of ability to perform work on the graduate level. Applicants are expected to offer evidence of maturity and leader­ship potential for the profession. All applicants must apply using the online application and include: ll transcripts of all previous postsecondary education ll a statement of purpose describing interest in the program as well as personal goals ll a current résumé/CV ll two letters of recommendation from academic or professional sources An in-person or telephone interview may be required. Applicants will be contacted by the School of Information if an interview is deemed necessary. International students whose first language is not English must submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The minimum required TOEFL score is 82 (internet). The minimum required IELTS is 6.5, and the minimum required PTE score is 53. Students who are not international but whose first language is not English must submit the GRE, TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The School of Information accepts appli­ cations on a rolling basis. If courses are full, applicants will be moved to the following semester.

Graduate Admissions

Library and Information Science M.S. with Library Media Specialist (L.M.S.) Program Leading to New York State Teacher Certification (fall and spring entrance), Manhattan Campus Applicants must hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university. The applicant must have a superior scholastic record or otherwise give evidence of ability to perform work on the graduate level. Applicants are expected to offer evidence of maturity and leadership potential for the profession. All applicants must apply using the online application and include: ll transcripts of all previous postsecondary education ll a statement of purpose describing interest in the program as well as personal goals ll a current résumé/CV ll two letters of recommendation from academic or professional sources An in-person or telephone interview may be required. Applicants will be contacted by the School of Information if an interview is deemed necessary. International students whose first language is not English must submit the TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The minimum required TOEFL score is 82 (internet). The minimum required IELTS is 6.5, and the minimum required PTE score is 53. Students who are not international but whose first language is not English must submit the GRE, TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE. The School of Information accepts applications on a rolling basis. If courses are full, applicants will be moved to the following semester. Library and Information Science Advanced Certificates (fall, summer, and spring entrance), Manhattan Campus Applicants must hold a master’s degree in library and information science. A TOEFL score of 600 (250 computer, 100 internet) is required. SCHOOL OF LIBERAL ARTS AND SCIENCES Media Studies M.A. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants must submit (1) a statement of purpose in which they describe their interest in media studies; (2) 10–20 pages of relevant writing sample(s), with emphasis on analytical writing. A TOEFL score of 100 (internet) is required. Writing M.F.A. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants should have a bachelor’s degree from an accredited institution. Candidates submit: (1) a statement of purpose in which they describe how their writing interests align with the vision of the program; (2) 10–20

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pages of relevant writing samples of any genre but with an emphasis on creative work and/or writing that exists in relation to theory, activism, performance, and visual art; (3) from all post-secondary institutions; and (4) two letters of recommendation. All applicants must follow the standard admissions process for graduate programs at Pratt. History of Art and Design M.S. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants must a hold a bachelor’s degree from an accredited college or university. Undergraduate study in art and/or design history is encouraged, and at least an introduction to those fields should be included in the comp­leted undergraduate curriculum. Application require­ments include a personal statement, a research paper (5–10 pages), recently earned scores from the Graduate Record Examination (GRE code R2669), and two recom­mendations. Applicants whose first language is not English must submit results of the TOEFL exam and score at least 600 or 100 (internet). An in-person or Skype interview may be required. These requirements apply to applicants for the department’s two dual degrees, M.S./M.S. (Library and Information Science) and M.S./M.F.A. Performance and Performance Studies M.F.A. (fall entrance only), Brooklyn Campus Applicants must have a B.A., B.S., or B.F.A. from an accredited institution. Candidates must submit (1) a state­ ment of purpose in which they describe their interest in the program, as well as their own goals and preparation; (2) 10–20 pages of relevant writing sample(s); (3) from all post-secondary institutions; and (4) two letters of recommendation. Collaborative pairs will be welcomed, but each member must apply separately under the above guidelines. All applicants must follow the standard admissions process for graduate programs at Pratt. The TOEFL requirement is 82 (internet). GENERAL REQUIREMENTS Deficiencies in Undergraduate Preparation Domestic applicants with deficiencies in their under­ graduate preparation of not more than six credits may be admitted, at the discretion of the department, on a nonmatriculating basis for not more than 18 graduate credits. These students may become matriculated upon completion of at least eight graduate credits with a grade of B or better. Applicants with deficiencies of more than six credits should apply as special students

Graduate Admissions

on the undergraduate level and may apply on the graduate level once these deficiencies are satisfactorily removed. Graduate Record Examination Although Pratt Institute does not require the Graduate Record Examination for most programs, students who already have taken this examination should have the results forwarded to the Office of Graduate Admissions. The GRE is required for Architecture (first-professional), Art History, and the combined Art History/Library Science, and combined Art History/Fine Art programs and the Art and Design Education Initial Certification and Advanced Certificate. Pratt’s Institutional Code is R2669. Accepted International Students All enrolling international students need to submit international student forms to the Office of International Affairs. International students include students who need an I-20 for the F-1 student visa as well as international students in other immigration statuses. Students will not be permitted to register for classes until the forms are submitted. (U.S. permanent residents are not considered international students.) Requesting the I-20 To request the I-20, first submit your enrollment deposit by April 15 to the Office of Admissions. Then you will receive your oneKey, which is a login and password. This can take up to seven days to receive. After you receive your oneKey, go to myPratt at www.pratt.edu/myPratt. Log in with your oneKey. 1. Left menu: Select “Pratt Resources” 2. Left menu: Select “Web Services” 3. Scroll down to “International Student Forms” and click link for online I-20 application 4. Review links under the appropriate heading: “New F-1 Visa Applicants” or “F-1 Transfer Applicants” or “Other Than F-1 Status” 5. All applicants must read the instructions and FAQs before requesting the I-20 6. Click “Get I-20” 7. Follow all instructions to complete the I-20 request 8. Print PDFs 9. Mail all supplemental documents in order for the I-20 to be processed Pratt Institute Office of International Affairs 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 USA

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Enrolling International Students for Admission to Pratt In addition to providing the TOEFL or IELTS, for admission to Pratt, all international students who enroll whose first language is not English are required to take an English exam­ ination before they register for classes. Students who do not pass will be required to complete Intensive English at Pratt. Students who are otherwise acceptable but have low English scores on the TOEFL may be accepted provisionally and may be required to take only English classes until they achieve the TOEFL score required by their depart­ment, at which time they may enroll in their degree courses. These students will receive an I-20 for English only. Students who are accepted with a possibility of needing English-language study will have this indicated on their I-20 and their acceptance letter will be tested for English when they arrive at Pratt. Students who need to take English will take it with their academic program unless they do not meet the required score. In calculating their expenses, students should budget the tuition equivalent of two credits per semester for intensive English courses. The minimum TOEFL score for graduate study at Pratt is 550 or 79 (IBT), although many departments require a higher score. See individual department requirement for specific score required. Notification and Deposit Applicants for fall who have completed applications by the deadline are generally notified of the decision of the admissions committee by April 1. Applicants for spring are notified by November 15. Accepted students who plan to enroll in the fall semester are required to make a deposit of US $500 by April 15 or two weeks following acceptance, whichever comes later. Accepted students who plan to enroll in the spring semester are required to make a deposit of US $500 by December 1 or two weeks following acceptance, whichever comes later. The full amount of this nonrefundable deposit is deducted from the student’s first-semester tuition. Deposits should be paid online at payments.pratt.edu. If not paid online, the US $500 must be paid in the form of an international money order or via credit card for international students and can be paid on the phone by calling the Office of Graduate Admissions. A space will not be held for students who do not send the deposit. OTHER GRADUATE ADMISSIONS SERVICES Readmission Graduate students must apply for readmission if they were not in attendance for two consecutive semesters (excluding summer session). Master of Science students in the graduate

Graduate Admissions

School of Art and Design who attend four consecutive summer sessions do not have to apply for readmission each summer. If they do not attend one session of the four sessions offered, they must apply for readmission. Students applying for re­ admis­sion must pay a $50 readmission application fee. A graduate student who wishes to register after an absence of two or more consecutive semesters, excluding summer session, must apply to the Office of the Registrar for readmis­ sion. The form is available at www.pratt.edu/apply under Admissions Requirements. Deadlines for application are August 15 for the fall semester, December 15 for the spring semester, and May 1 for the summer session. A graduate student who was accepted for admission but never registered must reapply in writing to the Office of Graduate Admissions. Transfer Credits The number of credits toward the master’s degree that may be transferred from another recognized graduate institution varies within the schools and programs, but generally it will not exceed 25 percent of the total credits required. The First-Professional Master of Architecture program has a residency requirement of 66 percent, which permits 33 percent of transfer credits. Students interested in receiving graduate transfer credits should arrange for an appointment with their department chair. Credit will be allowed for graduate courses that are appropriate to the curriculum at Pratt and that a student has passed with a grade of B or better. Transfer credit is provisional until the student has completed at least 15 semester hours of credit at Pratt Institute. Credit for courses taken, with permission, at another graduate school while matriculated at Pratt is limited to a maximum of six credits. Non-matriculated/Special Students Non-matriculated (non-degree) students may take courses for graduate credit, provided that their depart­ ment approves the registration, but they may not be admitted to candidacy for a degree without first gaining admission to a graduate degree pro­gram. No more than a total of 18 credits may be taken by a student with non‑matriculated/special status (no more than six credits per semester). The non-degree form and procedures can be found at www.pratt.edu/apply. Mailing Address Office of the Registrar Pratt Institute 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 reg@pratt.edu Tel: 718.636.3664

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Withdrawal after Deposit Applicants who decide not to enroll after submitting a deposit must notify the admissions office by submitting the online withdrawal/deferral form at www.pratt.edu/ admissions/applying/applying-graduate/acceptedstudents/deposited-students-grad/ or by emailing Natalie Capannelli at ncapanne@pratt.edu as soon as possible. Deposits are not refundable. Deferring Students may request a deferral to the next available term by emailing Natalie Capannelli at ncapanne@pratt. edu. Only one deferral is permitted. The deposit must be submitted for a deferral to be approved. Title IX Statement It is the policy of Pratt Institute to comply with Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, which prohibits discrim­ ination (including sexual harassment and sexual violence) based on sex in the Institute’s educational programs and activities. Title IX also prohibits retaliation for asserting claims of sex discrimination. Pratt Institute has designated Grace Kendall as its Title IX Coordinator to coordinate Pratt Institute’s compliance with and response to inquiries concerning Title IX and sexual misconduct. She can be reached at gkendall@pratt.edu or 718.636.3722. A person may also file a written complaint with the Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights regarding an alleged violation of Title IX by visiting www2.ed.gov/about/ offices/list/ocr/complaintintro.html or calling 800.421.3481. Intellectual Property Pratt is committed to fostering the artistic and intellect­ ual creativity of our community. The products of our creativity are both the physical property we create— paintings, designs, and manuscripts—as well as the intel­ lectual ideas these works represent. The latter is called intellectual property. Pratt’s Intellectual Property Policy applies to all our community’s members and is intended to respect the value of creators, whether students, faculty, or staff. It also provides for sharing our creative products to further the knowledge and academic growth of our collective community. Knowledge of intellectual property rights is an important responsibility of all members of our comm­unity and an important part of the intellectual life of every creative professional. Pratt’s complete Intellectual Property Policy can be found on the web at www.pratt.edu/provost.

Graduate Admissions

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Financial Aid

Pratt offers various kinds of assistance, ranging from academic merit-based scholarships to assistantships and loans. Entering Graduate Students Graduate students who are interested in applying for federal aid must complete and submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) to the Department of Education electronically by March 1. File electronically using the FAFSA or renewal application at www.fafsa.ed.gov or on Pratt’s website. Do not submit more than one application! The FAFSA should be submitted no later than March 1 if the student wishes to receive timely notification of financial aid. Other documents, such as federal tax transcripts, may be requested and must be submitted by May 15. If financial need has been established and adequate funding is available, students are considered for federal loan programs. Graduate students are not eligible for Federal Pell Grants, Federal Supplemental Educational Opportunity Grants (FSEOGs), or Subsidized Stafford Loans.

Manhattan Campus 144 West 14th Street, 3rd Floor New York, NY 10011 Senior Financial Aid Counselor Sonya Chestnut schestnu@pratt.edu 212.647.7788 Brooklyn Campus 200 Willoughby Avenue Myrtle Hall, 6th Floor Brooklyn, NY 11205 SFS Compliance Specialist Leonor Santillana lsantill@pratt.edu 718.399.4491 Student Financial Services www.pratt.edu/aid www.pratt.edu/financing www.pratt.edu/financial-aid

Currently Enrolled Graduate Students Students who are interested in applying for federal aid must submit the FAFSA to the Department of Education. The FAFSA should be filed no later than March 1 if the student wishes to be advised of aid in a timely fashion. Documents such as IRS tax transcripts may be requested. If requested, they must be submitted by May 15. Student Financial Services, upon receipt of student grades, evaluates the eligibility of each applicant and sends email notifications of the awards to continuing students in early summer if the student has applied by March 1. GRANT AND SCHOLARSHIP PROGRAMS Graduate Scholarships What is the purpose of the program? To provide funds to full-time students based on merit. These are awarded by academic departments; all incoming students are considered. There is no application form. They are renewable with a 3.0 cumulative GPA as specified by your department. All scholarship recipients must be full-time (a minimum of nine credits per semester). Pratt Restricted Awards and Scholarships What is the purpose of the program? To provide funds derived from Institute endowments and restricted gifts that are granted to students according to

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the wishes of the donor and on the recommendation of the appropriate dean or department chair. How much are the awards? The awards range from $1,000 and up for the academic year, for one year only. Who can receive this money? Full-time students who have applied for aid, have demonstrated financial need, and are making satisfactory academic progress. Some awards are based on academic merit only, and all are based on departmental recommendations. How much do I have to pay back? No repayment is required. How do I apply? There are no special application forms for restricted and endowed scholarships. Each department determines its own application process. Recipients are selected by the dean or department chair based on criteria established by donors. These awards are made for one year only and are based on the availability of funds in any given year.

Students must not owe any refunds on Federal Pell Grants or any other awards paid, and not be in default of any student loan. OTHER PRATT PROGRAMS Pratt Student Employment Program Student employment is funded entirely by Pratt Institute and offers an opportunity for qualified students to work part-time on campus. Applicants for student employ­ ment must complete and submit all required financial aid documents in order to qualify. These funds are paid directly to students for campus job assignments and are not deductible from the Bursar’s bill. Students are responsible for submitting signed time sheets electronically to the Office of Student Employment. Employment forms such as the W4, I-9, and Employment Authorization Form must be completed prior to working or getting paid. FEDERAL PROGRAMS

Pratt Assistantships/Fellowships What is the purpose of the program? To provide funds and professional experience to help meet a student’s costs from institutional sources.

Federal Work-Study (FWS) What Is FWS? Federal Work-Study is a federally assisted employment program that offers qualified students a chance to earn money to help pay for educational expenses. These funds are paid directly to students for job assignments and are not deductible from the student tuition bill.

How much are the awards? The assistantship awards range from approximately $500 to $7,200 for the academic year. They are paid directly to the student and are not deductible from the tuition bill. Fellowships are credited to the tuition bill.

Application Procedures All students must submit the FAFSA before a determination of eligibility will be made. Student Financial Services will notify eligible candidates of job assignments and required forms before initiating employment.

Who can receive this money? Graduate students with demonstrated proficiency in their area of study.

Selection of Recipients and Allocation of Awards The applicant must be enrolled full-time (nine credits per semester) at Pratt. Pratt makes employment reasonably available to all eligible students who demonstrate need as per federal guidelines. In the event that more students are eligible for FCWs than there are funds available, prefer­ ence is given to students who have greater financial need and who must earn a part of their educational expenses.

How much do I have to repay? No monetary repayment is required; students must complete assigned tasks. How do I apply? Through your department chair. Rights and Responsibilities of Recipients For assistantships or fellowships to be awarded in successive years, the student must make satisfactory progress toward a degree and show financial need.

Financial Aid

Schedule Pratt arranges jobs on campus, for up to 20 hours per week. Factors considered by Student Financial Services in determining whether the applicant may work under this program are financial need, class schedule, academic progress, and specific skills. Level of salary must be at

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least the minimum wage; maximum wage is dependent on the nature of the job and the applicant’s qualifi­ cations. Students may work for only one department each semester. Rights and Responsibilities of Recipients Satisfactory Academic Progress must be maintained. Students must not owe any refunds on Federal Pell Grants or any other awards paid, and not be in default on any student loan. Students are responsible for submitting signed time sheets electronically to the Center for Career and Professional Development. Employment forms such as the W4, I-9, and Employment Authorization Form must be submitted prior to working. Federal Unsubsidized Stafford Loans These loans have the same terms and conditions as Stafford Loans, except that the borrower is responsible for interest that accrues during deferment periods (including in-school) and during the six-month grace period. Interest may be deferred while in school but interest will be capitalized if the student requests a deferment. Program is open to students who may not qualify for Subsidized Federal Stafford Loans. (Combined total cannot exceed Stafford limits.) Loan Schedule Annual Loan Limit: $20,500—graduate and professional students (unsubsidized). The annual loan limits for students enrolled in a program of study for less than one academic year in length are prorated. Aggregate Loan Limits: $138,500—undergraduate and graduate combined. 1. All student loans will be disbursed in two installments, one each semester. 2. A percentage (approximately 1 percent) of the loan amount will be deducted from each disbursement as an origination fee. Loan Fees Borrowers pay an origination fee of 1.069 percent on or after October 1, 2016 and before October 1, 2017. Interest rate is fixed at 5.31 percent, but may change July 1. Rights and Responsibilities of Recipients All borrowers are required to submit a Master Promissory Note (MPN) to apply for a Federal Direct Loan (subsidized and unsubsidized). The MPN is an application for the Stafford Loan Programs and is valid for 10 years from the time that you originally submit. Please keep in mind that

Financial Aid

you will still have to submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) each year by March 1. Student Financial Services will notify you of loan eligibility via your electronic financial aid award letter. If any changes are made to your financial aid, a new letter with the most current information will be emailed to your Pratt email address. You should keep all the letters you receive from Student Financial Services in order to keep track of any award revisions. Along with your electronic award letter you will be able to gain access to an electronic Master Promissory Note (MPN). Prior borrowers may have different interest and repayment terms based on when they borrowed their first loan. All borrowers must attend school at least part-time to be eligible to borrow any type of loan. Students who are registered for Thesis in Progress (TIP) also have a minimum attendance requirement and are considered full-time for financial aid purposes only. Six months after ceasing to be at least a part-time student, the borrower must make formal arrangements with the Department of Education to begin repayment. The following regulations apply: 1. The minimum monthly payment will be $50 plus interest. 2. The maximum repayment period is 10 years. 3. The maximum period of a loan from date of the original note may not exceed 15 years, excluding authorized deferments of payments. 4. Repayment in whole or part may be made at any time without penalty. Disbursement and Refund of Credit Balances The Institute credits all loan disbursements for graduatelevel students after the add/drop period of each semester. Your loan funds will be credited only if you file all your required applications in a timely fashion. If your loan funds do not credit to your account as expected, please contact your SFS counselor or contact Student Financial Services at 718.636.3599 for assistance. If your loan amounts exceed your balance, you will be written a refund check 14 days after this credit has been created on your account. All refund checks are mailed to students at the address submitted to the Registrar’s Office. If you have any questions regarding your refund checks, please feel free to contact Student Financial Services at 718.636.3799. Sources of Outside Scholarships Student Financial Services has lists of agencies to which you may also apply.

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ACADEMIC PROGRESS AND PURSUIT

Standards of Degree Progress Master’s Degree/Post-Master’s Certificate

Financial Assistance Standards Standards of Academic Progress for Determining Eligibility for Pratt and Federal Financial Aid Pratt applies minimum academic progress standards to all students receiving Pratt aid, federal aid, and state aid (including loans). Criteria Measurable satisfactory academic progress for a full-time graduate student means: ll The student must complete a minimum of nine credits each semester ll The student’s cumulative grade point average (GPA) must not fall below 3.0. ll Students receiving federal and Pratt financial aid who drop credits will be subject to adjustments in their financial aid package. Review Policies Student Financial Services will periodically review the GPA and number of credits earned by each financial aid recipient using his or her academic transcript. Credits earned include only those for courses with A through D grades. A student not meeting these standards will be placed on financial aid warning for one semester. After the grades for the warning semester are calculated, the student’s transcript will be reviewed. If the student fails to meet the standards, all of their financial aid will be revoked begin­ ning with the semester following the warning semester. Once the student meets the minimum standards, they may reapply for financial aid. A student may choose to continue to study without Title IV aid if the department grants approval. In this instance, the student must apply and be approved for an alternative loan prior to getting registration approval from Student Financial Services. Standards of Academic Progress for Determining Eligibility for Student Aid The following chart lists Pratt Institute’s standards of degree progress for determining eligibility. Note that each program type shown on the chart requires that as you begin each term shown: ll You must have earned at least the required number of credits listed; and ll You must have achieved the minimum GPA. Both of these requirements must be met before loan certification can occur.

Financial Aid

Term GPA Credits 1 N/A 0 2 3.00 12 3 3.00 21 4 3.00 30 5 3.00 39 6 3.00 48 7 3.00 57 8 3.00 66 9 3.00 75

Out-of-State Programs Other state or commonwealth scholarship programs and where to apply: Maryland Maryland Higher Education Commission Empowering Higher Education 6 North Liberty Street, Baltimore, MD 21201 800.974.0203 Vermont Vermont Student Assistance Corp. P.O. Box 2000 Winooski, VT 05404 888.253.4819 Virgin Islands Board of Education PO Box 11900 St. Thomas, VI 00801 340.774.4546 Washington, D.C. Office of the State Superintendent of Education 810 1st Street NE, Third Floor Washington, DC 20002 202.727.2824 The above state and district programs are available only to residents of the appropriate state or district. Pratt knows of no other states that make awards to students at a New York college. United States Bureau of Indian Affairs Aid to Native Americans Higher Education Assistance Program Application Procedures Application forms may be obtained from the Bureau of Indian Affairs office. An application is necessary for each year of study. An official needs-analysis from Pratt’s

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Student Financial Services office also is required each year. Each first-time applicant must obtain tribal enrollment certification from the bureau, agency, or tribe that records enrollment for the tribe. Selection of Recipient and Allocation of Awards To be eligible, the applicant must: 1. Be at least one-fourth American Indian, Eskimo, or Aleut. 2. Be an enrolled member of a tribe, band, or group recognized by the Bureau of Indian Affairs. 3. Be enrolled in or accepted for enrollment at Pratt, pursuing at least a four-year degree. 4. Demonstrate financial need. Veterans Administration Educational Benefits Application forms are available at all Veterans Admin­ istration (VA) offices, active duty stations, and American embassies. Completed forms are submitted to the nearest VA office. (See Veterans Assistance under Registration.) State Education Agencies Alaska Alaska Commission on Post-Secondary Education PO Box 110505 Juneau, AK 99811-0505 800.441.2962

Florida Office of Student Financial Assistance 325 West Gaines Street Tallahassee, Florida 32399 888.827.2004 Illinois Illinois Student Assistance Commission 500 West Monroe, 3rd Floor Springfield, IL 62704 800.899.4722 Massachusetts American Student Assistance Corporation 100 Cambridge Street Boston, MA 02114 800.999.9080 New Hampshire New Hampshire Higher Education Assistance Foundation 4 Barrell Court Concord, NH 03301 800.719.0708

Arkansas Arkansas Department of Higher Education 423 Main Street, Suite 400 Little Rock, AR 72201 501.371.2000

New Jersey New Jersey Higher Education Assistance Authority PO Box 545 Trenton, NJ 08625 800.792.8670

California California Student Aid Commission P.O. Box 419026 Rancho Cordova, CA 95741-9026 888.224.7268

New York New York State Higher Education Services Corporation 99 Washington Avenue Albany, NY 12255 888.697.4372

Connecticut State Scholarship Program Commission for Higher Education 39 Woodland Street Hartford, CT 06105-2326 800.842.0229 Delaware Delaware Post-Secondary Education Commission Carvel State Office Building

Financial Aid

820 North French Street, 5th Floor Wilmington, DE 19801 800.292.7935

Pennsylvania Pennsylvania Higher Education Assistance Agency State Grant and Special Programs Division 1200 North 7th Street Harrisburg, PA 17102 800.692.7392

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Rhode Island Rhode Island State Scholarship 560 Jefferson Boulevard Warwick, RI 02886 800.922.9855

Benjamon Goldberger Memorial Scholarship The Benjamin Goldberger Memorial Scholarship was established by Beatrice Goldberger, class of 1934, in honor of her father, Benjamin Goldberger, class of 1909. William Randolph Hearst Scholarship The William Randolph Hearst Scholarship is a fund established by the William Randolph Hearst Foundation for students in architecture. Selection will be based on demonstrated financial need and academic merit. Secondary consideration will be fostering a diverse student body.

Texas Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board 1200 E. Anderson Lane Austin, TX 78752 800.242.3062 RESTRICTED GRANTS AND SCHOLARSHIPS There are no special application forms for restricted and endowed scholarships. Recipients are selected by deans or department chairs based on criteria established by the donors. These awards are generally made to continuing students in the spring semester for one year only, and are based on the availability of funds in any given year. Notification of scholarship and fellowship availability will be made by individual departments in the spring of each year. School of Architecture Evan Akselrad and Yasmine Anavi Rome Study Abroad Scholarship This fund provides financial assistance to students who are accepted into the Rome Study Abroad Program in the School of Architecture. This scholarship is based on financial need and academic merit. Robert Djerejian Memorial Scholarship This scholarship was established with contributions made in memory of the late Robert Djerejian to provide financial assistance to academically qualified graduate and under­graduate students enrolled in the School of Architecture at Pratt. Patrick F. Corvo ’88 Memorial Scholarship A scholarship established by the family and friends of Patrick Corvo, class of 1988, in his memory. An award is given to a student entering the final year of study in the School of Architecture who has demonstrated a serious commitment to the field of architecture. Goodstein Development Corporation Scholarship in Honor of Jack and Florence Goodstein Established by Pratt alumnus Steven H. Goodstein, class of 1966, in memory of his parents, this scholarship benefits students majoring in Construction Management.

Financial Aid

Amy C. Koe Endowed Scholarship The Amy C. Koe Endowed Scholarship is awarded to needy and deserving students in the School of Architecture with demonstrated financial need. Francisco Laurier Memorial Endowed Scholarship This scholarship was established with contributions made in memory of Francisco Laurier to provide financial assistance to deserving and academically qualified students in the School of Architecture. Charles Macchi Scholarship The Charles Macchi Scholarship provides one or more full or partial scholarships to academically qualified students in the School of Architecture. David Mandl Memorial Scholarship A scholarship established in memory of David Mandl, the David Mandl Memorial Scholarship supports deserving and academically qualified students in the School of Architecture. Patrons Program Scholarship A scholarship established by Pratt family member Edmund S. Twining III, the Patrons Program Scholarship provides support to outstanding architecture students. Planning Scholarship The Planning Scholarship fund was established for students in the graduate program in City and Regional Planning. Pratt Planning Alumni Scholarship A fund established by Pratt Planning Alumni for students in the graduate Planning Program in the School of Architecture. Frank O. Price Scholarship This fund was established by friends of Professor Frank O. Price, longtime teacher in the School of Architecture, and is awarded to a worthy student.

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Edward Re Jr. Scholarship This scholarship was established by Professor Edward D. Re Jr. in order to aid students studying in the School of Architecture and the Construction Management program.

School of Art Art Students’ Association Scholarship A fund raised by the Art Students’ Association over a period of years, this scholarship is awarded by competition.

Donna and Martin Rich ’63 Architecture Travel Fund This fund provides financial assistance to students who are accepted into the “Pratt in Rome” travel program.

The Reggie Behl Drawing Award The Reggie Behl Drawing Award provides an annual financial award to a student in the School of Art who exhibits excellence in drawing.

Clyde Lincoln Rounseville Scholarship The Clyde Lincoln Rounseville Scholarship is awarded to deserving students in the School of Architecture. Charles and Marie Schade Endowed Scholarship A scholarship established by Charles and Marie Schade, the Charles and Marie Schade Endowed Scholarship provides aid to students in the School of Art, School of Design, or School of Architecture who demonstrate good academic standing as well as financial need. Vincent A. Stabile Endowed Scholarship A scholarship fund established by Vincent A. Stabile, class of 1940, the Vincent A. Stabile Endowed Scholarship benefits students in the School of Architecture. Gihei and Sato Takeuchi Memorial Endowed Scholarship A scholarship established by John M. Takeuchi in honor of his parents, the Gihei and Sato Takeuchi Memorial Endowed Scholarship is awarded to a full-time student in her or his second year studying in the School of Architecture, who shows promise through academic achievement. Lucinda Veikos Endowed Scholarship A fund established by William and Elizabeth Pedersen in memory of Lucinda Veikos, class of 1992, the Lucinda Veikos Endowed Scholarship benefits a deserving student in the School of Architecture. Veikos Travel Scholarship for Architecture Study and Travel A scholarship established by Kohn Pederson Fox Associates in memory of Lucinda Veikos, class of 1992, for travel abroad for a deserving student in the School of Architecture. Winnemore Endowed Scholarship Established by Augustine E. Winnemore, this scholarship is awarded to outstanding students in the School of Architecture.

Financial Aid

Raymond and Mabel Bolton Art and Design Scholarship A scholarship fund established in honor of Raymond and Mabel Bolton for deserving students in the School of Art and the School of Design. Alma H. Borgfeldt Scholarship A bequest by Alma H. Borgfeldt for scholarships for worthy female students to be selected by the dean of the School of Art. The scholarships are awarded to applicants who have majored in the study of art in a public high school located in Kings County (Brooklyn) and who reside in Kings County (Brooklyn). Robert F. Calrow Memorial Scholarship A scholarship fund established by Trudi Calrow in memory of her husband, Robert F. Calrow, a well-known painter and inspirational teacher. This scholarship is awarded annually to a Fine Arts major on the basis of merit and need. Andrea M. Cella and Grace Hansen Cella Memorial Scholarship The Andrea M. Cella and Grace Hansen Cella Memorial Scholarship was established by Robert and Warren Cella and aids students in the School of Art and the School of Design who actively promote the arts in their community. John A. Dreves Art and Design Scholarship A scholarship established from the Estate of John A. Dreves, class of 1935, the John A. Dreves Art and Design Scholarship provides support for students in the School of Art and the School of Design who demonstrate financial need. Faith Ellis Art Financial Aid Scholarship A fund established by Faith Ellis, class of 1939, in memory of her son Rolan R. Ellis, the Faith Ellis Art Financial Aid Scholarship allows students to access special training as determined by the Art Education Department.

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Anthony Gennarelli Memorial Sculpture Award The Anthony Gennarelli Memorial Sculpture Award is awarded to students enrolled at Pratt Institute who are studying sculpture. The award is based on artistic and academic merit, as well as quality of student work. Robert N. Giraldi ‘60 Scholarship in Film/Video This scholarship provides a partial-tuition, renewable scholarship to an incoming student in Film/Video. Selection of recipient is based on demonstrated financial need and potential success in the program. Haskell Travel Scholarship The Haskell Travel Scholarship was established for students in the School of Art and the School of Design for travel abroad within two years of graduation. Steve Horn Art and Design Award The Steve Horn Art and Design Award Award, established by Steve Horn, is awarded annually to one outstanding student studying Photography, Film, or other media arts. Elaine Gluckman Popowitz Memorial Scholarship The Elaine Gluckman Popowitz Memorial Scholarship was established in memory of Elaine Gluckman, class of 1981, and faculty member in the graduate Art Therapy Department. The scholarship is awarded annually to a second-year student in the graduate Creative Arts Therapy Department who has exhibited outstanding scholarship, integrity, and concern for others. Charles Pratt, Jr. Award for Excellence in Photography Established by Pratt Institute Trustee Mike C. Pratt in honor of his father, the Charles Pratt, Jr. Award for Excellence in Photography is distributed annually to a student in the Photography Department at Pratt Institute and is based on a combination of academic merit and financial need. Walter Rogalski Scholarship The Walter Rogalski scholarship is awarded annually to a graduate Fine Arts student on the basis of merit and need. The recipient is selected by a faculty committee that reviews candidates who exemplify the creative ability that characte­ rized the work of former Pratt professor Walter Rogalski. Anna K. Rust Endowed Scholarship for Students in Art and Design A scholarship for students in the School of Art and the School of Design established by Leo Lewis Rust in memory of his wife, Anna Klenke Rust, class of 1938.

Financial Aid

Charles and Marie Schade Endowed Scholarship A scholarship established by Charles and Marie Schade, the Charles and Marie Schade Endowed Scholarship provides aid to students in the School of Art, School of Design, or School of Architecture who demonstrate good academic standing as well as financial need. Dorothy G. Schmidt Scholarship A scholarship established in honor of Dorothy G. Schmidt, used for elementary and junior high school teachers seeking courses at Pratt for professional enhancement in their work of teaching art and related subjects in the public schools of Brooklyn. The scholarship is to be awarded on the basis of need. Other factors being equal, females shall be given preference. James Seeman Endowed Scholarship Established by the family and friends of interior design leader and muralist James Seeman, this scholarship provides resources for dedicated Painting students, with preference given to those who recently moved to the United States. Monica Shay Scholarship Established with gifts made in memory of Professor Monica Shay, this scholarship is awarded to a deserving student who meets the following criteria: a graduate student in the Department of Design Management and Arts and Cultural Management with demonstrated financial need or dedicated and exemplary service and commitment to the Department of Design Management and Arts and Cultural Management. Ruth P. Taylor Scholarship The Ruth P. Taylor Scholarship is a fund established by the estate of Ruth P. Taylor, class of 1921, for students in the School of Art and the School of Design. Max Weber Scholarship A gift given by Mrs. Max Weber and Miss Frances Weber in memory of the well-known artist who was a member of the class of 1900. It provides annual scholarship aid for students in the School of Art and the School of Design. Willard Scholarship The Willard Scholarship was established to aid students in the School of Art and the School of Design who are graduates of Washington Irving High School.

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Henry Wolf Scholarship An endowed scholarship fund, the income of which is used to award one or more scholarships to support economically disadvantaged students pursuing B.F.A.s or M.F.A.s in Photography or Communications Design. School of Design Don Ariev Memorial Term Award A term award for Pratt graduate students enrolled in their second year in graduate Communications Design, in memory of Pratt Professor Don Ariev, class of 1960. This award is based strictly on merit. Ralph Appelbaum Endowed Scholarship The Ralph Appelbaum Endowed Scholarship is a fund established by Ralph Appelbaum and is awarded to Industrial Design students on the basis of need and merit. Bernice Bienenstock Scholarship The Bernice Bienenstock Scholarship is awarded to students pursuing home furnishings-related studies. Ruth Campbell Bigelow and David E. Bigelow Scholarship The Ruth Campbell Bigelow and David E. Bigelow Scholarship is awarded to a student in Interior Design on the basis of need and academic promise. Raymond and Mabel Bolton Art and Design Scholarship A scholarship fund established in honor of Raymond and Mabel Bolton for deserving students in the School of Art and the School of Design. Federico Castellon Endowed Scholarship A scholarship established by Hilda Castellon in memory of her husband, Federico Castellon. This scholarship is awarded on a yearly basis to a promising student in Graphic Arts. Andrea M. Cella and Grace Hansen Cella Memorial Scholarship The Andrea M. Cella and Grace Hansen Cella Memorial Scholarship was established by Robert and Warren Cella and aids students in the School of Art and the School of Design who actively promote the arts in their community. Coyne Family Foundation Scholarship A fund established by the Richard and Jean Coyne Family Foundation for students in Communications Design. Tomie dePaola Scholarship An endowed scholarship supporting students majoring

Financial Aid

in Illustration, established by alumnus Tomie dePaola, class of 1956. John A. Dreves Art and Design Scholarship A scholarship established from the Estate of John A. Dreves, class of 1935, the John A. Dreves Art and Design Scholarship provides support for students in the School of Art and the School of Design who demonstrate financial need. William Fogler Endowed Scholarship A scholarship established in memory of Professor William A. Fogler, class of 1955, for promising students in Industrial Design. Rick Goodwin Memorial Scholarship This scholarship fund is established with gifts made in memory of Rick Goodwin, a former faculty member in the Department of Industrial Design, and supports an Industrial Design student based on financial need and academic merit. Charles L. Goslin Endowed Memorial Scholarship The Charles L. Goslin Endowed Memorial Scholarship provides recognition and financial assistance, based on need and merit, to students enrolled in Pratt Institute’s Communications Design program in the School of Design. Richard and Anne L. Boetzel Gunn Scholarship The Richard and Anne L. Boetzel Gunn Scholarship is awarded annually to a student majoring in Communications Design on the basis of scholarly achievement, with prefer­ ence given to students majoring in Advertising Design or Illustration. The scholarship is named for and established by alumni from the class of 1937. Haskell Travel Scholarship The Haskell Travel Scholarship was established for students in the School of Art and the School of Design for travel abroad within two years of graduation. The Bill and Barbara Hilson Scholarship The Bill and Barbara Hilson Scholarship provides meritbased, renewable partial scholarships to incoming graduate students in Communications Design. The Hilson Family Fund The Hilson Family Fund was established by the Hilson family to enhance and strengthen the graduate Communications Design program. Part of the fund is used for scholarships for students in graduate Communications Design.

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Industrial Design Scholarship The Industrial Design Scholarship consists of a number of scholarships from a fund established by business contributions and is awarded to students in Industrial Design for experimental projects in the laboratory. Melvin K. Jung Memorial Scholarship The Melvin K. Jung Memorial Scholarship, named in memory of an alumnus from the class of 1975, is awarded to a worthy graduate student in Industrial Design. Leeds Scholarship in Interior Design A scholarship for Interior Design students, this award was established through a gift from the estate of Harold Leeds. Naomi Leff Excellence in Interior Design Scholarship Established with a generous bequest from Naomi Leff, class of 1973, this full scholarship is awarded annually to one student who exhibits excellence in Interior Design, who is in good academic standing, and who demonstrates financial need. Ted and Betsy Lewin Endowed Scholarship This fund was established by Pratt alumni Ted Lewin, class of 1956, and Betsy Lewin, class of 1959, and provides support for Illustration students. William L. Longyear Scholarship A fund established by students, alumni, and friends from the business world as a tribute to William L. Longyear, associate dean emeritus and former chair of the Department of Advert­ising Design. It is awarded annually to Communi­cations Design students and to graduate Packaging Design students on the basis of need and scholar­ship. The recipients of the scholar­ship are nom­inated by the depart­ment chairs and two faculty members for approval by the deans of the School of Art and the School of Design. Phyllis and Conrad Milster Endowed Scholarship Established by Conrad Milster, Pratt Institute’s Chief Engineer, the Phyllis and Conrad Milster Endowed Scholar­ship provides one or more annual partial scholarships to undergraduate or graduate students in the Industrial Design Department. Point of Purchase Scholarship The Point of Purchase Scholarship is funded by grants from numerous companies with significant interest in the design of displays used at the Point of Purchase (POP). An annual award is given to either undergraduate or graduate Industrial Design students who have demonstrated design leadership potential in the field of POP design.

Financial Aid

Marc Rosen Scholarship Funded by friends and associates of Marc Rosen, class of 1970, in his honor, this award is made to an outstanding graduate Communications/Packaging Design student. The recipient is selected by the chair and members of the faculty of the Department of graduate Communications/ Package Design. Anna K. Rust Endowed Scholarship for Students in Art and Design A scholarship for students in the School of Art and the School of Design established by Leo Lewis Rust in memory of his wife, Anna Klenke Rust, class of 1938. David Saylor Scholarship for Design The David Saylor Scholarship for Design was established to benefit undergraduate and graduate students in the School of Design who are studying either Industrial Design or Interior Design. Preference is given to students who combine the fields of industrial design and interior design in their studies, or who plan to do so in their careers. Charles and Marie Schade Endowed Scholarship A scholarship established by Charles and Marie Schade to aid students in either the School of Art, School of Design, or School of Architecture who demonstrate good academic standing as well as financial need. Donald J. Schwarz and Anastasia Malamas Schwarz Scholarship This annual, nonrenewable scholarship is to be awarded, in alternating years, to a student in Industrial Design or Communications Design. Seeman-Burse Fund The Seeman-Burse Fund is a scholarship for students in the School of Design, specifically studying Fashion Design. Selma Seigel Memorial Scholarship A fund created by Morton Flaum, class of 1971, in memory of Selma Seigel, that provides scholarship aid to Interior Design students in the School of Design. Starr Foundation Scholarship A scholarship fund established by the Starr Foundation for students in the Department of Communications Design. Awards are made annually to three students majoring in Illustration, Graphic Design, or Advertising. Selection will be based on academic merit. Secondary consideration will be fostering a diverse student body.

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Ruth P. Taylor Scholarship The Ruth P. Taylor Scholarship is a fund established by the estate of Ruth P. Taylor, class of 1921, for students in the School of Art and the School of Design.

Morton D. Flaum Memorial Scholarship A scholarship established by Morton D. Flaum, class of 1971, through his estate, to benefit students in the School of Information.

Dorothy Toole Scholarship Created through a bequest in the will of Mrs. Dorothy Rodgers Toole, class of 1931, the Dorothy Toole Scholarship is for students who demonstrate unusual interest and talent in the field of fashion illustration.

Library School Graduates’ Association Scholarship The Library School Graduates’ Association Scholarship is a fund established for graduate students in the School of Information.

Max Weber Scholarship A gift given by Mrs. Max Weber and Miss Frances Weber in memory of the well-known artist who was a member of the class of 1900. It provides annual scholarship aid for students in the School of Art and the School of Design.

Library Science Fund The Library Science Fund is a scholarship fund for graduate students in the School of Information. S.M. Matta Endowed Scholarship in Information Technology A scholarship established in honor of Seoud M. Matta, former dean of the School of Information.

Stephan Weiss Endowed Scholarship Funded by Donna Karan’s Karan-Weiss Foundation and awarded to Fine Arts students in good academic standing, this scholarship honors Stephan Weiss.

Sylvia G. Mechanic Merit Award in Business Librarianship The Sylvia G. Mechanic Merit Award in Business Librarianship is a scholarship for graduate students in the School of Information.

Willard Scholarship The Willard Scholarship was established to aid students in the School of Art and the School of Design who are graduates of Washington Irving High School.

Pratt-Severn Student Research Award in Information Science This annual award, funded by a bequest from alumnus David Severn, class of 1968, is presented to a master’s degree student selected by the American Society for Information Science (ASIS).

Henry Wolf Scholarship An endowed scholarship fund, the income of which is used to award one or more scholarships to support economically disadvantaged students pursuing B.F.A.s or M.F.A.s in Photography or Communications Design. School of Information Beta Phi Mu Scholarship A scholarship fund established by Beta Phi Mu, an honor society for elite graduates in the School of Information and Library Science. Mabel Bogardus Scholarship Established for graduate students in the School of Information, the Mabel Bogardus Scholarship is named for an alumna from the class of 1913. Dorothy M. Cooper Endowed Fellowship The Dorothy M. Cooper Endowed Fellowship, named for an alumna from the class of 1931, was established from the Dorothy M. Cooper Trust to provide support for students in the School of Information.

Financial Aid

Marvin Scilken Endowed Scholarship A fund established in memory of Marvin Scilken, class of 1960, a former faculty member in the School of Information. George Simor Scholarship A scholarship fund established in memory of George Simor, a former faculty member in the School of Information. The Edmund S. Twining III and Diana Twining School of Information and Library Science Fellowships in Florence This fund provides two graduate fellowships each summer for students studying in the School of Information and Library Science’s Florence Summer Program. H.W. Wilson Scholarship A fund established by the H.W. Wilson Foundation for graduate students in the School of Information or the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences. School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Izchak Friedman Endowed Scholarship An endowed fund established by Pratt alumna

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Estelle Friedman, class of 1969, and her children. It is named in memory of her husband, Pratt alumnus, professor, and dean of the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Izchak Friedman, class of 1962. The scholar­ ship is awarded to students with an interest in combining science and the arts, based on merit and financial need.

Esther Brigham Fisher Scholarship A scholarship fund established by Edward M. Fisher, in memory of his wife, to assist Pratt Institute students.

M.F.A. Writing Scholarship This fund is designated as support for students in the M.F.A. Writing Program.

Ford-EEOC Scholarship The Ford-EEOC Scholarship is an endowment fund estab­lished by the Ford Motor Company to provide scholarships for students with demonstrated financial need. Financial need being equal, preference will be given to Ford emp­loy­ees, their spouses, and their children. Secondary consider­ation will be fostering a diverse student body.

H.W. Wilson Scholarship A fund established by the H.W. Wilson Foundation for graduate students in the School of Information or the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences. All Schools Alumni Scholarship The Alumni Scholarship is a fund established in 1957 by various alumni, the income from which is used for scholarship assistance for worthy students. James W. Atkinson Memorial Scholarship A scholarship established from the trust of Yvonne Atkinson, in memory of her husband James W. Atkinson, class of 1938, a generous and active alumnus and graphic designer who headed Pratt’s alumni branch in Detroit. This fund provides resources for general scholarship purposes. Dorothy P. Barrett Endowed Scholarship A fund established by the estate of Dorothy P. Barrett for general charitable and educational uses. William Bingham II Scholarship A trust for charitable purposes established by the late William Bingham II for students from Bethel, Maine, other towns in Oxford County, Maine, or elsewhere in the state of Maine (in that order). Black Alumni of Pratt Endowed Scholarship A fund established to provide scholarships to students who have completed a year at Pratt, are in good academic standing, and demonstrate a need for financial assistance. Secondary consideration will be fostering a diverse student body. Helen R. Fecke Endowed Scholarship Awarded to students in good academic standing who demonstrate financial need, the Helen R. Fecke Endowed Scholarship is named for an alumna of the class of 1926.

Financial Aid

Lewis H. Flynn Scholarship A fund established under the will of Lewis H. Flynn, class of 1916, for scholarship aid.

General Scholarship A fund established in 1956 through gifts from various donors to provide need-based scholarships. Kathleen L. Gerla Endowment Scholarship The Kathleen L. Gerla Endowment Scholarship is a fund established by the Kathleen L. Gerla Charitable Trust. Wilson Y. Hancock Endowed Scholarship A scholarship that provides general support for students in good academic standing, the Wilson Y. Hancock Endowed Scholarship was established through a bequest from the Estate of Elizabeth Marie Hancock in memory of her late husband, Wilson Y. Hancock, class of 1933. Coby Hoffman Scholarship The Coby Hoffman scholarship was established to support students in the School of Art and the School of Design. Herman Y. Krinsky Scholarship Fund for Disabled Students A fund established for disabled students in honor of former Pratt professor Herman Y. Krinsky. Jacob and Gwendolyn Lawrence Endowed Scholarship The Jacob and Gwendolyn Lawrence Endowed Scholarship is a fund established for general scholarship support. Margaret A. Middleditch Fund The Margaret A. Middleditch Fund is a fund established anonymously to finance scholarship or maintenance abroad, or the travel itself.

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Leo J. Pantas Residence Center Scholarship A scholarship established by Leo J. Pantas, class of 1937, trustee emeritus, with a matching grant from Eaton Corporation. The scholarship is awarded to a full-time student with financial need living in Pantas Residence Hall. Pratt Art Supply Product Scholarship A fund established by the Pratt Art Supply Shop to provide supply scholarships for qualifying students. Scholarships will be awarded annually during a scholarship and fall trade show. Charles Pratt II Memorial Scholarship This endowed scholarship was established by Edmund Twining III in memory of his grandfather, Charles Pratt, president of Pratt Institute from 1937 to 1953, to support any full-time student at Pratt Institute who best demonstrates the ideals of the founder of Pratt Institute. These are defined as leadership, community service, and self-motivation. Additionally, the award is made to a student who demonstrates artistic achievement at the college level. George D. Pratt Scholarship A scholarship for worthy students established by Vera H. A. Pratt in memory of her husband, George D. Pratt. Richardson (Jerry) Pratt Endowed Scholarship Funded by gifts from the Pratt family and established in honor of Richardson Pratt, Jr., former president of Pratt, this scholarship is awarded to outstanding students with demonstrated financial need. Richardson and Mary O. Pratt Scholarship This scholarship, made possible by the gifts of various donors, honors the legacies of Richardson Pratt, Jr., former president of Pratt, and his wife, Mary O. Pratt. Paige Rense Scholarship A scholarship established in honor of Paige Rense. Raoul Settle Scholarship A fund established in memory of Raoul Settle, class of 1952. Irene C. Shea Endowed Scholarship A fund established by Irene C. Shea, class of 1934, for students who demonstrate financial need and are in good academic standing. Katherine Pratt Twitchell Fund A fund established in memory of Katherine Pratt Twitchell.

Financial Aid

J. Sherwood Weber Memorial Scholarship A fund established in memory of J. Sherwood Weber, former provost and faculty member, to be awarded annually to an outstanding student in any school. INTERNATIONAL STUDENT SCHOLARSHIPS The International Student Scholarship for the academic year 2017–18 will be available to those students who have en­ count­ered financial hardship. Students must demonstrate unfore­seen economic need. A Financial Aid Committee will determine the eligibility of the applicant. The scholarship funds are very limited. Since the award is based only on unforeseen economic need, there is no application deadline. The scholar­ ship, if awarded, is to be used for tuition and fees only. You must follow these guidelines: 1. You must in be in good academic standing and must submit the latest copy of your transcript. 2. You must have been enrolled at Pratt for at least one academic year. 3. You must have clearance from the Office of the Bursar. Those who have any outstanding debts with the Bursar will not be considered. 4. You must submit copies of bank statements for the past six months; telephone, utility, and rent bills; and a budget for the academic year. 5. If you are sponsored, you must submit proof of your sponsor’s inability to continue with the financial commitment. 6. You must submit a statement outlining your academic goals at Pratt, what contributions you have made as an international student to the campus life, and why you need the scholarship. 7. You must submit a letter of recommendation. 8. If you are receiving Pratt’s financial assistance, your travels will be restricted. The above-listed documents must be submitted as proof of unforeseen economic need to the Office of International Affairs, attention: Jane Bush, Director of International Student Affairs. FINANCIAL AID INSTRUCTIONS AND SCHEDULE All application materials are available at www.pratt.edu/ financing. You must submit the following to be considered for federal, state, and Pratt Institute aid (including bank loans) for the next academic year: 1. Financial aid forms for 2017–18 Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA). The FAFSA should be completed and submitted electronically online at www.fafsa.ed.gov or at the financial aid section of Pratt’s website.

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2. IRS tax transcript for 2016, if requested. If you did not file a tax return, you must submit a notarized letter stating your source of income. 3. Mail to:

Student Financial Services Pratt Institute 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 Fax: 718.636.3739

Deadline: May 15, 2017, for requested tax transcript. 4. Continu­ing students who wish to apply for a loan should file the FAFSA by February 1. If you filed the Master Promissory Note (MPN) last year, you don’t have to submit another MPN loan application. We can only notify students of their loan eligibility levels in the electronic award letter, which is sent to your Pratt email address. 5. Other information we request: An SFS counselor may ask for additional information and or docu­ment­ ation after your application is reviewed. Respond quickly—we can’t finalize your aid until we receive the requested information. Mail early. We award financial aid only when your file is complete! Call us with questions at 718.636.3599 or email sfs@pratt.edu. For the 2017–18 academic year, please refer to the Student Financial Services section of the Pratt website: www.pratt.edu/financing.

Financial Aid

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Tuition and Fees

COSTS The following approximate costs are in effect at the time of publication. They are subject to change by action of the Board of Trustees. The Institute reserves the right to change regulations at any time without prior notice. It also reserves the right to change tuition and fees as necessary. Tuition and fees are payable in full at the time of registration. Graduate No flat rate. $1,713 per credit. Note: The charge per credit for the School of Information is $1,376. Fees Fees vary according to program. For a complete listing of fees, see next page. Please refer to the undergrad­uate bulletin for undergraduate tuition and fees. Books and Supplies Approximately $3,000 per year, depending on program. Other Expenses For resident students (students living away from home in either on-campus or off-campus housing), an estimated $600 per month (for a nine-month period) should be allowed for food, housing, clothing, and other personal needs. For commuter students (students living at home), an estimated $250 per month should be allowed for personal expenses and transportation. Students provide their own textbooks and instructional and art supplies. These books and supplies may be pur­ chased either online or at local art supply stores. Bookstore expenses are not chargeable to the student’s Institute tuition account. For those students who have a third-party book voucher, they must purchase their books up front and provide the voucher with eligible copies of the receipt in order to be reimbursed.

Director, Student Financial Services and Collections Yvette Mack ymack@pratt.edu Assistant Director, Accounts Receivables and Cash Controls Loretta Edwards ledwards@pratt.edu Assistant Director, Student Financial Services Madeline Vega-Mourad mvegamou@pratt.edu Office Tel: 718.636.3539 Fax: 718.636.3740 sfs@pratt.edu

TUITION PAYMENT Undergraduate and graduate students are charged tuition according to their enrollment status. An undergraduate student taking a graduate course applicable to his or her undergraduate degree is charged at the undergraduate rate. A graduate student taking an undergraduate course is charged tuition at the graduate rate. TERMS OF PAYMENT Bills are payable by personal or certified check, money order, VISA, Mastercard, American Express, Discover, debit cards featuring the NYCE symbol, or wire transfer in advance of each term. We will no longer be accepting credit cards in person or over the phone. All credit card

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transactions will be accepted online only. All credit and debit card payments must be made online through the myPratt portal. Checks should be made payable to Pratt Institute. Payment is also accepted online. Payment for fall is due August 1 for all students. There is a 2.5% convenience fee charged with each credit card transaction. Library fines, lost ID cards, and fees not charged to your student account do not incur the fee. Pratt Card trans­ac­ tions also do not incur the fee. E-checks are free. AVAILABLE PAYMENT PLAN THROUGH TUITION MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS DEFERRED PLAN OPTION (FALL- AND SPRING-BASED) This deferred payment plan may be implemented on a semester basis. Open Enrollment begins April 15 and you have a choice of the 3-, 4- or 5-month plans. Brochures explaining this plan (including an application) are available through the Tuition Management Systems (TMS) firm. The fee is $115 Per Semester. TMS will provide an easy-touse worksheet to assist the student in budgeting edu­ cational expenses for the year. For further information, call or write: Tuition Management Systems 171 Service Avenue, Second Floor Warwick, RI 02886 800.722.4867 www.afford.com/PRATT

Academic Facilities Fees $350 Each fall and spring term: full-time students $195 Each fall and spring term: part-time students (This fee is targeted to improve facilities, equipment, and materials that directly enhance instruction.) $100 Full-time International student services fee (This fee is targeted to improve the quality of services available to the international student.) $75 Part-time International student services fee (This fee is targeted to improve the quality of services available to the international student.) $195 Each summer term for all students Architecture Fees $50 Architecture shop fee. Each fall, spring, term: full-time and part-time students Digital Arts Lab Fees (per course) $45 All 100/200/300- level DDA courses $55 All 400/500-level DDA courses $65 All 600-level DDA courses

Please notify Student Financial Services if you are using TMS. Pratt Institute Student Financial Services 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 718.636.3539 sfs@pratt.edu

Fine Arts Shop Fee (per course): Fall and Spring $60 All 200–600-level courses in sculpture $50 All 200–600-level courses in ceramics $45 All 200–600-level courses in jewelry $45 All 200–600-level courses in printmaking Students not enrolled in ceramics courses but requesting use of facilities and clay: $75

PRATT INSTITUTE GRADUATE FEES

Health Insurance Fees TBD mandatory fee per semester. May be waived with proof of personal health insurance.

General Fees $50 Application fee $90 Application fee, international students $500 Acceptance deposit $300 Residence deposit

Thesis-in-Progress Fees Each semester of In-Progress varies by academic department.

Activities Fees $112 Graduate activities fee each fall and spring term: full-time students $90 Graduate activities fee each fall and spring term: part-time students

Tuition and Fees

Technology Fees $325 Each fall and spring term: full-time students $165 Each fall and spring term: part-time students $165 Each summer term for all students

Late Payment Fees A late fee of $195 will be charged for any unpaid balance. Health Services Fees $200 Each fall and spring term: full-time students $102 Each fall and spring term: part-time students

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Miscellaneous Fees $100 Shop Safety Certification Class $35 Fee for issuance of duplicate diploma $55 Readmission fee $20 Leave of absence fee $100 Portfolio/work experience deposit $100 Library thesis submittal fee (per copy) $413 Fee–30 percent of per credit charge, School of Information $514 Fee–30 percent of per credit charge, graduate FINE ARTS STUDIO REFUNDABLE DEPOSITS M.F.A. Fine Arts Refundable Studio Deposit $50 Deposit for the entire program Deposits are paid to Student Financial Services and refunded by check $25 Deposit for key replacement Returned Check Fees $25 Fee for checks returned for insufficient funds Transcript Request Fee* (Per Copy) $7.50 By internet: www.pratt.edu/registrar $10 By internet: www.pratt.edu/registrar (request leaves Pratt within one working day of receipt on campus) $15 In-person requests $18.50 UPS Service All fees are charged 100 percent when dropping classes during the add/drop period. Lock/Key Replacement Fees $25 Lost/stolen ID card replacement fee $20 Lock (core) replacement—Residential Life $3 Key replacement—Residential Life $25 Unreturned mailbox key—Mailroom

Library Lost Item Replacement Fees $90 Circulating books ($15 add’l may be charged if a softcover is replacing a hardcover book) $25 Picture files $90 Course reserve items $90 One day loans Interlibrary loan items—lending library determines replacement costs Film and videos—DVDs and 16mm—replacement cost Multimedia equipment—replacement cost 35mm Slides—determined by department Friends of the Library Fees $100 General public (for library access privileges and book borrowing—2 books limit) $50 Alumni AUDITING COURSES Students and Community Pay 50 percent of the published “per credit” tuition rate for each course. Pratt Alumni Pay 40 percent of the published “per credit” tuition rate for each course. All persons auditing courses are charged 100 percent of all fees.

LIBRARY REPRODUCTION FEES Image Fees Summary $10 Already digitized ($10 handling fee for up to 5 images, after that $1 add’l per image) $25 New digital files per image ($25 set up fee, which covers up to 5 images, after that $1 add’l per image) $25 Handling for fragile/rare materials (add’l $50 per hour, with a ½ hr minimum of $25) Rush fees (additional 50% of total fee). CD or DVD (additional $5 per order plus variable shipping/delivery fee)

Tuition and Fees

Library Late Fines $0.2 Circulating books - per day $0.2 Picture files - per day per envelope $2 Course reserve items - per hour or portion thereof $5 Interlibrary loan items—per day $1 Film and videos, DVDs—per day $5 Film and videos, 16mm—per day $12 Multimedia equipment—per day $0.5 35mm slides—per day per box

Zero-Credit Internships Zero-credit internships may have billing credits, which are charged at 30 percent of the “per credit” rate. All zero‑credit internships are charged 100 percent of all fees. Course Withdrawal Refunds Procedures for official withdrawals are as follows: Students who want to withdraw must fill out the official withdrawal form (available in the student’s academic depart­ ment), have the form signed by Student Financial Services, and submit it immediately to the Office of the Registrar. Refunds are determined by the date the add/drop or comp­ lete withdrawal form is signed by the Office of the Registrar.

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For all students, the following course withdrawal penalty schedules apply.

Before such actions are taken, students will be notified by email.

PRATT INSTITUTE REFUND POLICY Full Refund Withdrawal prior to and including the opening day of term

BANKING FACILITIES Arrangements have been made with a bank on campus for students to open accounts, making it possible to cash personal checks with the Pratt ID (providing the student’s available bank account balance covers the amount of the check to be cashed) and a primary ID (state-issued or passport). An ATM is also available on campus.

85 Percent Tuition Refund Withdrawal from the second through eighth day of the term 70 Percent Tuition Refund Withdrawal from the ninth through 15th day of the term 55 Percent Tuition Refund Withdrawal from the 16th through 22nd day of the term No Refund Withdrawal after the 22nd day of the term Individual fees are not refundable after the first day of the term. Once a student’s request is received, processing takes approximately 10 working days. Liability is computed from the date the form is signed by the registrar staff. Withdrawals may not be made by telephone. Check regist­ ration schedules and the Institute’s calendar for exact liability deadline dates each semester. Withdrawal from courses does not automatically cancel housing or meal plans. Penalties for housing and meal plans are calculated based on the date the student submits a completed Adjustment Form to the Office of Residential Life. Refunds for withdrawn courses are not automatic and must be requested from Student Financial Services. REFUNDS ON STUDENT’S CREDIT BALANCE A credit balance on a student’s account after applying Title IV funds (Federal Student Aid Funds) will be auto­ matically refunded and a refund will be mailed or applied to the debit card within 14 days of the later of any of the following dates: 1. the date the credit balance occurs 2. the first day of classes of a payment period of enroll­ ment the date the student rescinds his or her authori­ zation to apply Title IV funds to other charges or for the Institute to hold excess funds Refund checks are valid for 90 days from the date of the check issued. In keeping with federal regulations, all Title IV (Federal Student Aid) checks not cashed within the time frame listed above will be considered unclaimed and will result in funds being returned to the federal government.

Tuition and Fees

BILLING Bills are mailed to one address. One copy of each bill will be mailed to the address the student lists as his or her “billing” address on registration records. A “billing” address may be established, changed, or deleted at any time by writing or visiting the Office of the Registrar. Due dates cannot be extended because bills have not been received. If no billing address is specified, bills are mailed to the permanent address. You may also pay online at www.pratt.edu/myPratt. BILLING SCHEDULE All bills, including summer, are available online. Fall bills are available online after July 1, if regist­ration has already occurred. If you do not receive a bill, you may contact Student Financial Services prior to the due date to ascertain the amount due. Please consult the costs section and your housing license if you need an earlier estimate. Consult the annual Academic Calendar and Academic Guide for exact payment deadlines. LATE PAYMENT FEE AND INTEREST A late payment fee of $195 is assessed each semester on all bills remaining unpaid, in whole or in part, after the due date of the tuition bill for the semester. NOTICE OF IRS FILING For any cash amount paid totaling $10,000 or more made within a 12-month period, the IRS form 8300 will be completed and sent to the IRS. Please be sure to present photo ID. PAYMENTS Payments must include the student’s name and student ID number. Checks and money orders should be made payable to Pratt Institute in U.S. dollars and drawn on a U.S. bank. Checks drawn on an international bank may delay credit to the student’s account and may be subject to a collection fee imposed by Pratt’s bank.

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Students may pay in person and receive a receipt by presenting the invoice and payment to Student Financial Services, Myrtle Hall 6th Floor, between 9 AM and 5 PM, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Friday. Evening hours are on Thursdays. Payment by mail avoids waiting in line. Please allow five working days for mail delivery and a mini­ mum of three weeks for processing. RETURNED CHECKS The Institute charges a processing fee of up to $25 when a check is returned by the student’s bank for any reason. Any check in payment of an Institute charge that is returned by the bank may result in a late-payment charge, as well as a returned-check charge. ADJUSTMENTS We strongly recommend that you view your bill online periodically. In addition, we recommend giving parents or any third-party payer access to the Parent Module so they can view/pay your bill online. A student who contests a portion of the bill should pay the uncontested portion by the due date and immediately contact the appropriate office to request an adjustment. Adjustments should be pursued and resolved immediately to avoid a hold on registration or grades. DIRECT LOANS (STAFFORD, PLUS) Loan funds are sent to Pratt by the federal government electronically (EFT). Funds will be disbursed in accordance with federal regulations, and a signature may be required. Alternative Loan Checks In some instances, lenders disburse Alternative Loans in paper check form which may require a signature. Loan checks are made payable jointly to Pratt Institute and the student. Payee must endorse the checks before they can be applied to the student’s account. The student will be held respons­ible for the loan portion of the balance on his or her account whether or not he or she receives the loan. It is the student’s re­s­ponsi­bility to contact the federal government when delays occur. A student whose Institute bills are over­ due will not be allowed to register for the Institute, receive grades, transcripts, or diploma, or have enroll­ ment or degrees confirmed until financial obligations are paid in full. PLUS loan checks are sent to the parent directly unless a parent gives written consent to have any PLUS loan excess returned to the student.

Tuition and Fees

Registration (First Day of Class) We reserve the right to restrict eligibility for registration for students with high balances. Collection Accounts The student will be responsible for all collection costs associated with delinquent accounts forwarded to an outside collection agency because of nonpayment. Pratt Tuition Refund Disbursements Partnering with prattchoice.afford.com, students have the flexibility of receiving their tuition refunds in a variety of ways. You can now manage and receive your funds faster than ever, plus have the convenience of carrying a Visa branded debit card. This card will serve as your student refund card for the duration of your studies at Pratt Institute. If you choose this option, all future student refunds will be disbursed through it, so you must be careful not to misplace the card. The TMS ATM located in the Design Center is the FREE ATM where no charges are assessed for with-­ draw­ing funds. You can also transfer the available funds to your personal checking/savings account or request a paper check be mailed, at no cost. Included with your card are instructions on how to activate and use it. TMS administers the card. All questions regarding your card can be answered through the TMS website, pratt.afford.com/Home, or for more information regarding the debit card, please see pratt.afford.com/ Refunds. If you have not received a card and would like one, please contact Student Financial Services directly at sfs@pratt.edu. FLYWIRE FOR INTERNATIONAL STUDENTS Pratt Institute is always looking for ways to accom­ modate the busy lives of our students. With you in mind, Pratt Institute has recently partnered with FlyWire to offer an innovative way to streamline your inter­na­ tional tuition payments. Developed by an international student, FlyWire offers a simple, secure, and costeffect­ive method for transferring and processing education payments in foreign currencies. By offering favorable conversion rates unmatched by larger financial institutions, FlyWire enables Pratt’s international students to pay from any country and any bank while saving a significant amount of money. Furthermore, students will be able to: 1. Track the progress of their payment throughout the transfer. 2. Be alerted when their payment is received.

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3. Track the progress of their tuition payments via an online dashboard and be assured that their payments are going to the correct account. You can find the link to the FlyWire solution at www.pratt.edu/student-life/student-services.

Tuition and Fees

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Registration and Academic Policies

Registrar Lisle Henderson lhenders@pratt.edu Associate Registrar Rajeev Jayadeva rjayadev@pratt.edu Assistant Registrars Marcia Approo mapproo@pratt.edu Juliet Lee jlee170@pratt.edu Linda Bloom lbloom37@pratt.edu Matthew Townsend mtownse@pratt.edu TAP Certification Officer/ Veterans Adviser Charlotte Outlaw-Yorker coutlaw@pratt.edu Office Tel: 718.636.3663 Fax: 718.636.3548 reg@pratt.edu

In order to attend any course at Pratt Institute, a student must: 1. Be formally approved for admission. ll Matriculated students will receive an acceptance letter/email that includes a oneKey (username) and ID number (initial password). It may also include additional requisites required for admission to a program. ll All final and official college and high school transcripts (indicating date of graduation) must be submitted to the Institute prior to enrollment. ll Non-matriculated students will be provided this information once they submit a non-matriculated student application in the Registrar’s Office and pay the fee. They do not have to follow steps 2 and 3. 2. Meet with an academic adviser and have a program of courses approved by that adviser on Academic Tools—the portion of www.pratt.edu/myPratt that allows students to register for classes, add or drop sections, view their grades, and review their degree audit. Your academic adviser and your appointment dates for advisement and registration are listed on your degree audit. Students should contact their adviser for assistance. 3. Register for the approved courses online during the designated registration period. A student’s registration date is displayed under the student’s name when he or she logs in to www.pratt.edu/myPratt. Online registration is done on Academic Tools. 4. Pay prescribed tuition and fees to the Student Financial Services. Students—and persons approved by that student via the Parent Module—can view the bill on www.pratt.edu/myPratt. See the Tuition and Fees section of this bulletin for more information. Students are fully responsible for tuition and fees after they complete steps 1 through 3 above. If students do not complete Step 4 before the first day of class, their unpaid registrations may be canceled according to the payment schedule. Responsibility for a correct registration and a correct academic record rests entirely with the student. Students are responsible for knowing regulations regarding withdrawals, refund deadlines, program changes, and academic policies. Instructors will not admit students to classes in which they are not officially registered. Proof of official registration may be obtained in the Office of the Registrar or through the Academic Tools. Any student who attends a class without valid registration (i.e., they are not on the official class roster) will not have credits or a grade recorded for that course.

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Identification Cards and Services As part of orientation, new students are issued identi­ fication cards. Students must present their PrattCard to receive services and privileges, gain entry into campus buildings, and identify themselves to Institute officers as necessary. People who cannot, or will not, produce a student identification card are not recognized as students and are not entitled to student services. To find out more about the PrattCard, log in at www.pratt.edu/myPratt (the PrattCard is on the left side of the dashboard). The PrattCard Office is located in the Activities and Resource Center (ARC), Lower Level, Room A109. PRATT EMAIL ACCOUNTS AND MYPRATT ACCESS The portal www.pratt.edu/myPratt is Pratt’s interactive student gateway. It provides access to grades, schedules, bills, applications for graduation, and transcripts, as well as other academic information. No additional applications or activations are necessary. All student user names are automatically assigned by the Information Technology Office. Pratt email and www.pratt.edu/myPratt accounts are assigned to all students at the time of admission. The Admissions Office mails a letter to all deposited students with their Pratt email address and ID number. Pratt online accounts must be used for all official Institute communication through the Internet as an individual’s Pratt email address is the only way to validate the authenticity of the requester. No official requests will be fulfilled from any email address that does not end with a pratt.edu suffix. Likewise, all official Institute communications sent electronically are emailed to this address. Some notices are only sent electronically. Students are responsible for the information sent to their Pratt email. STUDENT REGISTRATION New Student Initial Registration New students should receive information about regist­ ration in the mail once they have paid their deposit. Each department’s advisement office provides detailed academic advisement and curriculum counseling for entering new students. Contact your department for further information. Continuing Student Registration Continuing students are assigned a registration date based on their degree progress. Official registration dates can be found in the Academic Calendar or in the Academic Guide for Students (emailed to all students each fall). To avoid late

Registration and Academic Policies

fees, all registered students who plan to continue in subsequent semesters are required to register during the open registration period. This registration period closes at the end of the previous semester. Failure to register during the open registration period and make payment in advance may result in late fees. Late registrations will also jeopardize a student’s chances of obtaining their preferred academic course schedule. Late Registration New and continuing students who do not complete regist­ ration during their designated registration periods are subject to a late fee. The amounts and timing of these fees are described in the Tuition and Fees section of this bulletin. Registration or reinstatement after the published add period requires a written appeal to the Office of the Registrar. Admission to Class It is the responsibility of each student to obtain an official schedule (printout of registered course, section, credit, and time) on www.pratt.edu/myPratt after completion of the registration process. Students are strongly cautioned to review and confirm all data. If any course/section/credit correction is necessary, the student can make adviserapproved changes on www.pratt.edu/myPratt through the first two weeks of classes (drop/add period) only. Students may also alter their schedule with the assistance of their department or with a Drop/Add form available in academic offices or the Office of the Registrar. Veterans Affairs Pratt Institute participates in the following Veterans Administration Benefits: ll Chapter 33 Post 9/11 GI Bill ll Chapter 30 Montgomery GI Bill (MGIB) ll Chapter 1606 Montgomery GI Bill (MGIB-SR) ll Chapter 31 Veterans Vocational Rehabilitation Because the New York Regional Veterans Administration (VA) will not accept certification of enrollment before the first class day of any session, students planning to enroll under any of the VA programs should initiate the certification procedure by making an appointment to see the veterans’ adviser in the Office of the Registrar after registration is completed. Depending on the Chapter, students receive monthly checks from the VA or the VA will send the check directly to Pratt six to eight weeks after certification. Failure to request certification upon completion of registration may result in a four- to six-week delay in the receipt of the first benefit check. As of January 1976, those students

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receiving survivor’s benefits (children of deceased veterans) are no longer required to be certified by the school. Appropriate forms may be obtained at the student’s VA Regional Office. New transfer students who have already received educational benefits should bring their VA claim number to the veterans’ adviser. New students who have been in active military service must submit a certified copy of their DD 214 (discharge papers). Students in Active Reserve should be certified by their commanding officer, and the signature of the Pratt veterans’ adviser should be obtained from the Registrar’s Office. Students who support spouses, children, or parents should submit birth certificates or marriage certificates as appropriate. Students in the Reserve (Chapter 1606) seeking to obtain educational benefits should see their commanding officer for eligibility counseling and forms and, if eligible, should then see the Pratt veterans’ adviser for certification. All students receiving benefits under Veterans’ Vocational Rehabilitation (Chapter 31) should contact their counselors at the VA, who will forward an “authorization form” to Pratt’s veterans’ adviser. These veterans should then go to the Registrar’s Office after having been programmed by their respective departments in order to present a signed copy of the authorization to the Student Financial Services. Only after receiving this signed authorization will the Student Financial Services validate tuition payment. Veterans receiving an allocation for books should note that Pratt Institute does not maintain the campus bookstore. The VA should be notified accordingly. Final and official authorization cannot be forwarded to the VA until the student has completed registration. Pratt Institute serves only as a source of certification and information to the VA Regional Office. The student must carry out all financial transactions with the VA directly. All transactions are carried out with the Buffalo Office: P.O. Box 4616 Buffalo, NY 14240 The New York Regional Office is at: 245 W. Houston Street (at Varick Street) New York, NY 10014 Residency Requirement Graduate students are expected to complete a minimum of 75 percent of the program’s credits at Pratt, with the exception of the first-professional (M.Arch.) program in Architecture, which requires 67 percent of the credits to be completed at Pratt.

Registration and Academic Policies

TRANSFER CREDITS Transfer Credit Prior to Matriculation Transfer credit is granted for courses that are approp­ riate to the program curriculum at Pratt from a school accredited by an accrediting agency or state approval agency recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education or the international equivalent. Credits may be awarded for courses in which (1) a grade of B or better is earned from domestic institutions (or 80 or better from international institutions as determined by an official international credit evaluation service) and (2) the courses correspond to the specific course requirements of the applicant’s program of study. Grades lower than B (including B-) or less than 80 are not transferable. Grades of transfer credits are not included in the GPA. The number of credits toward a master’s degree that may be transferred from another graduate institution may not exceed 25 percent of the total number of credits required for graduation, with the exception of the firstprofessional (M.Arch.) program in Architecture, which permits up to 33 percent of the program’s total credits to be transferred. Courses that have been applied toward an earned graduate degree will not be considered for transfer credit. Students seeking transfer credits for professional courses in art, design, or architecture are required to submit a portfolio reflective of their studio coursework completed in a prior institution as part of the admission application. International students may be required to submit additional class hour documentation to determine a U.S. semester hour equivalency or have their credentials of international credit hours evaluated by an official international credit evaluation service. Pratt accepts international credit evaluations performed by any member of the National Association of Credit Evaluation Services (NACES). Credit evaluations will be completed only after accept­ ance. Students petitioning for transfer credit(s) must submit to the Admissions Office an official transcript from each college attended prior to enrollment. Additional transcripts will not be accepted for transfer credit evalu­ ation after the beginning of the student’s first semester at Pratt. Transfer Credit after Matriculation Graduate students, once matriculated at Pratt, are expected to complete their degree requirements at Pratt. Students who are in good academic standing may request to take a course at another institution. These students must get permission in advance to take courses at other institutions for transfer to their Pratt record. Credit for

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courses taken, with permission, at another institution while matriculated at Pratt is limited to a maximum of six. To be accepted for transfer credit, the course must be recognized for graduate-level credit by the institution attended and must be passed with a grade of B or better. Grades lower than B (including B-) are not transferable. Grades of transfer credits are not included in the GPA. PORTFOLIO/WORK EXPERIENCE CREDIT Based on previous work experience and/or portfolio, credit may be granted only for work experience gained before initial matriculation at the Institute. This is available to all graduate students in the School of Architecture, School of Art, and School of Design. When applying for admission the student should indicate his or her intention to seek credits for work experience. Students must submit the following documentation for credit consideration: ll Résumé ll Professional portfolio ll Letters from employers detailing responsibilities and areas of expertise To apply for portfolio/work experience credit, the following steps must be followed. How to Petition ll Petition in person at the office of the appropriate chair before initial enrollment for classes. You will be advised as to the feasibility of your request and given a statement of intent to be completed. You should keep a copy of the document and be sure another is in your permanent file. ll Present a copy of the Statement of Intent to the Registrar’s Office with a $100 deposit. The Office of the Registrar will give you an application form, which should be returned to that office after completion. When the entire process is complete, the Registrar’s Office will apply the deposit to a fee schedule of 30 percent of the regular per-credit tuition rate per credit evaluated. ll Submit documentation as described above to the appropriate departmental chair. Please allow one week for evaluation. ll Return the application with the proper authorization to the Office of the Registrar to complete the process. You will be billed accordingly. Payment is due upon billing. Credits earned through this procedure are not included in the GPA. They will not count toward the Institute’s minimum residency requirement.

Registration and Academic Policies

STUDENT STATUS Full-Time Graduate To establish full-time equivalence, graduate students must enroll for nine or more semester credits (or an equivalent combination of credits and activities recognized as applicable). Graduate students enrolled in their thesis course or Thesis in Progress are considered full time. Students registered for Intensive English are considered registered in activities equivalent to two credits for each section. Part-Time Graduate Graduate students are classified as part-time if they schedule or drop to fewer than nine credits of registered coursework. Attendance Policy Pratt Institute understands that students’ engagement in their program of study is central to their success. While no attendance policy can assure that, regular class attendance is key to this engagement and signals the commitment Pratt students make to participate fully in their education. Faculty are responsible for including a reasonable attendance policy on the syllabus for each course they teach, consistent with department-specific guidelines, if applicable, and with Institute policy regarding reasonable accommodation of students with documented disabilities. Students are responsible for knowing the attendance policy in each of their classes; for understanding whether a class absence has been excused or not; for obtaining material covered during an absence (note: instructors may request that a student obtain the material from peers); and for determining, in consultation with the instructor and ahead of time if possible, whether make-up work will be permitted. Consistent attendance is essential for the completion of any course or program. Attending class does not earn students any specific portion of their grade, but is the pre‑condition for passing the course, while missing class may seriously harm a student’s grade. Grades may be lowered a letter grade for each unexcused absence, at the discretion of the instructor. Even as few as three unexcused absences in some courses (especially those that meet only once per week) may result in an automatic “F” for the course. (Note: Students shall not be penalized for class absences prior to adding a course at the beginning of a semester, though faculty may expect students to make up any missed assignments.) Pratt Institute respects students’ requirements to observe days of cultural significance, including religious holy days, and recognizes that some students might need to miss class to do so. In this, or other similar, circumstance,

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students are responsible for consulting with faculty ahead of time about how and when they can make up work they will miss. Faculty are encouraged to give consideration to students who have documentation from the Office of Health and Counseling. Reasonable accommodations for students with disabilities will continue to be provided, as appropriate. ENROLLMENT VERIFICATION LETTERS Students can generate a watermarked PDF record of their periods of enrollment and current status at Pratt Institute online through the National Student Clearinghouse. This service can be accessed at any time through www.pratt.edu/myPratt. 1. Log in with your oneKey at www.pratt.edu/myPratt; 2. Click on “Academic Tools” on the left side of the page. Click on “log in” under “Verifications and Transcripts.” Through the Self-Service menu, a student may also: ll Obtain a Good Student Discount Certificate. ll View the enrollment information on file with the National Student Clearinghouse. (Enrollment information is provided to the National Student Clearinghouse by many post-secondary institutions. Enrollment in those schools is included.) ll View the student loan deferment notifications that the Clearinghouse has provided to your loan holders (lenders and guarantors). ll View the proof(s) of enrollment that the Clearinghouse has provided to your health insurers and other providers of student services or products. ll Order or track a transcript. ll View specific information about your student loans. A student may request an enrollment verification letter on Pratt Institute letterhead several ways: ll Through the Academic Tools student menu (under My Courses). ll A written request including ID number and mailing/fax destination from a student’s Pratt email account. ll In person at the Registrar’s Office with a Pratt ID. In all cases where the student is not the direct recipient, the student must provide written permission to release the information as well as the name and address of the company or person that is to receive the verification letter.

Registration and Academic Policies

CHANGES AND WITHDRAWALS Program/Major Changes Each student must follow the program and major for which she or he has been admitted to Pratt. The Institute will not recognize a change of major as official unless the change is processed with the appropriate approvals and recorded in the student information system. A student who wants to change his or her major must first meet with the depart­ment chair and then notify Graduate Admissions. Course requirements for the new major reflect the current catalog year. Hence, a change in major may result in more credits being required to graduate. It may also have an effect on the number of transfer credits allowed. Course/Section Changes The Institute recognizes no change of course(s) or section(s) as official unless the change is processed online through Academic Tools or with a drop/add form submitted to the Registrar’s Office. Courses and course sections may be changed online during the first two weeks of each semester. Once this add period is over, no courses may be added to the student’s schedule. Students paying by the credit who drop a course on or after the first day of the term will be charged a percentage of the course fee. (See refund period schedule below.) Refund Last day to add a class or change sections

Fall

Spring

Summer

Sept. 11

Jan. 29

May 21

Last day to drop a class with 100% refund Aug. 28

Jan. 16

May 14

Last day to drop a class with 85% refund Sept. 4

Jan. 23

N/A

Last day to drop a class with 70% refund Sept. 11

Jan. 30

N/A

Last day to drop a class with 55% refund Sept. 18

Feb. 6

May 21

It is the responsibility of the student to officially with­ draw from any registered course or section. This decision must be completed online through Academic Tools or by filing a properly completed Drop/Add form with the Registrar’s Office. Failure to attend classes, to notify the instructor, or to make or complete tuition payment does not constitute an official withdrawal. A student who

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does not officially withdraw from a registered course will receive a WF for nonattendance. Students who stop attending a course without having officially dropped the course during the published refund period will not be eligible for a retroactive refund. Students may withdraw from a course during the first 11 weeks of the fall or spring semesters. A class that is dropped from a student’s schedule after the second week of the semester will remain on the student’s academic record with the noncredited designation of WD (withdrawal). No course withdrawal will be accepted after the published deadline. WD grades earned via the official withdrawal procedure cannot be changed. Complete Withdrawal from the Institute Students who are leaving Pratt without graduating are required to fill out a Complete Withdrawal form in the Registrar’s Office. This form permits the Registrar to drop or withdraw a student from all registered classes (a student cannot do this online). The form also serves to advise relevant offices that a student is no longer enrolled. Students who withdraw need to be advised about any financial obligations and any academic repercussions of their actions. They will also be required to complete an exit interview. The date that the Complete Withdrawal form is turned into the Registrar’s Office is the official date used for withdrawal. This date determines eligibility for WD grades and a student’s charges for the term of withdrawal. Only the submission of a Complete Withdrawal form will deactivate your status as a currently enrolled student. Until that time, registration and billing stay in effect and grades of WF will be issued for class absences. None of the following actions cause an official withdrawal or reduce financial liability for a semester: ll Notifying a faculty member, department chair, or academic adviser. ll Failure to pay the student account. ll Failure to attend classes. The Complete Withdrawal form must be signed by the student, his or her department’s chair or academic adviser, a Student Financial Services representative and the Director of Residential Life (if living in a residence hall). International students should also obtain the signature of the Office of International Affairs. Students who are not enrolled during either the fall or the spring semester and have not completed a Complete Withdrawal or Leave of Absence form will be officially withdrawn from the Institute and will need to apply for readmission.

Registration and Academic Policies

Leave of Absence A student in good academic and financial standing may request a leave of absence for not more than two consecu­ tive semesters (excluding summer sessions). Students must apply with a Leave of Absence Request form in the Office of the Registrar. ll Students must apply for a leave of absence on or before the last day to withdraw from classes for any given semester. ll Only students in good academic and financial standing will be approved. ll A leave of absence will not be granted once a student’s thesis is in progress. ll International students must obtain authorization from the Office of International Affairs. ll Students applying for a leave of absence must pay a $20 processing fee. ll A student who wishes to register after an undocu­ mented absence must apply for readmission. ll Students requesting leave for medical reasons must obtain authorization from Health and Counseling Readmission Students who do not attend Pratt for a semester or more without receiving an official leave of absence must apply for readmission. Applications for readmission are available from the Registrar’s Office. Those applying for readmission must submit a $55 app­li­cation fee payable to Pratt Institute. Degree requirements are updated to reflect the current catalog when a student is readmitted to a program (rather than the one used in the initial acceptance). The readmission application deadlines for each semester are below. Application Deadlines Fall August 15 Spring December 15 Summer May 1 PERSONAL DATA CHANGES All personal data changes must be made in written form only by the student. Students are responsible for reporting the following personal data changes to the Office of the Registrar: ll Change of name (requires legal documentation) ll Change of address ll Change of major Note: Consult the Office of the Registrar for procedural details on reporting these changes.

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PREFERRED NAME Pratt Institute recognizes that many members of the Pratt community prefer to use names other than their legal ones to identify themselves. As long as the use of this preferred name is not for the purposes of misrepresentation, the Institute acknowledges that a “preferred name” can and should be used where possible in the course of Institute business and education. Therefore, beginning in the fall semester of 2016–­17 any member of the Pratt Community may choose to identify a preferred name in addition to their legal name. The preferred name will be used in all Institute business, except where the use of the legal name is required. For example, some records, such as paychecks and transcripts, require use of a legal name; in such circumstances, the Institute will not be able to use the preferred name. However, whenever reasonably possible, “preferred name” will be used. Inappropriate use of the preferred name, including but not limited to misrepresentation or attempting to avoid a legal obligation, may be cause for denying the request. PARENT MODULE Students can authorize parents, guardians, or sponsors to view current schedules, grades, degree progress, and/or access the tuition bill to see the current balance and make payments. Students manage (grant or rescind) these permissions through their Academic Tools. Parents and sponsors can then access the system and log in at parents. pratt.edu. To access the module: 1. Log in with your oneKey at www.pratt.edu/myPratt; 2. Click on “Academic Tools” on the left side of the page, and click “log in”; 3. After the system logs you in, click on the “Students” menu on the sidebar; 4. Through “Grant Parent/Sponsor Rights” (listed under “My Personal Information”), students decide which information they allow each account to see or rescind previously given access. Students can request to add people not listed on this screen by returning to the Students menu and clicking “Request New Parent/ Sponsor” (under “My Personal Information”). If a person is missing an email address or other important information, a request to update their account can be made through the same process. TRANSCRIPT GENERAL POLICIES ll The Registrar’s Office must have the student’s written request or authorization to issue a transcript. Parents cannot authorize the Registrar’s Office to mail a transcript.

Registration and Academic Policies

ll Official transcripts bear the Institute’s seal and registrar’s signature. ll Partial transcripts are not issued. A transcript is a complete record of all work completed at Pratt. ll Allow five (5) business days after receipt of the transcript request for the transcript to be mailed. At certain peak times, such as registration and commencement, the processing time may be longer. ll Transcripts are not released until a student’s account has been paid in full. ll Copies of transcripts from other schools that were attended must be requested directly from those schools. The Registrar’s Office cannot release or copy transcripts in a student’s file. TRANSCRIPTS Unofficial Transcripts Currently enrolled students can view and print an unofficial transcript through Student Planning. Official Transcripts Official transcripts may be ordered in three ways: online, by mail or in person. (NOTE: Records containing financial holds will not be processed until the hold is cleared.) All transcript requests must have the following information to be processed: ll Name while attending Pratt Institute ll 9-digit social security number or 7-digit Pratt ID number ll Date of birth ll Telephone number ll Dates of attendance and/or graduation date ll Destination information where transcript is to be mailed Online The easiest and most affordable way for students and alumni to order an official Pratt transcript is through the National Student Clearinghouse. This requires a valid credit/debit card to place your order. Regular service (three to five business days) is $7.25 per copy. Expedited services are available for an additional cost. You can upload additional forms to accompany your transcript if needed. By Mail Official transcripts may be ordered by mail by completing a Transcript Request form available on our website. Delivery and pricing information is available on the request form. Send your request form with a check or money order (no cash) to:

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Pratt Institute Office of the Registrar 200 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205

the sanctions found in absentia before being permitted to appeal. ll Transcript notations for students expelled are permanent and cannot be appealed.

In Person Official transcripts may also be ordered in person at the Office of the Registrar, Myrtle Hall, 6th Floor, during window hours. We can only accept cash or checks. (A credit card payment can be charged at the financial services window adjacent to the registrar’s window.) Requests for imme­diate processing and pick up are $15 per copy. Requests to send official transcripts by regular mail service (leaves Pratt in three to five business days) are $10 per copy. TRANSCRIPT NOTATION FOR VIOLENT OFFENSES — TRANSCRIPT NOTATION PROCESS. As required by New York State Legislation Article 129-B, effective October 5, 2015, Pratt Institute will denote conduct outcomes on academic transcripts of students found in vio­lation of any policy violation that is deemed a violent offense as defined by CLERY reportable crimes. Transcript notations are applied at the conclusion of the conduct proce­edings and appeals processes. The following are examples of language that may appear onan academic transcript: ll “Expelled after a finding of responsibility for a code of conduct violation” ll “Suspended after a finding of responsibility for a code of conduct violation” ll “Withdrew with conduct charges pending” Transcript notations for a student suspended or who chooses to withdraw pending conduct investigation will remain on a transcript for a minimum of one year. Afterone year’s time, a student may request to have the transcript notation removed by filing an appeal with the Vice President for Student Affairs. If an appeal is not filed, the notation will be removed after seven years. TRANSCRIPT NOTATION APPEALS PROCESS To file an appeal to have the transcript notation removed from an academic transcript, a student must submit in writing to the Vice President for Student Affairs the following: ll A statement describing the incident and what was learned over the time away from the institution. ll Documentation of successful completion of an in/out patient program or therapy to address the conduct. ll Students who withdrew from the Institute prior to resolution of the conduct process will need to fulfill

Registration and Academic Policies

WITHDRAWAL PRIOR TO CONDUCT CASE ADJUDICATION A student who withdraws from the Institute prior to an outcome of a pending conduct case should understand that the investigation will continue without their participation. A student can still be found responsible in their absence. Withdrawal from the institution will not protect a student from possible criminal or civil action(s). ORGANIZATION OF COURSE OFFERINGS Courses Numbered 100 through 499 are primarily reserved for under­graduates. Graduate students will not receive credit toward graduation for taking these courses. Courses Numbered 500 through 599 may be open to both undergraduates with junior or senior class standing and graduate students. Courses in this range are consider­ ed either 1) Technical Elective; 2) Qualifying; or 3) Graduate courses whose content complements advanced under­ graduate studies. Credit earned within the 500-numbered courses by undergraduate students may not be applied toward a graduate degree. Graduate students enrolled in 500-level courses are expected to perform with greater productivity and capacity for research and analysis than their undergraduate colleagues enrolled in the same courses. Sign­ificantly more is expected of graduate students in course projects, papers, and conferences. Courses Numbered 600 and above are generally for graduate students only. A graduate course embraces highly developed content that demands advanced qualitative and quantitative performance and specialization not normally appropriate to under­graduate courses. Courses Numbered 9000 and above are elective internship courses. SEMESTER HOUR CREDITS In accordance with federal regulations, a credit/semester hour is the amount of work represented in intended learning outcomes and verified by evidence of student achievement. Pratt Institute operates on a semester calendar and awards credit on a semester basis. Each semester is a minimum of 15 weeks. One credit is awarded for at least three hours of student work per week, or the equivalent amount of work over a different amount of time. Student work may take the form of classroom time, other direct faculty instruction, or out-of-class homework, assignments, or other student work. A minimum of one

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clock hour per week, or equivalent time in variable-length courses, represents classroom or direct instruction time. To determine the appropriate amount of classroom time required for each course, Pratt follows the standards established by its accrediting agencies. Typically, for each credit hour awarded to lecture or seminar courses, the students receive 15 clock hours of direct instruction and are required to perform an additional 30 hours of out‑of‑class work. For each credit awarded to a studio course, undergraduate students typically receive 22.5 clock hours, and graduate students receive 15 hours of direct instruction and are required to complete a minimum of 30 additional hours of out-of-class work. GRADING SYSTEM Letter Grades That Affect the Academic Index A, A– excellent The student has consistently demonstrated outstanding ability in the comprehension and interpretation of the content of the course. (Numerical Value: A = 4.0; A– = 3.7) B+, B, B– above average The student has acquired a comprehensive knowledge of the content of the course. (Numerical Value: B+ = 3.3; B = 3.0; B– = 2.7) C+, C acceptable The student has shown satisfactory understanding of the content of the course. C is the lowest passing grade for graduate students. (Numerical Value: C+ = 2.3; C = 2.0 ) F failure The student has failed to meet the minimum standards for the course. (Numerical Value: F= 0) WF (Withdrawal Failing) Grade given to a student with a failing grade due to lack of attendance. Note: The highest grade acceptable for recording is A (4.0) and not A+; C (2.0), not C–, is the only grade preceding F (0.0). The +/– grading system went into effect as of the fall 1989 semester and is not acceptable for recording purposes for prior semesters. Grades That Do Not Affect the Academic Index AUD (Audit, no credit) Students must register for courses they plan to audit by contacting the Registrar’s Office in person or by way of their Pratt email account.

Registration and Academic Policies

CR (Credit) Grade indicates that the student’s achievement was sat­is­factory to assure proficiency in subsequent courses in the same or related areas. The CR grade does not affect the student’s academic index. The CR grade is to be assigned to all appropriately documented transfer credits. The CR grade is applied to credit earned at Pratt only if: ll The student is enrolled in any course offered by a school other than the one in which the student is matriculated, and had requested from the professor at the start of the term a CR/NCR option as a final grade for that term. ll The instructor has received approval to award CR grades from the Office of the Provost. (This does not apply to liberal arts courses within the School of Liberal Arts and Sciences.) IP (In Progress) Designation used only for graduate student thesis, thesis project for which satisfactory completion is pending, or Intensive English course for which satisfactory competence level is pending. INC (Incomplete) Designation given by the instructor at the written request of the student and available only if the student has been in regular attendance, to indicate the student has satisfied all but the final requirements of the course, and has furnished satisfactory proof that the work was not comp­ leted because of illness or other circumstances beyond his or her control. The student must understand the terms necessary to fulfill the requirements of the course and the date by which work must be submitted. If the work is not submitted by the understood date of submission, the incomplete will be converted to a failure. If unresolved at the end of the following semester, the grade is changed to failure with a numerical grade value of 0. NCR (No Credit) Indicates that the student has not demonstrated proficiency. (See CR for conditions of use.) NG (No Grade Reported) Indicates that the student was properly registered for the course but the faculty member issued no grade. The student should contact the professor. Students cannot graduate with an NG on their record. NR (No Record) Grade given for no record of attendance in an enrolled course. (All NR designations must be resolved by the end of

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the following term or the grade is changed to a letter grade of F with a numerical value of 0.)

incomplete grade or of a final grade reported in error, no letter grade may be changed following graduation.

WD (Withdrawal from a Registered Class) Indicates that the student was permitted to withdraw from a course in which he or she was officially enrolled during the drop period for that semester.

REPEATED COURSES A repeated course must be the same course as the one for which the previous final grade was awarded. No graduate student may choose to repeat a course that was passed with a grade of C or higher without specific authorization from the chair or dean. Graduate students must repeat all required courses in which F is the final grade. The initial grade will remain, but only the subsequent grade earned will be averaged in the cumulative index from the point of repeat onward.

Grade Reports Grade reports are not mailed to students. Grades may be obtained via www.pratt.edu/myPratt (see instructions below). Professors submit final grades online and students are able to view their grades as soon as the instructor enters them. If there are any questions about the grade received, a student should contact the instructor immediately. Only the instructor can change a grade by properly completing, signing, and submitting a Change of Grade form directly to the Office of the Registrar. Time limits have been allotted for resolving grade problems. Spring and summer grades may not be changed after the last day of the following fall semester. Fall grades cannot be changed after the last day of the following spring semester. Once this time limit has passed, all INC and NR grades will convert to Fs. To view grades online: 1. Log in with your oneKey at www.pratt.edu/myPratt; 2. Click on “Academic Tools” on left side of page, and click “log in”; 3. After the system logs you in, click on the “Students” menu on the sidebar; 4. Choose from the options offered under “My Grades and Transcripts.” Final Grades, Grade Disputes, and Grade Appeal Policies All grades are final as assigned by the instructor. If a student feels that a grade received is an error, or that he or she was graded unfairly, it is the student’s responsibility to make prompt inquiry of the instructor after the grade has been issued. Should this procedure not prove to be an adequate resolution, the student should contact the chair of the department in which the course was taken to arrange a meeting and appeal the grade. If this appeal is unsuccessful, a further and final appeal can be made to the dean of the school in which the course was taken. It is important to note that the faculty member who issued the grade holds the authority to change the grade unless an appeal is granted by department chair or dean. If a grade is to be changed, the student must be sure that the change is submitted within the following semester. Petitions of change of any grade will be accepted only up to the last day of the semester following the one in which the grade was given. Other than resolution of an initially assigned

Registration and Academic Policies

GRADE POINT AVERAGE A student’s grade point average is calculated by dividing the total Grade Points received by the total Credits Earned. A Grade Point is computed by multiplying the Credits Attempted for each class by the Quality Points earned for completing that class. Only credits evaluated with letter grades that earn quality points (see table below) are used in GPA calculations. Each semester has a minimum length of 15 weeks. In courses that are passed, a credit is earned for each period of lecture or studio work, each week throughout one term or the equivalent. Quality Points A 4.00 B+ 3.30 C+ 2.30 D+ 1.30 A– 3.70 B 3.00 C 2.00 D 1.00 B– 2.70 C– 1.70 F 0.00 (If unresolved at the end of the following semester, INC = F = 0.00 and NR = F = 0.00) In the following example the GPA is 3.33: Grade = Quality Points × Credits Earned = Grade Points A = 4.00 × 3 = 12.00 B+ = 3.30 × 3 = 9.90 B– = 2.70 × 3 = 8.10 = 30.00 Total Grade Points ÷ Total Credits Attempted = Grade Points 30 ÷ 9 = 3.33 30 (total grade points) divided by 9 (total credits) makes a GPA of 3.33. INC (incomplete) and NR (no record) carry no numerical value for one semester after the grade is given. Thereafter, if unresolved, the INC and NR grades convert to an F and carry a numerical value of 0. The following grades do not carry numerical values and are never calculated in the GPA:

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P CR U WD AUD NCR IP

Pass Credit Unsatisfactory Withdrawal Audit No Credit In Progress

Final grades for credit transferred from other institutions to the student’s Pratt record are not computed in the GPA. ACADEMIC STANDING Pratt Institute’s policies on academic standing intend to ensure that all students receive timely notification when they are subject to academic discipline or achieve academic honors. Each student is responsible at all times for knowing his or her own standing. These standings are based on the published academic policies, regulations, and standards of the Institute. Students subject to academic discipline are encouraged to take advantage of support services available to them, including academic advisement, in an effort to help them meet Institute academic standards. All students’ records are reviewed at the end of each semester to determine whether any student who has failed to remain in good standing may continue in the program. Good Standing All graduate students must maintain a cumulative GPA of at least a 3.0 (equivalent of a B) to remain in good standing. A graduate student whose GPA falls below a 3.0 at any time may be subject to academic dismissal. The specific conditions under which this policy will be invoked are as set forth by the dean of each school. Written notification will be furnished to the student. Maximum Time for Graduate Study All work for the master’s degree should be completed within seven (7) calendar years from initial registration in graduate courses as a graduate student at Pratt Institute. The depart­ ments will not approve registration after seven years with­ out the written approval of the provost. DEGREE AUDITS Degree audits are computerized checklists of graduation requirements. These reports are similar to transcripts because they list all academic activity. They are different from transcripts, however, because they organize the coursework attempted into logical blocks that represent what is required. They also clearly flag what has been taken and what has yet to be taken.

Registration and Academic Policies

There Are Four Parts to an Audit: 1. Student Information The top of the first page lists the student’s name, the academic program being evaluated, the catalog year that the requirements are being checked against, and the student’s anticipated graduation date (based on the date of admission). This section may also contain one or many text messages specific to the student, depending on his or her status at Pratt. 2. Credit and GPA Information This area lists the total credits required for graduation, the number required to be taken at Pratt (residency), and the GPA required for graduation. 3. Required Course Information This section is usually the longest. It lists the entire range of requirements and electives specific to the academic program being evaluated. Fulfilled require­ ments will be listed with the grade earned (or CR for transfer credit). Missing requirements are also noted with credits needed. 4. Other Courses Courses that usually do not count toward a program’s requirements are listed in this bottom section. Some­ times a course will not count toward graduation because it was dropped, or carries a grade that makes it ineligible for consideration, such as an F or an INC. Also, some students choose to take an extra class for additional knowledge even though it doesn’t fulfill any particular degree requirement. How to Get a Copy of a Degree Audit Students may view or print an audit at any time using their Academic Tools. 1. Log in with your oneKey at www.pratt.edu/myPratt; 2. Click on “Academic Tools” on left side of page, and click “log in”; 3. After the system logs you in, click on the “Students” menu on the sidebar; 4. Click on “Degree Audit” under “Course Planning”; 5. In order to review an audit for the current academic program (major), click appropriate radio button. In order to see what the results would look like in a different program, use the drop-down list of majors next to Evaluate New Program to select a potential major to review. Students may go online and receive a degree audit at any time. If you do not have a computer or access to a computer lab, come to the Office of the Registrar. Students who have questions about how to read the audit should visit their academic adviser’s office or stop

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by the Office of the Registrar during office hours for an explanation. Thesis Enrollment Thesis must be completed within three years, the duration of which equals the initial semester of thesis registration plus five (5) consecutive semesters of Thesis in Progress. Grad­ uate students must register without interruption and pay the Institute’s tuition and fees for each additional semester of continued thesis work following the initial semester of thesis registration. Any extension beyond the three-year duration is subject to an acceptable demon­stration of extenuating circumstances from the candidate and a written approval from the department chair and the dean. First Registered Thesis Credit Semester Graduate students will register for their thesis course. If the student does not complete the thesis by the end of that first semester, completion of the thesis is pending and the student will receive an IP (In Progress) grade. The student must enroll in Thesis in Progress the following semester. Subsequent Semesters of Thesis in Progress Registration for Thesis in Progress must be made for each consecutive semester following enrollment in Thesis. A student is expected to complete his or her thesis within the next five consecutive semesters. If at the end of five semesters the thesis is still pending completion, the student will be withdrawn from the original Thesis course. Re-enrol­l­ment in the Thesis course will only take place with the written permission of the department chair. Certification of Enrollment for Registered Thesis Work For certification purposes, Pratt considers students taking Thesis or Thesis in Progress to be full-time. Thesis Submission and Final Grade Students should refer to the latest version of the Graduate Theses Library Guidelines, available at the Pratt Library. Questions concerning organization and formatting of mat­ erials should be discussed with the Information/Reference department of the Pratt Library before final typing. Graduation Summer Term/October Fall Term/February Spring Term/May

File on or before: September 15 January 15 June 1

Students must submit their own thesis in person, unless it is submitted by a representative from the academic department.

Registration and Academic Policies

For the Pratt Libraries to accept a thesis submittal after the deadline date, a Late Thesis Submittal Permission form must be submitted to the Library. The form is available at the Library Reference desk. The department chair’s signature is required to allow a late thesis submission. Thesis and Thesis in Progress are graded IP. Thesis will remain IP until the thesis adviser assigns a final grade upon completion of the thesis project. A failing grade may be assigned if the student fails to remain in proper progress or communication, or fails to complete a satisfactory thesis. ACADEMIC INTEGRITY STANDARDS At Pratt, students, faculty, and staff do creative and original work. This is one of our community values. For Pratt to be a space where everyone can freely create, our community must adhere to the highest standards of academic integrity. Academic integrity at Pratt means using your own and original ideas in creating academic work. It also means that if you use the ideas or influence of others in your work, you must acknowledge them. At Pratt we do our own work, we are creative, and we give credit where it is due. Based on our value of academic integrity, Pratt has an Academic Integrity Standing Committee (AISC) that is charged with educating faculty, staff, and students about academic integrity practices. Whenever possible, we strive to resolve alleged infractions at the most local level possible, such as between student and professor, or within a department or school. When necessary, members of this committee will form an Academic Integrity Hearing Board. Such boards may hear cases regarding cheating, plagiarism, and other infractions described below; these infractions can be grounds for citation, sanction, or dismissal. Academic Integrity Code When students submit any work for academic credit, they make an implicit claim that the work is wholly their own, completed without the assistance of any unauthorized person. These works include, but are not limited to exams, quizzes, presentations, papers, projects, studio work, and other assignments and assessments. In addition, no student shall prevent another student from making their work. Students may study, collaborate and work together on assignments at the discretion of the instructor. Examples of infractions include but are not limited to: 1. Plagiarism, defined as using the exact language or a close paraphrase of someone else’s ideas without citation. 2. Violations of fair use, including the unauthorized and uncited use of another’s artworks, images, designs, etc.

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3. The supplying or receiving of completed work including papers, projects, outlines, artworks, designs, prototypes, models, or research for submission by any person other than the author. 4. The unauthorized submission of the same or essentially the same piece of work for credit in two different classes. 5. The unauthorized supplying or receiving of information about the form or content of an examination. 6. The supplying or receiving of partial or complete answers, or suggestions for answers; or the supplying or receiving of assistance in interpretation of questions on any examination from any source not explicitly authorized. (This includes copying or reading of another student’s work or consultation of notes or other sources during an examination.) For academic support, students are encouraged to seek assistance from the Writing and Tutorial Center, Pratt Libraries, or consult with an academic advisor about other support resources. GRADUATION AND DEGREES Degrees are conferred by the Institute upon the recom­ mendation of the dean and faculty of the various schools. This is done three times a year: October 1 (summer term), February 1 (fall term), and June 1 (spring term). Commencement Ceremony One commencement ceremony is held each year at the end of the spring semester. Students who successfully complete their studies in October or February are invited to attend the ceremony that is held following their graduation. Students who anticipate a summer/October completion date should attend the ceremony that is held the May following their graduation. Students who will graduate in summer/October and cannot attend com­ mence­ment the following spring may apply for Permission to Walk in May Commencement in the Registrar’s Office. Their names will not appear in the commencement program, nor will they receive their diplomas early. Attend­ ance at commencement does not guarantee graduation from the Institute. Graduation with Honors To be graduated with distinction, a graduate student must have earned a final cumulative GPA no lower than 3.850 in all work. To be considered for distinction, a student must have completed a minimum of 50 percent of degree credits at Pratt. These credits must be in semesters evaluated with a GPA.

Registration and Academic Policies

Graduation Procedures To be eligible for a degree, the student must satisfy all Institute, school, and department requirements as stated in the student’s degree audit. Where applicable, students must also meet specific academic require­ ments concerning prerequisites, course sequences, or program options as posted by academic departments. Application for Graduation Students wishing to be considered for graduation must file a Graduation Application. The application is available to the students in myPratt. Applications must be filed on or before the following deadlines: Graduation Summer Term/October Fall Term/February Spring Term/May

File on or before: March 25 August 25 December 15

Using the application, candidates indicate: 1. Their anticipated graduation term. 2. The exact spelling and punctuation of their name as it is to appear on the diploma. 3. Their hometown and state/country as it is to appear in the commencement program. 4. The Diploma Mailing Address to be used to mail diplomas. Information can be updated before the application deadline by simply filling out and submitting the graduation application again. If the candidate is not cleared for the announced graduation, a new application must be filed for each subsequently requested graduation. Only after the application has been submitted to the Office of the Registrar will the candidate’s name be placed on a tenta­ tive graduation list. At that time, the graduation review is scheduled. Graduation Requirements Final graduation requirements include the following: 1. Grade Requirements Graduate students must be in good standing, with a cumulative GPA of at least 3.0. In courses constituting the student’s major as formally specified in advance by his or her departmental chair, the student must have received a grade of B or better in each or have a cumulative index in these courses of at least 3.0. Any outstanding INC, NG, or NR grades from any previous semester(s) that are pending resolution must be resolved. Failure to do so will result in removal from the graduation list. When final grades are reported for the last term of active registration, any reported INC or

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NR grade for a graduation candidate will automatically remove the candidate from the graduation list. Students who have been removed from consideration must complete a new application for graduation in order to be considered for another graduation date. 2. Curriculum Requirements Each student must fulfill all require­ments for graduation. No credits required for graduation will be waived. All requests for an exception to this rule must be referred to the dean’s office for consideration. A course require­ ment in a student’s major may be substituted by the department chair/adviser of the department in which the student is enrolled; however, another course in the same subject area must be taken. 3. Residency Requirements Thesis work must be registered at the Institute. The minimum residency requirement at Pratt for the master’s degree is 24 credits. In most cases transferred credit does not exceed 25 percent of the total credits required. The Professional Master of Architecture program permits up to 33 percent of the total credits required. 4. Master’s Thesis/e-Portfolio A thesis or e-portfolio is required in many of the master’s degree programs. Each student is held respons­ible for meeting the precise requirements of his or her school. Thesis candidates should obtain the latest edition of Regulations Concerning the Deposit of Master’s Thesis in the Pratt Institute Library and sample pages from their respective departments. CHANGES TO THIS BULLETIN While every effort has been made to make the material presented in this Bulletin timely and accurate, the Institute reserves the right to periodically update and otherwise change any material, including faculty listings, course offerings, policies, and procedures, without reprinting or amending this Bulletin.

Registration and Academic Policies

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Student Affairs

Life at Pratt Institute can be intense. Often students need assistance to cope with challenges encountered at Pratt and in the city of New York. The staff members of the Office of Student Affairs are able and willing to help each student in as many ways as necessary and possible to make meeting these challenges a positive experience. The Office of Student Affairs is also home to the Center for Equity and Inclusion, dedicated to creating a welcoming and safe environment where diversity, in all its many forms, is valued and celebrated. The Office of Student Affairs is located on the ground floor of the Main Building and can be found on the web at www.pratt.edu/student-life/student-affairs. Student Affairs also has an office in Room 207A on the Pratt Manhattan campus. Specific hours and services provided are posted there and on the Student Affairs website. STUDENT INVOLVEMENT Director Emma Legge Associate Director Meredith Klauss Associate Director Alex Ullman Assistant Director Colby Sim Office Manager Karen Smith

Vice President Helen Matusow-Ayres Assistant Vice President of Student Affairs and Title IX Coordinator Esmilda Abreu Assistant Director of Special Projects for Equity and Inclusion Jazmin Peralta Administrative Assistant Nadine Shuler Office Tel: 718.636.3639 Fax: 718.399.4239 studaff@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/student-affairs

Office Tel: 718.636.3422 studentactivities@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/involvement The Office of Student Involvement coordinates and assists students in planning social, cultural, educational, and recreational programs. Student activities at Pratt are planned to contribute to each student’s total education, as well as to meet social and recreational needs. Students are responsible for managing their own group activities, thus gaining experience in community and social affairs and playing a role in shaping Institute policy. Students are represented on Institute decision-making bodies such as the Board of Trustees, trustee committees, and the Student Judiciary. The main functions of the Department of Student Involvement are:

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ll Allocating and administering the funds collected through the student activity fee; ll Overseeing the Student Union complex; ll Programming of student activities; ll Promoting leadership and professional development. New Student Orientation New student orientation is an exciting time at Pratt. In order to acclimate to campus, graduate students have a one-day orientation during the week before classes begin. Brooklyn campus students attend orientation on that campus, while students attending Pratt Manhattan will attend orientation at 14th Street. Graduate student socials will be held on both campuses that week. Graduate students are invited to attend any and all other programs happening that week, including the Broadway show and the baseball game. However, there is no requirement to attend those events. Detailed information will be sent to new students beginning in June. The orientation program is staffed by an exemplary group of student leaders who assist new students in many ways. Parent and Family Programs The mission of Parent and Family Programs at Pratt is to provide parents with the resources to support and encourage the success of their Pratt students. Pratt Institute recognizes that parents are valuable members of the Pratt community and have much to contribute to Pratt. We encourage parent involvement in the Pratt comm­unity. We offer programs for parents including Parent Orientation, our annual Family Weekend, and a parent blog. For further information, please contact our office by calling 718.636.3422 or emailing family@pratt.edu. STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS Student Government Association The Student Government Association’s (SGA) primary re­spon­ s­ibility is to represent the student body’s interests and to encourage students’ involvement in the life of the Institute. The SGA has an executive committee in which under­ graduate and graduate students are encouraged to become involved. The SGA can be reached by calling 718.399.4468 or by emailing sga@pratt.edu. ACTIVE ORGANIZATIONS Cultural ll Bako Tribe ll Black Lives Matter

Student Affairs

ll ll ll ll ll ll

Chinese Student Scholars Association Korean Student Association Pratt International Student Association Queer Pratt South Asian Student Association Turkish Student Association

ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll

Special Interest 16mm Film Club Anime Club Ceramics Club Comic Club Compassionate Pratt Drawing Club Envirolutions Founders Entrepreneurship Club Games Club Insurgent Poet Society Latin American Architecture Club Magazine Club Pratt Cosplay Club Pratt DO (IDSA student chapter) Pratt Feminists Pratt Film Cult Reef Club Strive Student Mentors Weightlifting Club Women Writers of Color

ll ll ll ll ll ll

Student Media Belvedere—Journal of Art History The Prattler—Student Newspaper Prattonia—Yearbook Static Fish—Comic Book Ubiquitous—Arts and Literary Magazine WPIR—Pratt Radio

ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll

Professional and Academic American Institute of Architecture Students Art and Design Educators Association for Information Science and Technology Chinese Fashion Club of Fashion ComD Agency Diversity Initiatives Group Graduate ComD History of Art and Design Student Association Jewelry Club Keyframe Animation Club Leadership in Environmental Advocacy and Policy Painting Club

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ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll ll

Photo League Pratt Artists League Pratt Historical Preservation Organization Pratt Institute Planning Student Association Pressure Printmaking School of Information Student Association Sculpture Club Special Archivists’ Association Special Libraries Association Type Directors Club User Experience/Information Architecture

Associate Director for Housing Administration Tuan Vu Assistant Director, North Campus Christopher Ruggieri Assistant Director, South Campus Kim Mortreuil Assistant Director, Housing Jason LeConey

Greek Letter Organizations ll Inter-Greek Council (Fraternity/Sorority Governing Body) ll Kappa Sigma Fraternity ll Pi Sigma Chi Fraternity ll Sigma Sigma Sigma Sorority ll Theta Phi Alpha Sorority

ll ll ll ll

Administrative Assistant Lillian Jennas Receptionist Steven Spavento Office Tel: 718.399.4550 reslife@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/reslife

Religious and Spiritual Art/Faith Collective Jewish Student Union Newman Club Remnant Christian Fellowship

Community Engagement Board Also known as C-Board, these students are dedicated to giving back to their communities, both local and global. Program Board The Program Board is a group of students who plan many on- and off-campus events. CAMPUS MINISTRY The chapel, one of the central spaces on campus, is the setting for meditation and for interdenominational and denominational rites to celebrate important events of the campus community. Currently, services are offered on a regular basis for those who are Jewish, Catholic, and Protestant (in English and Korean). Any group wishing to use the chapel may contact the director of Student Involvement; the only requirement is respect for the space and its purpose. RESIDENTIAL LIFE AND HOUSING Director Christopher Kasik Associate Director Katherine Hale

Student Affairs

The mission of Residential Life and Housing is to efficiently and effectively administer a housing program in a learningcentered environment that supports students while challenging them to: ll Enhance self-understanding; ll Value community responsibility; ll Learn from their experiences. Residential Life and Housing holds the belief that student development and learning goes on outside the classroom, as well as inside the classroom. The policies, procedures, and programs that are established and encouraged by Residential Life and Housing are those that enhance student learning and involvement outside the classroom. The office takes very seriously its role as guarantor of a residence-hall atmosphere conducive to work and study. We also strive to provide an atmosphere in which students are encouraged to make informed decisions on their own, take responsibility for their actions, and learn from their experiences. Leadership development opportunities are offered to students in the residence halls through participation in Residence Hall Councils, the Residence Hall Advisery Committee (a student advisery committee to Residential Life and Housing), Sustainability Reps, Dining Services Reps, and the Connections Leadership class. The Residential Life staff wants to provide a memorable, enjoyable, and successful academic year, but reminds

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students that we are jointly responsible for the success of this experience. Through participation, cooperation, understanding, and communication, all can enjoy the time spent in the residence halls at Pratt Institute. Residential Life and Housing at Pratt Institute is based on a specific set of values. These values guide the expect­ ations the office has for itself and for the students who reside on campus and extend to the residence halls in many direct ways. They are: ll Personal rights and responsibilities ll Integrity ll Respect ll Fairness and justice ll Open communication ll Involvement The educational mission of Pratt Institute is actively pursued in the residence halls. An expected outcome of the on-campus experience is to have students learn to cope and deal with problems that arise. Though this is not always an easy task, if a student is able to learn from an adverse situation, the goal has been achieved. Along with this is the ability for students to take responsibility for their choices and behaviors. If students make inappro­ priate choices, they should expect to be held accountable. The hope is that a different choice will be made the next time, more in keeping with the community expectations set forth. The Residence Halls Pratt Institute maintains two residence halls to accom­ modate graduate students. The focus of our residential life program is on providing a comfortable yet challenging environment in which students will become integral members of the campus community. This is fostered by educational approaches and programming. Pratt residence halls offer a variety of housing options, including rooms with and without kitchens, doubles, and singles. Pratt also offers campus meal plans for students who like the convenience of eating on campus. Grand Avenue Residence Grand Avenue Residence can accommodate 50+ students, graduates and undergraduates, in a variety apartment layouts. A “double efficiency” apartment is two students sharing a one-room apartment (with kitchen and bath). A “shared single” room for graduate students is two or more students, each with their own private bedroom, sharing involves two students sharing a one-room efficiency apartment. Our single efficiency is a smaller efficiency apart­ment that one student occupies. Both of

Student Affairs

these options include a bathroom and kitchen, within the confines of the apartment. The single with shared bath involves each student having a private bedroom, with a shared kitchen and bath. The building is located one block from campus. Each living room is furnished with a sofa, club chair, coffee table, kitchen table, and chairs. Utilities are included, with the exception of telephone. Internet connections and CATV service are provided. The building offers a garden courtyard, laundry facilities, and lounge areas. The Townhouses Pratt Institute’s newest and most exciting housing option, the Townhouses are remodeled historic row houses located near the center of campus. Six students reside in each house in single rooms on three floors. Each house is coed and offers a full kitchen, living room, parlor, backyard area, and basement. Each room is provided with the standard campus furniture (bed, armoire, dressers, desk, chair, and bookshelf). Amenities include CATV and Internet access. Preference for this housing option, which accommodates 120 upperclass students, is given to juniorand senior-level students. Willoughby Residence Hall Willoughby Residence Hall is a 17-story former apart­ment co-op and is the largest residence hall. It accom­modates about 900 upperclass and graduate students. The build­ ing houses offices (Residential Life and Housing, Health and Counseling, and the Learning/Access Center) as well as a student workroom, TV lounge, convenience store, laundry facilities, and other common student lounge areas. Suites are single-sex, but floors are coed. Rooms vary in size from 9 x 12 feet to 15 x 18 feet. In addition to the standard furniture, all suites have a kitchen table, stove, and refrigerator. Each resident is provided with a bookcase. All students assigned to double, triple, and single spaces will share kitchen and bathroom facilities with other residents of the suite. The converted apart­ments consist of at least one double or triple that occupies the former living room space of the apartment and at least one private single room that occupies the former bedroom space of the apartment. The number of students residing in a given suite usually ranges from three to six students (depending upon the size of the converted apartment—one-bedroom, two-bedroom, or threebedroom). Willoughby Residence Hall remains open all year. However, residents on certain floors might have to relocate to different floors during the summer months for the purpose of maintenance and upkeep. To accom­ modate additional graduate students, select double

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rooms are converted to semiprivate single spaces. Each semiprivate space occupies the former living room space of the apartment, is occupied by only one student, and shares kitchen and bathroom facilities with other private single rooms in the apartment. The semiprivate option is only available to graduate students and on an as-needed basis.

Graduate students may opt for a meal plan. Details are provided in the Enrollment Guide and are available from the Office of Residential Life and Housing.

Room Assignment Upon acceptance to the Institute, students are sent an Accepted Student Guide, which includes an application and a brochure describing each housing option. Students are assigned rooms in the order their applications are received. Space is limited, and students are advised to return their completed applications as soon as possible. Assignment notifications are made in June. Students who have not applied by April 15 can anticipate being assigned only if and when space becomes available. All correspondence should be addressed to:

Associate Director for Intercollegiate Athletics/Compliance Coordinator Ryan McCarthy

Residential Life and Housing 215 Willoughby Avenue Brooklyn, NY 11205 reslife@pratt.edu

Assistant Director for Recreation/Head Coach, Men’s and Women’s Soccer Jonas Worth Assistant Director for Events and Facilities/Head Coach, Women’s Basketball Sade Jackson Recreation Coordinator/Head Coach, Men’s and Women’s Cross Country and Track and Field Ezra Kwong

Room Rates—Graduate Options Room rates vary according to the type of accommodation. Typical costs for each residence hall for an academic year are as follows: Grand Avenue $11,600 (double studio) $16,200 (single w/shared bath) $19,550 (studio single) The Townhouses $10,800 (single w/shared bath) Willoughby Hall $11,200 (semiprivate single) $11,500 (single w/shared bath) $12,000 (single w/private bath) Meal Plan In an effort to ensure that students receive options for meeting proper daily nutritional requirements, Pratt Institute offers its students a number of meal plans. The meal plans are designed on a debit card system; the student’s meal plan points decrease as he or she purchases items in the main dining room, convenience store, or pizza shop. A meal plan point equals $1.

Student Affairs

ATHLETICS AND RECREATION Director Walter Rickard

Administrative Secretary Linda Rouse Office Tel: 718.636.3773  |  Fax: 718.636.3772 www.pratt.edu/athletics The Activities Resource Center (ARC) houses a 325 x 130-foot athletic area, the largest enclosed clear-span facilitiy in Brooklyn aside from the newly constructed Barclays Center. The complex includes five regulation-size tennis courts, two volleyball courts, and an NCAA basketball court. The ARC provides 650 bleacher seats for inter­ collegiate basketball, volleyball, the Colgate Women’s Games, and other spectator sports events. This enclosed area has a seating capacity for up to 1,000 people for special events. The four-lane, 200-meter indoor track completely encircles the athletic court areas. There are full locker room facilities with saunas for men and women. The second floor houses a fully equipped and newly renovated weight and fitness room, a dance studio, and administrative offices. Recreational and intramural activities are scheduled throughout the year in conjunction with PrattFit program­ ming and range from individual and team sports to special events. Men’s intercollegiate athletics teams include basketball, cross-country, indoor and outdoor track and

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field, tennis, and volleyball. Women’s teams include basketball, cross-country, indoor and outdoor track and field, tennis, and volleyball. Pratt Institute is a member of the Hudson Valley Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and fields a total of 14 teams. CAREER AND PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT Director Rhonda Schaller Associate Directors Carl Fengler Hera Marashian Assistant Directors Karen Rose Cover Deborah Yanagisawa Communications Manager Robert Carabay Career Development and Industry Relations Coordinator Alex Fisher Office Tel: 718.636.3506 career@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/ccpd The Center for Career and Professional Development (CCPD) is the starting point for students to learn about themselves and their options in the world of work. We guide students through self-exploration assessments, research in emerging trends and career opportunities, and teach students to navi­gate the path from college to career with clarity, confi­dence, and a lifetime of support. The CCPD augments Pratt’s state-of-the-art curriculum offerings with personal and professional development planning, career and intern­ship advising, industry mentor­ ing, goal setting through mind­fulness and mind mapping, profes­sional development resources, work­shops, and entrepreneurial education. We combine an excellent academic creative experience with a lifetime job and career transition support system. CCPD staff stay abreast of changing trends and employer needs, maintain relationships with employers and internship providers nationally and internationally, and offer curated career fairs and networking events, portfolio reviews, and site visits so employers can recruit from the talented Pratt community year round.

Student Affairs

CCPD advisers work with students on résumés, cover letters, portfolio reviews, mock interviews, and basic and advanced personal and professional develop­ment action plans. We guide students through their internship and job search, implementation of freelance and studio practices, and entrepreneurial and small business planning. Extended support is offered in the areas of Fulbright grants, exhibition submissions, fellowships, and residencies. The CCPD provides: ll Professional Development Programming Industry speakers and recruiters come to campus every semester. We offer workshops, panels, lectures, opportunity fairs, and networking events where students can meet alumni and industry professionals, and gain tools to create a life and career plan. Guest speakers cover topics that relate to careers in creative industries, review portfolios, and hold interview sessions and discussions on topics such as big data and high‑value innovation. ll Individual and Group Career Advising Career advising is available to Pratt students and alumni for life. ll Entrepreneurship and Business Planning The CCPD has developed resources to help students and alumni build skills and strategies to become successful entrepreneurs and small business owners. The Meditation Incubator project utilizes contemp­lative practices in personal and professional develop­ment and teaches participants to apply meditation, mindfulness, and visualization tools to deepen their creative process and to use as a career-building and planning tool. The CCPD develops and provides resources that help students and alumni pursue entrepreneurship, intrapreneurship, and business development. CCPD also launched an intensive training program based on the lean launch pad method for aspiring entrepreneurs, culminating in a pitch competition, and introduced a weekly co-working space for budding student entrepreneurs. ll Industry Outreach and Pratt Pro Job Board The CCPD manages the Pratt Pro job board, on which thousands of new positions are posted each year. We perform outreach to employers around the world, developing a pipeline to help move Pratt students and alumni into their job openings. We visit studios and organize firm trips for students so that they can learn about the latest industry trends. Pratt Institute hosts numerous portfolio reviews and thesis exhibitions of current and graduating students’ work, including multiple end-of-year events highlighting the best work

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of the graduating class. Each year, the CCPD hosts opportunity fairs, roundtable discussions, and creativecareer conferences with visiting partners, recruiters, and industry leaders. All of our programs are developed to educate students and alumni as well as provide networking opportunities with the creative professional community. ll Online Resources and Online Portfolio The CCPD professional staff have developed a career blog and online resource lists for all majors located at ccpd.pratt.edu. Alumni stories, events, and links to social media are located here. CCPD staff help students publish their portfolios and develop their online presence. Pratt Institute and the CCPD partnered with Behance to launch “Pratt Institute Portfolios” at portfolios.pratt.edu. Students can promote their work under the Pratt brand with the Behance platform. “Pratt Institute Portfolios” reaches a wide audience of industry professionals on the lookout for the best creative talent.

To make an appointment or to learn the dates of the next internship information session, contact career@pratt.edu or call 718.636.3506.

The staff of the CCPD welcomes your questions. To make an appointment or to find out how the CCPD can help you, contact career@pratt.edu or call 718.636.3506.

Office Tel: 718.802.3123 | Fax: 718.399.4544 lac@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/LAC

Pratt Institute Internship Program Internships are learning experiences in the workplace that relate to students’ majors or professional pursuits. Interns are able to take the skills and theories learned in the class­room and apply them to real-life work experience. Graduate internships play a crucial role in developing skills and offering professional perspectives. An internship at Pratt is an academic opportunity available to full-time matriculated students every semester, including summer semester. For more information about internships, students should speak to their department chair. You may also visit www.pratt.edu/career and click on “Students and Alumni,” then “Internship Program.” Some key components of a Pratt Internship: ll The experience is a full semester. ll The experience can be paid or unpaid. ll Internships are available to all domestic, international, and transfer students during their time at Pratt. ll Internship credits vary from 0 to 3 credits based on individual departmental policy. Students are required to attend one of the internship information sessions offered throughout the year in the CCPD to learn more about the internship program, how to begin an internship search, and how to find departmental eligibility information.

Student Affairs

LEARNING/ACCESS CENTER Director Elisabeth Sullivan esulliv5@pratt.edu Learning Specialist Maegan D’Amato, L.C.S.W. mdamato@pratt.edu Learning Specialist Anna Lewis Riquier, L.M.H.C. ariquier@pratt.edu Assistant to the Director Marie A. McLaughlin mmclaug3@pratt.edu

The Learning/Access Center (formerly the Disability Resource Center) facilitates full access so that all students can freely and actively participate in all facets of Pratt life. The L/AC collaborates to provide Institute-wide advise­ment and consultation on disability-related matters (including legal compliance and universal design) and provides individual services and tools to facilitate diverse learning styles and accommodations in a sustainable, inclusive manner. Students come to Pratt from varying academic backgrounds, and students’ learning needs also vary. The L/AC has staff and tools available to help all Pratt students who are working toward academic success. To that end, at the L/AC, students can meet with staff, explore assistive technology, and take part in student success program­ ming. Additionally, the L/AC offers short-term, one-on-one meetings to help students struggling with academic dif­fi­culties. If it is determined that further evaluation is necessary to test for the presence of learning disabilities or psychological or psychiatric conditions, the L/AC can help students with securing referrals. Additionally, the L/AC coordinates access for students with disabilities. Students with disabilities can enroll with the L/AC to determine and receive reasonable accom­ modations for classroom, housing, and other campus

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settings. The L/AC maintains confidential records of docu­ mentation of disability for all current and prospective Pratt students who identify as having disabilities, including learning disorders, AD/HD, psychological/psychiatric conditions, chronic illnesses, physical/mobility conditions, blindness, low vision, hearing loss, and temporary dis­ abilities. After meeting with the student and conducting a review of the documentation and individualized student needs, the L/AC determines and coordinates individualized academic accommodations, including but not limited to extended test time, distraction-reduced exam setting, sign language interpreting, etc. The L/AC also arranges auxiliary aids for students, such as FM Units, assistive learning software, and books in alternative formats. The L/AC assists students in connecting with helpful Institute resources, advocates for students, and collaborates with campus department administrators regarding specific student needs, including psychological support, special housing, and dietary needs. Meeting with L/AC staff to privately discuss your academic experiences is the first step in the process of developing a support plan, regardless of what academic or access issues exist. We encourage you to contact the L/AC to speak further with staff about our services and how we may assist you. To schedule an appointment, please email the L/AC at lac@pratt.edu or call 718.802.3123.

Director for Counseling Services TBD Nurse Practitioner/Associate Director for Health Services Debbie Scott, A.R.N.P.-B.C., F.N.P. dscott2@pratt.edu

Staff Counselors Inez Strama, Psy.D. istrama@pratt.edu Althea Maduramente, Ph.D. amaduram@pratt.edu Assistant Director for Counseling and Staff Counselor TBD

Student Affairs

Case Manager and Staff Counselor Hali Brindel, L.C.S.W. hbrindel@pratt.edu Assitant to the Director for Health Services Clarissa Liu cliu21@pratt.edu Nurses Christine Susca, R.N. csusca@pratt.edu Tamara Holness, L.P.N. tholness@pratt.edu Administrative Aides Giovanni Glaize gglaize@pratt.edu Sandra Davis sdavis@pratt.edu Office Tel: 718.399.4542  |  Fax: 718.399.4544 health@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/health

HEALTH AND COUNSELING Director for Health Services Martha Cedarholm, A.R.N.P.-B.C., F.N.P. mcedarho@pratt.edu

Nurse Practitioner TBD

Clinical AOD Services Coordinator Jernee Montoya, L.C.S.W. jmontoya@pratt.edu

Health and Counseling operates both by appointment and as a walk-in clinic. All care provided is strictly confidential, and information about care remains separate from a student’s academic and social conduct record. The office is open on weekdays from 9 AM to 5 PM, with the last appointments made at 4 PM. Check the website for up-to-date information about hours and services. The medical staff includes the director, who is a family nurse practitioner; two nurse practitioners; a physician attending the clinic once a week during the academic year; and two registered nurses. Services provided include treatment of illnesses; first aid for injuries; physicals, including sports and women’s health examinations; health education; and medical testing. Pregnancy testing is performed in the office for free; however, other tests are sent to a laboratory service, which will bill the student or the student’s insurance provider. Some commonly used medications (over-the-counter and prescription) are dispensed for free or for a nominal

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fee. Students must purchase all other medication at a pharm­acy. Referrals are made to local medical resources for care not provided on campus.* The counseling staff includes clinical psychologists, clinical social workers, and a consulting psychiatrist who are each available by appointment to meet with students. Students may receive counseling on a short-term basis for personal, emotional, family, interpersonal, and situational problems. Consultation is available on campus, and referrals for specialty services can be made. Since Health and Counseling is not designed to meet the total health care needs of students, referrals are sometimes made to outside clinics and agencies. The staff is committed to helping students find the best source of health care at the lowest cost. Hospital and medical care beyond that provided by Health and Counseling is the financial responsibility of the student and his or her family. For this purpose, Pratt Institute requires all students to carry health and accident insurance. Students are automatically enrolled in a health and accident insurance plan. They may waive this insur­ ance fee, which will be deducted from their bill, by providing insurance information in the online student insurance system, Aetna Student Health, prior to the waiver deadline. This deadline always falls on the same day as the last day to drop or add courses for the semester. All students who were born after January 1, 1957 must provide proof of immunity against measles, mumps, and rubella. New York State law requires written docu­ment­ation of two measles-mumps-rubella vaccines or written docu­ment­ation of immunity to these diseases proved by a blood test. Students are absolutely required to have written documentation in order to attend classes. Immunization against meningococcal meningitis is strongly recommended for students planning to live in on-campus housing. A complete medical history and a comprehensive physical examination are also required for all new students.

SEVIS Coordinator Elizabeth Mallard International Student Adviser Emilie Buse Receptionist Zoila Dennigan Office Tel: 718.636.3674 oia@pratt.edu www.pratt.edu/oia The Office of International Affairs (OIA) welcomes approxi­ mately 650 new International students each year. There are currently about 1,600 international students from 80 countries, and 30% of Pratt’s enrolled students are international. Thirty percent (30%) of Pratt’s enrolled students are inter­national. In addition to providing services to the international students, the OIA takes care of J-1 exchange visitors, including inbound exchange students, professors, and scholars. The OIA is the office in charge of keeping Pratt in compliance with the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of State. The well-traveled and experienced staff members are here to help students make a successful transition to the Pratt community and help address some of the challenges that students might encounter during their academic program. They create a friendly environment, providing direct support with immigration issues, employment authorization, personal issues, and crosscultural events. The OIA advises the Pratt International Student Association (PISA), which is open for all to join. * Numerous and varied resources are available at the Health and Counseling page of the Pratt website at www.pratt.edu/health. †N ew York State does not require this vaccine but does require a signed acknowledgment of receipt and review of vaccine information.

INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS Director L. Jane Bush Associate Director Saundra Hampton Assistant Director Mia Schleifer

Student Affairs

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Libraries

Director Russell S. Abell Head of Public Services Lore Guilmartin Head of Technical Services John A. Maier Library Services Coordinator, Manhattan Campus Jean Hines Evening and Weekend Library Manager Elizabeth Berg Visual and Multimedia Resources Director Chris Arabadjis Visual Resources Curator Johanna Bauman

Pratt Libraries are dedicated to an active partnership in the academic process. The Libraries’ primary mission is to support the Institute’s academic programs by providing materials and information services to students, faculty, staff, alumni, and visiting scholars. A state-of-the-art integrated library system interfaces with an up-to-date website providing broad access to electronic materials as well as information about the Libraries. Connect to the Libraries’ website and catalog at library.pratt.edu. The collection at the Brooklyn Campus Library provides broad-based coverage of the history, theory, criticism, and practice of architecture, fine arts, and design, while also supporting the liberal arts and sciences. The collection encompasses over 200,000 monographs and bound periodicals and also maintains 776 current periodical descriptions. The Libraries also provide students access to 38 online resources and electronic periodical indexes. Through these resources over 11,474 full‑text periodical titles are accessible. The Brooklyn Campus Library houses micro-film, multimedia, rare books, and the college archives. Visual and Multimedia Resources has a collection of DVDs, VHS tapes, and 16mm films. The department also circulates cameras, projectors, light kits, audio recorders, and a half-dozen laptops. The Visual Resources Center holds a collection of 35mm slides and provides access to over 1.3 million images through ARTstor. Comfortable reading and study spaces are available in this New York City landmark building on the Brooklyn campus. The Pratt Manhattan Library holds more than 17,024 monographs, subscribes to over 170 current periodicals, and maintains a small fiction collection. The book and periodical collection provides support for the following programs: Graduate Communications Design, Information and Library Science, Creative Arts Therapy, Facilities/ Construction Management, Historic Preservation, Arts and Cultural Management, AOS/AAS Program, Design Management, and Continuing and Professional Studies. Librarians at both facilities offer instructional programs to help patrons use information resources more effect­ ively. Other services offered throughout the year include orientation, individualized instruction, information literacy instruction, and research assistance and referrals to other libraries in the metropolitan area. All of the Library units are dedicated not only to providing access to information, but to assisting inform­ ation seekers in developing successful strategies to locate, evaluate, and employ information to meet a full range of needs. The Pratt Institute Libraries are members of ConnectNY, a consortium of libraries serving 20 prestigious independ­ ent academic institutions in New York State. From the

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library online catalogue, Pratt students can easily access an impressive collection of ebooks and request over 10 million print books from the college and university libraries of Adelphi, Bard, Canisius, Colgate University, Hamilton, Hobart & William Smith Colleges, Le Moyne, Medaille, Pace University, Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Rochester Insitute of Technoloy, St. Lawrence University, Siena, Skidmore, Union College, the U.S. Military Academy, and Vassar College.

Association of College and Research Libraries; Reference and User Services Association; and Art Libraries Society of North America.

LIBRARY FACULTY Cheryl M. Costello Assistant Professor/Art and Architecture Librarian B.A., M.S., Library and Information Science, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign; curator of exhibit, La Gazette du Bon Ton: Art Deco Fashion Plates from 1913 to 1922, at the Pratt Library; published in ARLIS/NA reviews; peer reviewer for Art Documentation; professional organization memberships include American Association of Museums, Art Libraries Society of New York, Art Libraries Society of North America; awarded the Celine Palatsky Travel Award for the Art Libraries Society of North America annual conference 2008. Maggie Portis Assistant Professor/Art and Architecture Librarian B.A., University of Texas at Austin; M.S. LIS, The Palmer School, Long Island University; professional organization memberships include ARLIS/NA and ARLIS/VRA. Paul Schlotthauer Associate Professor/Librarian and Archivist B.S., Gettysburg College; M.M., Indiana University; M.L.S., St. John’s University; publications include “Pratt Institute: A Historical Snapshot of Campus and Area” in Digitization in the Real World: Lessons Learned from Small and Medium-Sized Digitization Projects; professional organ­ ization memberships include the Association of American Archivists, Mid-Atlantic Regional Archives Conference, Archivists Round Table of Metropolitan New York, New York Library Club (board member), American Library Association, Association of College and Research Libraries, American Association of Museums. Holly Wilson Associate Professor/Research and Instruction Librarian B.A., Baldwin-Wallace; M.L.I.S., University of Pittsburgh; publications include “Touch, See, Find: Serving Multiple Literacies in the Art and Design Library” in The Handbook of Art and Design Librarianship; professional organization memberships include the American Library Association,

Libraries

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Board of Trustees

Bruce J. Gitlin Chair of the Board President and CEO, Milgo Industrial Inc. Mike Pratt Vice Chair of the Board President and Executive Director, The Scherman Foundation Robert H. Siegel Vice Chair of the Board Founding Partner, Gwathmey Siegel & Associates Architects, LLC Thomas F. Schutte President, Pratt Institute Dr. Joshua L. Smith Secretary Professor Emeritus, New York University Howard S. Stein Treasurer Retired Managing Director, Operational Risk Global Corporate and Investment Bank, Citigroup Tara Ali-Khan Undergraduate Student Trustee Kurt Andersen Writer Mahogany L. Browne Recent Graduate Trustee Deborah J. Buck Artist, interior designer, and owner, Buck House Amy Cappellazzo Sotheby’s Chairman, Fine Arts Division, Sotheby’s Kathryn C. Chenault Attorney Anne N. Edwards Arts activist Adriana Green Graduate Student Trustee Susan Hakkarainen Co-Chairman and Co-CEO, Lutron Electronics Co., Inc. and Ivalo Lighting Inc. Gary S. Hattem Philanthropy and Social Finance Advisor, Managing Director and Head, Global Social Finance and President, Deutsche Bank Americas Foundation June Kelly June Kelly Gallery David S. Mack Senior Partner, The Mack Company Carolyn Bransford MacDonald Trustee, The Halycon Foundation, Trustee Emerita, The American Museum in Britain, Member of the Board, The American Associates of the National Theatre in London Katharine L. McKenna Artist, designer, and owner, KLM Studio

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Kelsey Miller Recent Graduate Trustee David O. Pratt Not-for-profit consultant Ralph Pucci President, Ralph Pucci International Stan Richards Principal, The Richards Group Christopher D. Shyer President, Zyloware Eyewear Mark D. Stumer Principal, Mojo-Stumer Associates, P.C. Juliana C. Terian Chairman of the Rallye Group Adam D. Tihany Principal, Tihany Design Anne H. Van Ingen Former Director, Architecture, Planning and Design Program and Capital Projects, NYSCA and Adjunct Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation, Columbia University Ellery Washington Faculty Trustee Diana Wege Artist; Trustee, Wege Foundation; Trustee, IPCNY; Founder/Chair, WOVEN; Trustee, Syracuse University School of Education Board of Visitors; Pratt ’15 Parent Susan Young Faculty Trustee Michael S. Zetlin Attorney, Zetlin & De Chiara LLP Trustees Emeriti: Richard W. Eiger Charles J. Hamm Young Ho Kim Malcolm MacKay Leon Moed Bruce M. Newman Heidi Nitze Marc A. Rosen



Administration

Dr. Thomas F. Schutte President

Randy Donowitz Director of the Writing and Tutorial Center

Kirk E. Pillow Provost

Michael Farnham Director of Academic Advisement

Donna Heiland Associate Provost

Adam Friedman Director of Pratt Center for Community Development

Judith Aaron Vice President for Enrollment Helen Matusow-Ayres Vice President for Student Affairs Joseph M. Hemway Vice President for Information Technology and CIO Joan McCormick Vice President for Institutional Advancement Cathleen Kenny Vice President for Finance and Administration Thomas Hanrahan Dean, School of Architecture Gerald Snyder Dean, School of Art Anita Cooney Dean, School of Design Andrew Barnes Dean, School of Liberal Arts and Sciences Tula Giannini Dean, School of Information Russell Abell Director of Libraries Walter Rickard Director of Athletics and Recreation Sinclaire Alkire Director of Enrollment Marketing and Research Nedzad Goga Executive Director of Financial Services Christopher Arabadjis Director of Multi-Media Services Drew Babitts Director of Planned Giving and Major Gifts Nicholas Battis Director of Exhibitions

Christopher Gavlick, CLARB Executive Director, Chief Facilities Officer Anthony Gelber Director of Administrative Sustainability Mai McDonald-Graves Director of the Disability Resources Center Thomas Greene Director of Human Resources Imani Griszell Director of Events and Diversity Recruitment Natalie Capannelli Director of Graduate Admissions Lisle Henderson Registrar Dustin Liebenow Director of Marketing Communications and Enrollment Management Christopher Kasik Director of Residential Life and Housing Grace Kendall Director of Special Projects/Assistant to the Vice President for Student Affairs Emma Legge Director of Student Involvement and Parent and Family Programs John Maier Head of Technical Services TBA Director of Foundation Relations Ellery Matthews Director of Academic Computing Patti McCall Head of Public Services Thomas Nawabi Comptroller Christopher Paisley Director of Processing and Technology

Vladimir Briller Executive Director of Strategic Planning and Institutional Research

Dmitriy Paskhaver Director of Research

L. Jane Bush Director of International Affairs

Kimberlae Saul Director of Facilities Planning and Design

Martha Cedarholm Director of Health and Counseling Services

Rhonda Schaller Director of the Center for Career and Professional Development

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William J. Schmitz Director of Safety and Security Maira Rey Seara Dean, School of Continuing and Professional Studies Nancy Seidler Director of Intensive English Lorraine Smith Curator, Visual Resource Center Richard Soto Director of Budget TBA Director of Undergraduate Admissions Warren White Director of HEOP Bryan Wizemann Director of the Web Group

Administration

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Academic Calendar

Imporatant Telephone Numbers Admissions (toll-free) 800.331.­0834 Admissions 718.636.3514 Career Services 718.636­.3506 Financial Aid 718.636.­3599 Health and Counseling Services 718.399.­4542 International Affairs Office 718.636.­3674 Library (Circulation Desk) 718.636.3420 Registrar 718.636.3663

Residential Life 718.399.­4550

Fall 2017

Spring 2018

Summer 2018

Last day for 100% tuition refund upon withdrawal (WD)

August 28

January 16

May 14

First day of classes

August 28

January 16

May 14 (See schedule of classes)

Last day to add or drop without a WD grade

September 11

January 29

May 21

Last day to withdraw (WD) from a course

November 10

April 6

June 22

Dates that classes do not meet

September 4 (Labor Day) October 10 (Midterm Break) November 22–26 (Thanksgiving)

January 15 (Martin Luther King Day) March 12–18 (Spring Break)

May 28 (Memorial Day) July 4 (Independence Day)

Final exams

December 12–18

May 2–8

n/a

Last day of classes

December 18

May 8

July 20 (See schedule of classes)

Grades Due Online

December 20

May 10

July 23

Security 718.636­.3540 Student Activities and Orientation 718.636­.3422

Please note: This calendar must be considered as informational and not binding on the Institute. The dates listed here are provided as a guideline for use by students and offices participating in academic and registration related activities. This calendar is not to be used for nonacademic business purposes. Pratt Institute reserves the right to make changes to the information printed in this Bulletin without prior notice.

Academic Advisers Architecture 718.399­.4333 Art and Design 718.636­.3611 Information and Library Science 212.647.7682 Intensive English Program 718.636.3450 Writing Programs 718.399­.4497

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FALL 2017

Housing Sunday, August 20 Entering freshman, transfer, and graduate students check-in to residence halls, 9 AM to 5 PM

Registration Monday, February 6 SU/FA schedule due to Registrar’s Office

Friday, August 25 Continuing students’ check-in to residence halls, 9 AM to 5 PM

Monday, March 6 Fall schedule goes live online Monday, March 20 Academic advisement begins

Saturday, December 16 Noon checkout deadline for graduating students and those who cancelled spring residence hall license

Monday, April 3 Online registration begins for continuing students

Note: Students residing on-campus Spring 2018 do not check-out of their Fall rooms

Sunday, August 27 Last day of preregistration for continuing students

Academic Mid-June to end of July (Online) English Proficiency exam given for international students

Sunday, July 1 (Tentative) New student registration Monday, September 11 Last day to add a class Last day to drop a class without a WD grade recorded No new registrations accepted after this date

Wednesday, August 16 Design Management classes begin Monday, August 28 Arts and Cultural Management classes begin

Friday, November 10 Last day for course withdrawal

Monday, August 28 Classes begin

New Student Orientation Saturday, August 19–Friday, August 25 New student orientation held; loan entrance interviews

Monday, September 4 Labor Day—no classes.

Payment/Financial Friday, June 9 Student loan application deadline Tuesday, August 1 Continuing students’ tuition payment deadline Tuesday, August 1 New students’ tuition payment deadline Wednesday, August 2 Late payment fee $195 in effect Monday, August 28 Last day for 100% tuition refund upon withdrawal

Monday, September 11 Last day to add a class or drop without a WD grade recorded Monday, October 9 Columbus Day—classes meet, offices closed Tuesday, October 10 Midterm Break. No classes. Institute offices open. Friday, November 10 Last day for course withdrawal. Wednesday, November 22–Sunday, November 26 Thanksgiving—no classes Offices open on 11/22 only Monday, December 11 Exam conflict/Study Day

Academic Calendar

276


Tuesday, December 12–Monday, December 18 Final critique and exam week

Monday, October 16 Academic advisement begins

Friday, December 15 Last day for students to submit graduation applications to the registrar’s office for May graduation. Review for graduation begins January 8.

Monday, October 30 Continuing students’ online registration for spring begins

Monday, December 18 Fall semester ends. Last day to change grades from previous spring/summer semesters.

Monday, January 29 Last day to add a class Last day to drop a class without a WD grade recorded No new registrations accepted after this date Friday, April 6 Last day for course withdrawal

Wednesday, December 20 All final grades due online by 3 PM

New Student Orientation Thursday, January 11 English Proficiency exam given for international students

Sunday, December 24–Monday, January 1 Winter vacation Refund Schedule Course Withdrawal Refund Schedule, Fall 2017 Prior to and including August 28 Full refund August 29–September 4 85% refund September 5–September 11 70% refund September 12–September 18 55% refund After September 18 No refund

Friday, January 12 New student orientation held

The refunds above are calculated using the date you dropped your course online or submitted your completed drop/add form to the Office of the Registrar (Myrtle Hall 6th Floor). No penalty is assessed for undergraduate withdrawals when a full-time credit load (12-18 credits) is carried before and after the drop/add.

Friday, December 15 Continuing students’ tuition payment deadline for spring

Payment/Financial Wednesday, October 4 Recommended date to file spring financial aid and student loan applications for students who did not file for fall term

Housing Cancellation Refund Schedule Fall 2017 Please refer to the housing license to determine the cancellation penalty/refund. Meal Plan Cancellation Refund Schedule Please refer to the cancellation penalty schedule on the back of your meal plan contract to determine the cancellation penalty/refund.

Tuesday, January 2 All continuing students should begin to file financial aid forms for summer 2018/fall 2018/spring 2019 financial aid award packages Friday, January 12 New students’ tuition payment deadline Tuesday, January 16 Last day for 100% tuition refund upon withdrawal

SPRING 2018

Monday, January 29 Recommended filing deadline for financial aid applications for the next academic year

Registration Monday, September 25 Spring schedule due to Registrar’s Office

Thursday, April 5 Recommended filing deadline for 2018/19 student loan applications

Wednesday, October 11 Spring schedule goes live online

Academic Calendar

277


Housing Thursday, January 11 Entering freshman, transfer, and graduate students’ check-in to residence hall, 9 AM to 5 PM

Tuesday, May 1 Exam conflict/Study Day

Wednesday, May 9 Noon checkout deadline for non-graduating students and those students without a summer session I residence hall license Saturday, May 12 (Tentative) Noon checkout deadline for graduating students. Note: students residing on-campus Summer 2018 Session I do not check-out of their Spring room until notified their SU room is ready Academic Wednesday, November 1 All international students’ applications and documents due Saturday, January 6 Graduate Design Management and Arts and Cultural Management classes begin

Wednesday, May 2–Tuesday, May 8 Final critique and exam week. Classes end. Graduate Design Management and Arts and Cultural Management classes end. Tuesday, May 8 Last day to change grades from previous fall semesters Thursday, May 10 All final grades due online by 3 PM Tuesday, May 8–Sunday, May 13 (Tentative) Pratt Shows Week after classes end (Tentative) Graduation Awards Convocation Week after classes end (Tentative) Commencement Refund Schedule Course Withdrawal Refund Schedule Spring 2018 Prior to and including January 16 Full refund January 17–January 23 85% refund January 24–January 30 70% refund January 31–February 6 55% refund After February 6 No refund

Thursday, January 11 English proficiency exam for international students Saturday, January 13 Sat/Sun classes begin Monday, January 15 Martin Luther King Day—no classes Tuesday, January 16 Weekday classes begin. Tuesday, January 30 Last day to add a class or drop without a WD grade recorded Monday, February 19 President’s Day—classes meet. Offices closed.

The refunds above are calculated using the date you completed your transaction online or submitted your completed drop/add form to the Office of the Registrar (Myrtle Hall, sixth floor). No penalty is assessed for undergraduate withdrawals when a full­time credit load (12–18 credits) is carried before and after the drop/add date. Housing Cancellation Refund Schedule Spring 2018 Please refer to the housing license to determine the cancellation penalty/refund.

Monday, March 12–Sunday, March 18 Spring break Sunday, March 25 Last day to submit a graduation application for October and February graduation

Meal Plan Cancellation Refund Schedule Please refer to the cancellation penalty schedule on the back of your meal plan contract to determine the cancellation penalty/refund.

Friday, April 6 Last day for course withdrawal

Academic Calendar

278


SUMMER 2018

Friday, June 22 Last day for course withdrawal from summer session

Registration* Monday, April 9 Registration for all summer classes begins

Wednesday, July 4 Independence Day—no classes

Monday, May 14 First day of classes

Friday, July 20 Summer session classes end

Monday, May 21 Last day to add a class Last day to drop summer classes without a WD grade recorded No new summer session registrations accepted after this date

Monday, July 23 Summer Grades due online by 3 PM

Friday, June 22 Last day for withdrawal (WD) from a summer class

Refund Schedule Course Withdrawal Refund Schedule Summer 2018* Prior to and including May 14 Full refund May 15 through May 21 55% refund After May 21 No refund The above refunds are calculated using the date you dropped classes online or submitted your completed drop/add form to the Office of the Registrar (Myrtle Hall, sixth floor).

Payment/Financial Monday, May 14 Summer tuition deadline

* The refund schedule is calculated based on the start date of the class

Housing Note: Move-ins continue weekly through the end of Summer Session Saturday, July 21 Noon final checkout deadline for students without fall residence hall license. Note: Students residing on-campus Fall 2018 do not check-out of their SU room until notified their Fall room is ready.

Housing Cancellation Refund Schedule Summer 2018 Please refer to the housing license to determine the cancellation penalty/refund. Meal Plan Cancellation Refund Schedule Please refer to the cancellation penalty schedule on the back of your meal plan contract to determine the cancellation penalty/refund.

Academic Saturday, May 12 Graduate Design Management and Arts and Cultural Management classes begin Monday, May 14 Summer session classes begin Monday, May 21 Last day to add a class Last day to drop without a WD grade recorded No new summer session registrations accepted after this date Monday, May 28 Memorial Day—no classes

Academic Calendar

279



Directions

BROOKLYN CAMPUS 200 WILLOUGHBY AVENUE BROOKLYN, NY 11205 By Subway From Grand Central Station Take the downtown 4 or 5 train to the Fulton Street station. Take the Brooklyn-bound A or C train to the HoytSchermerhorn station. Cross platform and take the G train (front car) to the Clinton-Washington station. Use Washington Avenue exit. On Washington, walk one block north to DeKalb Avenue. Turn right onto DeKalb and proceed one block to Hall Street/Saint James Place to the corner gate of the Pratt campus. From Penn Station and Port Authority Bus Terminals Take the Brooklyn-bound A or C train to the HoytSchermerhorn station. Cross platform and take G train (front car) to the Clinton-Washington station. Use Washington Avenue exit and follow directions above to campus. By Bus From Downtown Manhattan Take the B51 bus from City Hall to Fulton and Smith streets in downtown Brooklyn. Change to the B38 bus and take it up Lafayette Avenue to the corner of Saint James Place, which turns into Hall Street. Entrance to the campus is one block north on Hall Street. From Downtown Brooklyn Take the B38 bus towards Ridgewood and up Lafayette Avenue to the corner of Washington Avenue. On Washington, walk one block north to DeKalb Avenue. Turn right onto DeKalb and proceed one block to Hall Street/ Saint James Place to the corner gate of the Pratt campus. By Car From BQE, Heading West/South Exit 31, Wythe Avenue/Kent Avenue. Stay straight to go onto Williamsburg Street W., which becomes Williamsburg Place, then Park Avenue. Turn left onto Hall Street. Proceed two blocks to Willoughby Avenue. Make a left on Willoughby. Campus is on right. From BQE, Heading East/North Exit 30, Flushing Avenue. Bear left onto Classon Avenue, then turn left onto Flushing Avenue. Turn left onto Washington Avenue. Proceed two blocks to Willoughby Avenue. Make a left on Willoughby. Campus is on right. Myrtle Hall is across the street from the main gate (first left parking lot).

281


From West Side of Manhattan Via Manhattan Bridge Travel east on Canal Street to Manhattan Bridge. Exit bridge to Flatbush Avenue Extension. Turn left onto Myrtle Avenue. Proceed 15 blocks. Make a right turn onto Hall Street. Go one block. Make a left turn onto Willoughby. Campus is on right. From East Side of Manhattan Via Brooklyn Bridge Travel south on the FDR Drive (also called East River Drive) to Brooklyn Bridge exit. Exit bridge to Tillary Street. Turn left on Tillary to Flatbush Avenue. Turn left on Tillary. Turn right onto Flatbush Avenue Extension. Proceed 15 blocks. Make a right turn onto Hall Street. Go one block. Make a left turn onto Willoughby Avenue. Campus is on right. From Newark-Liberty Airport After the exit, continue toward US-1/US-9/NewarkElizabeth (US-22.) Continue on US-1 and 9 North toward Port Newark. US-1 and 9 North become 12th Street. Continue on Boyle Plaza, which becomes the Holland Tunnel. Take the tunnel toward Brooklyn/Downtown and continue on Beach Street to Walker Street. Continue on Canal Street to the Manhattan Bridge. Cross the bridge to Flatbush Avenue Extension. Turn left onto Myrtle Avenue. Proceed 15 blocks. Make a right turn onto Hall Street. Go one block. Make a left turn onto Willoughby Avenue. Campus is on right. From LaGuardia Airport Follow signs toward Airport Exit/Rental Cars. Take ramp (right) onto Grand Central Parkway toward Parkway West/ Manhattan. At exit 4, take ramp (right) onto BQE/ I-278 W. toward the Verrazano Narrows Bridge. Take BQE to exit 31, Wythe Avenue/Kent Avenue. Stay straight to go onto Williamsburg Street W., which becomes Williamsburg Place, then Park Avenue. Turn left onto Hall Street. Proceed two blocks to Willoughby Avenue. Make a left on Willoughby. Campus is on right. From Kennedy Airport Take the Airport Exit on I-678 South and continue toward Terminals 8 and 9. Go toward Terminal 9 Departures. Bear right toward the Van Wyck Expressway/Airport Exit. Continue on the Van Wyck/I-678 North. Take the 1B-2/Belt Parkway exit toward the Verrazano Bridge. Take exit 1B to North Conduit Avenue, which becomes North Conduit Boulevard. Take Belt Parkway West toward the Verrazano Bridge. Take the North Conduit Avenue exit 17W. Continue on Nassau Expressway/North Conduit Avenue. Bear left on Atlantic Avenue. Proceed five miles. Turn right onto

Directions

Washington Avenue and go seven blocks. Turn right onto Willoughby Avenue. Campus is on right. Myrtle Hall is across the street from the main gate (first left into parking lot). MANHATTAN CAMPUS 144 WEST 14TH STREET NEW YORK, NY 10011 By Car From Queens Via 59th Street Bridge Go south on the FDR Drive. Take 23rd Street exit. Make a right turn onto 23rd Street. Make a left turn on Second Avenue. Take Second Avenue to 14th Street. Make a right turn. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. From Brooklyn Via Brooklyn Bridge, head north on FDR Drive. Drive to Houston Street exit. Take left on Houston to Third Avenue. Make a right. Take Third Avenue to 14th Street, and make a left turn. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. From New Jersey Take the Holland Tunnel to Manhattan. Take Exit 3 toward Brooklyn, merge onto Beach St./W. Broadway and continue to follow W. Broadway. Make a slight left onto Sixth Avenue/ Avenue of the Americas. Turn left onto 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. From Westchester Take the West Side Highway South. Make a left turn onto 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. Parking in Manhattan Limited street parking is available on weekdays and weekends. Parking is available for a fee in nearby garages. By Subway Take the A, C, or E train to 14th Street/Eighth Avenue, the F or M train to 14th Street/Sixth Avenue, the 1, 2, or 3 train to 14th Street/Seventh Avenue, or the 4, 5, 6, N, R, or Q train to 14th Street/Union Square. Take crosstown buses or the L train to travel east or west on 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue.

282


By Bus If uptown, take the M20 to 14th Street/Eighth Avenue. Or take the M6 to 14th Street/Avenue of the Americas. If downtown, take the M20 to 14th Street/Seventh Avenue. Or take the M6 to 14th Street/Union Square. Take cross­ town buses or the L train to travel east or west on 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. By PATH Train From New Jersey Take the PATH train to 14th Street in Manhattan. Exit at Sixth Avenue and 14th Street. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. GOING FROM PRATT BROOKLYN TO PRATT MANHATTAN By Subway Take the G train from the Clinton-Washington station. Go two stops to Hoyt-Schermerhorn. Change for the A or C train, and take it to 14th Street/Eighth Avenue. Walk east, or take the crosstown buses or L train for eastbound travel. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue. By Bus and Subway Take the M38 bus to Flatbush Avenue. Exit at DeKalb Avenue station. Take the N, R, Q or W train to 14th Street/Union Square. Walk west, or take crosstown buses, or the L train for westbound travel. Pratt is located between Sixth and Seventh Avenues on the south side of the block, closest to Seventh Avenue.

Directions

283


Brooklyn Campus 1. ISC Building 2. Library 3. DeKalb Hall 4. Higgins Hall 5. North Hall 6. Memorial Hall 7. Student Union 8. Main Building 9. East Building 10. South Hall

Directions

11. Jones Hall 12. Thrift Hall 13. Pantas Hall 14. Willoughby Hall 15A. Willoughby Security Booth 15B. Pantas Security Booth 15C. Hall Security Booth 16. Chemistry Building 17. Machinery Building 18. Engineering Building 19A. Pratt Studios

284

19B. Juliana Curran Terian Design Center 19C. Steuben Hall 20. Film/Video Building 21. Pratt Townhouses 22. ARC Building 23. Stabile Hall 24. Cannoneer Court 25. Myrtle Hall 26. 100 Grand 27. Pfizer Building, 630 Flushing Avenue 28. Newman Mall and Clock


Index

A Academic calendar, 275–279 Academic facilities fees, 240 Academic integrity standards, 256–257 Academic policies. see registration and academic policies Academic standing, 255 Academic year format, of Creative Arts Therapy program, 80 Accreditation School of Architecture, 19 School of Art, 80, 86 School of Design, 123 School of Information, 145, 147 Activities fees, 240 Activities Resource Center (ARC), 263 Adjustments, to tuition and fees, 243 Administration, 273–274 Admission requirements, 211–224 applications, 213–215 campus tours, 213 Communications Design, 114–115 deadlines for applications, 213–215 deferral of admissions, 224 deposits by accepted students, 223 discrimination, 219 general information, 211–213 I-20 form, 222 intellectual property, 224 international applicants, 214–215 international students, 214–215, 222–223 merit-based scholarships, 213 non-matriculated students, 223–224 Office of Graduate Admissions, hours, 213 readmission, 223 School of Architecture, 19, 57 School of Art, 76, 80–82, 86, 90, 98 School of Information, 146–147, 149, 150, 159, 165, 170 School of Liberal Arts and Sciences, 186, 190, 194, 198–200 special students, 223–224 Title IX, 224 transfer credits, 223 undergraduate preparation deficiencies, 223 withdrawal after making deposit, 224 Advanced Certificates Archives, 167–168 Conservation and Digital Curation, 167–168 Digital Humanities, 168 Library and Information Studies, 169–170 Museum Studies, 182 User Experience, 169 Alternative loan checks, 243 Alumni, 12 American Art Therapy Association, 80 American Library Association, 145 Applications, 213–215. see also admission requirements Architecture, School of, 15–64 accreditation, 19 admission requirements, 19, 57, 215–217 Architecture (department), 23–30 Architecture and Urban Design, 21 Center for Community Development, 18 City and Regional Planning, 43–48 Facilities Management, 57–60 faculty, 29–30 fees, 240 general information, 15, 17–19 Graduate Center for Planning and Development, 35–38 grants and scholarships, 230–231 Historic Preservation, 53–56

285

Pratt Center for Community Development, 35, 36, 43, 50 Project for Public Spaces (PPS), 36 Real Estate Practice, 61–63 Spatial Analysis and Visualization Initiative (SAVI), 36 Sustainable Environmental Systems, 49–52 Sustainable Planning and Development, 8, 15 Urban Design, 31–34 Urban Placemaking and Management, 39–42 Archives, Advanced Certificate, 167–168 Art and Design Education curricula, 73–74 faculty, 73 general information, 69–74 M.S. in Art and Design Education, Professional Certification, 70, 73 Art, School of, 65–108 admission requirements, 217–219 Arts and Cultural Management, 75–78 Creative Arts Therapy, 79–84 Design Management, 85–88 Digital Arts, 89–96 Fine Arts, 97–107 general information, 65, 67 grants and scholarships, 231–233 Arts and Cultural Management curricula, 76, 78 general information, 75–78 Assistantships, 226 Athletics and Recreation, 263–264 Attendance policy, 248–249 Auditing, of courses, 241–242 Automated teller machines (ATMs), on campus, 243 B Banking facilities, 242 Billing, 242 Board of trustees, 271 Brooklyn campus directions, 281–282 general information, 3 map, 284 tours, 213 Brooklyn Law School, 35 C Campus Ministry, 261 Campus tours, 213 Career and Professional Development, 264–265 Center for Community Development, 18 Certificate programs. see also curricula Archives, Advanced Certificate, 167–168 Art and Design Education (M.F.A./PostBaccalaureate Certificate), 98, 101 Digital Humanities, Advanced Certificate, 168 Library and Information Studies, Advanced Certificate, 169–170 M.S. in Art and Design Education, Professional Certification, 70, 73 Museum Libraries, Advanced Certificate, 168–169 School Library Media Specialist, New York State Teaching Certification, 169 Certification. see certificate programs; combined degrees and certificates Changes, to registration, 249–250 Checks, returned, 243 China, applicants from, 214–215 City and Regional Planning curricula, 48 faculty, 47 general information, 43–48


Collections, for tuition and fees, 243 Combined degrees and certificates. see also curricula Art and Design Education (M.F.A./PostBaccalaureate Certificate), 98, 101 City and Regional Planning (M.S./J.D.), 38 Fine Arts/History of Art (M.S./M.F.A.), 98 Graduate Center for Planning and Development (GCPD) for, 35 History of Art and Design (M.A./M.F.A. and M.A./M.S.), 181–182 Communications Design curricula, 121–122 faculty, 121 general information, 113–122 Community-Based Design Concentration, 40 Conservation and Digital Curation, Advanced Certificate, 167–168 Copenhagen, Study Abroad program, 8 Course offerings, organization of, 252 Course withdrawal refunds, 241–242 Creative Arts Therapy curricula, 83 faculty, 83 general information, 79–84 Cultural partnerships, 8 Curricula Architecture, 30–31 Art and Design Education, 73–74 Arts and Cultural Management, 76, 78 City and Regional Planning, 48 Communications Design, 121–122 Creative Arts Therapy, 83 Design Management, 86, 88 Digital Arts, 96 Facilities Management, 60 Fine Arts, 107 Historic Preservation, 56 History of Art and Design, 184 Industrial Design, 130 Intensive English Program, 198 Interior Design, 138 Media Studies, 188 Performance and Performance Studies, 192 Real Estate Practice, 62 Sustainable Environmental Systems, 52 Urban Design, 34 Urban Placemaking and Management, 42 Writing, 196 D Dance Therapy Association, 80 Dance/Movement Therapy, 80 Data Analytics and Visualization, 155–160 Deadlines, for applications, 213–215 Deferral, of admissions, 224 Degrees. see also individual names of degrees degree audits, 255–256 graduation and, 257 Denmark, Study Abroad program, 8 Deposits by accepted students, 223 withdrawal after making deposit, 224 Design Management curricula, 86, 88 general information, 85–88 Design, School of, 109–139 admission requirements, 219–220 Communications Design, 113–122 general information, 109–111 grants and scholarships, 233–235 Industrial Design, 123–130 Interior Design, 131–138 Digital Arts

Index

curricula, 96 faculty, 95 general information, 89–96 lab fees, 240 Digital Humanities, Advanced Certificate, 168 Digital Imaging (School of Art), 90 Direct loans (Stafford, Plus), disbursement, 243 Directions to Brooklyn campus, 281–282 to Manhattan campus, 282–283 map (Brooklyn campus), 284 Discrimination, 219 Dual degree programs. see combined degrees and certificates E E-Portfolio, for Master of Science in Library and Information Science (M.S.L.I.S.), 146 Email accounts, 246 Employment programs Federal Work-Study (FWS), 226–227 Pratt student employment program, 226 England, Study Abroad program, 8, 124 English proficiency program, 179, 198–199 IELTS, PTE, and TOEFL tests, 146, 159, 165, 214, 217, 220–221, 223 Intensive English Program, 198 Enrollment verification letters, 249 Exhibitions, 7 F Facilities Management curricula, 60 general information, 57–60 Faculty Architecture, 29–30 Art and Design, 73 City and Regional Planning, 47 Communications Design, 121 Creative Arts Therapy, 83 Digital Arts, 95 Fine Arts, 105 general information, 7 Historic Preservation, 56 Industrial Design, 129 Interior Design, 137–138 libraries, 270–271 School of Liberal Arts and Science, 201–209 Sustainable Environmental Systems, 52 Urban Design, 34 Urban Placemaking and Management, 42 Family programs, 260 Federal financial aid. see financial aid Federal Work-Study (FWS), 226–227 Fees. see tuition and fees Fellowships, 226 Financial aid, 225–238 assistantships/fellowships, 226 for currently enrolled graduate students, 225 for entering graduate students, 225 Federal Work-Study (FWS), 226–227 Free Application for Student Financial Aid (FAFSA), 225–227, 237–238 grant and scholarship programs, by individual schools, 230–236 grant and scholarship programs, for all schools, 236–237 grant programs, 225–226 instructions and schedule, 237–238 merit-based scholarships, 213 out-of-state programs, 228 Pratt student employment program, 226 rights and responsibilities of recipients, 226 scholarship programs, 225–226

286

scholarships, for international students, 237–238 Stafford Loans, 227 Standards of Academic Progress, 228 state education agencies, 229–230 United States Bureau of Indian Affairs Aid to Native Americans Higher Education Assistance Program, 228–229 Veterans Administration Educational Benefits, 229 Fine Arts curricula, 107 faculty, 105 general information, 97–107 shop fee, 240 studio refundable deposits, 241 Florence, Study Abroad program, 8 FlyWire, 243–244 France, Study Abroad program, 8 Free Application for Student Financial Aid (FAFSA), 225–227, 237–238 Full-time status, 248 G Global Innovation Design (GID), 124 Grading grade point average (GPA), 254–255 system, 253–256 Graduate admissions. see admission requirements Graduate Architecture and Urban Design (GAUD), 31 Graduate Center for Planning and Development (GCPD), 8, 35–38 Graduate Record Examination (GRE), 222 Graduation, 257 Grants for all schools, 230–236 for international students, 237–238 Guided campus tours, 213 H Health and Counseling, 266–267 Health insurance fees, 240 Health services fees, 240 Historic Preservation curricula, 56 faculty, 56 general information, 53–56 History of Art and Design curricula, 184 general information, 181–184 History of Art and Design (M.A./M.F.A. and M.A./M.S.), 181–182 Housing general information, 11 low residency format of Creative Arts Therapy program, 89, 214 Residential Life and Housing, 261–263 I I-20 form, 222 Identification cards and services, 246 Industrial Design curricula, 130 faculty, 129 general information, 123–130 Information Experience Design, 161–166 Information, School of, 141–175 admission requirements, 220–221 Advanced Certificate Programs in, 167–173 Data Analytics and Visualization, 155–160 general information, 141–143 grants and scholarships, 235 Information Experience Design, 161–166


Library and Information Science, 145–148 Museums and Digital Culture, 149–154 InProcess (School of Architecture), 18 Intellectual property, 224 Intensive Certificate of English Proficiency, 179, 198–199 Intensive English Program, 198 Interior Design curricula, 138 faculty, 137–138 general information, 131–138 International Affairs, 267 International English Language Testing System (IELTS), 146, 159, 165, 214, 217, 220–221, 223 International students accepted students, general requirements, 222–223 from China, 214–215 English proficiency program, 179, 198–199 FlyWire for, 243–244 international student scholarships, 237 Internships Arts and Cultural Management, 76 Communications Design, 113 Creative Arts Therapy, 79–80 Digital Arts, 89 Pratt Institute Internship Program, 265–266 School of Architecture, 21, 35, 36, 39–40, 43, 50, 53 School of Information, 145, 169–170 zero-credit internships, 241 IRS filing notice, 242 Italy, Study Abroad program, 8, 182 J Japan, Study Abroad program, 124 Juris Doctor (J.D.) combined degree, School of Architecture, 35, 38 K Key replacement fees, 241 L Late payment fees, 240 Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of, 177–210 admission requirements, 221–222 classes in the liberal arts, 197–200 faculty, 201–209 general information, 177–179 grants and scholarships, 235–236 History of Art and Design, 181–184 Media Studies, 185–188, 197 Performance and Performance Studies, 189–192 Writing, 193–196 Libraries. see also Information, School of faculty, 270–271 general information, 7, 269–270 Library and Information Science, 145–148 Library and Information Studies, Advanced Certificate, 169–170 Library fees/fines, 241 Library Media Specialist program (L.M.S.), 146–147 Loans alternative loan checks, 243 disbursement of direct loans (Stafford, Plus), 243 Lock/key replacement fees, 241 London, Study Abroad program, 8, 124 Low residency format, of Creative Arts Therapy program, 89, 214 M Manhattan campus directions, 282

Index

general information, 4 Pratt Manhattan Library, 269 Master in Industrial Design (M.I.D.), 123–124 Master of Arts (M.A.) in Media Studies, 197 Master of Fine Arts (M.F.A.) Art and Design Education (M.F.A./PostBaccalaureate Certificate), 98, 101 Communications Design, 113–114 Digital Arts, 89–90 Fine Arts, 97–98 History of Art and Design (dual degree program), 181 Performance and Performance Studies, 189–190, 197 refundable studio deposits, 241 Writing, 179, 190, 194, 197 Master of Professional Studies (M.P.S.), Art Therapy and Creativity Development, 79 Master of Science (M.S.) Art and Design Education, 70, 73 Dance/Movement Therapy, 80 Data Analytics and Visualization, 155 History of Art and Design, 198 Information Experience Design, 161 Museums and Digital Culture, 149 Package Design, 113, 114 Master of Science in Library and Information Science (M.S.L.I.S.) M.S.L.I.S. program, 145–146 M.S.L.I.S. with Library Media Specialist (L.M.S.) program, 146–147 Meal plan, 263 Media Studies curricula, 188 general information, 185–188, 197 Merit-based scholarships, 213 Museum Libraries, Advanced Certificate, 168–169 Museum Studies, Advanced Certificate, 182 Museums and Digital Culture, 149–154 MyPratt access, 246 N National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB), 19 New student orientation, 260 New York State Education Department (NYSED) certification requirements Art and Design Education, 53, 69 Fine Arts, Pre-K-12, 101 M.S.L.I.S. with Library Media Specialist (L.M.S.) program, 146–147 School Library Media Specialist, 169 Visual Arts, Pre-K-12, 74 Non-matriculated students, admission requirements, 223–224 O Office of Graduate Admissions, hours, 213 Office of Residential Life and Housing, 261–263 Office of Student Involvement, 259–260 Orientation, for new students, 260 Out-of-state financial aid programs, 228 P Package Design, 113, 114–115 Parent module (MyPratt), 251 Parent programs, 260 Paris, Study Abroad program, 8 Parks, Open Space, and Green Infrastructure Concentration, 40 Part-time status, 248 Payments/payment plans, 239–240, 242 Pearson Test of English (PTE), 146, 159, 165, 214, 217, 220–221, 223

287

Performance and Performance Studies curricula, 192 general information, 189–192 Plagiarism policy, 256 Portfolios credit for, 248 e-Portfolio for Master of Science in Library and Information Science (M.S.L.I.S.), 146 Pratt Artists League (PAL), 97 Pratt Center for Community Development, 35, 36, 43, 50 Pratt Institute. see also admission requirements; registration and academic policies; tuition and fees; individual campuses; individual schools alumni of, 12 graduate departments, overview, 14 history of, 3, 11 Internship Program, 265–266 Manhattan campus, 4 overview, 6–10 rankings of, 3–4 student employment program, 226 Study Abroad programs, 8, 124, 182 Preferred name, of student, 251 Programs for Sustainable Planning and Development. see Sustainable Planning and Development Project for Public Spaces (PPS), 36 R Rankings, 3–4 Readmission, 223 Real Estate Practice curricula, 62 general information, 61–63 Refund disbursement, 242–243 Refund policy, 242 Registration and academic policies, 245–258 academic integrity standards, 256–257 academic standing, 255 changes and withdrawals, 249–250 email accounts and MyPratt access, 246 enrollment verification letters, 249 general information, 245 grade point average (GPA), 254–255 grading system, 253–256 graduation and degrees, 257 identification cards and services, 246 organization of course offerings, 252 parent module, 251 portfolio/work experience credit, 248 preferred name of student, 251 registration (first day of class), 243, 245 (see also tuition and fees) residency requirement, 247 semester hour credits, 252–253 student registration, 246 student status, 248–249 transcript policies, 251–252 transfer credits, 247–248 Residency requirement, 247 Residential Life and Housing, 261–263 Returned checks, 241, 243 Rome, Study Abroad program, 8 S Scholarships. see also financial aid for all schools, 236–237 for individual schools, 230–236 merit-based scholarships, 213 School Library Media Specialist, New York State Teaching Certification, 169 School of Architecture. see Architecture, School of


School of Art. see Art, School of School of Design. see Design, School of School of Information. see Information, School of School of Liberal Arts and Sciences. see Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Semester hour credits, 252–253 Spatial Analysis and Visualization Initiative (SAVI), 36 Special students, admission requirements, 223–224 Stafford Loans, 227 Standards of Academic Progress, 228 State education agencies, 229–230 State financial aid. see financial aid Student affairs, 259–267 Activities Resource Center (ARC), 263 Athletics and Recreation, 263–264 Campus Ministry, 261 Career and Professional Development, 264–265 Health and Counseling, 266–267 International Affairs, 267 Office of Student Involvement, 259–260 Pratt Institute Internship Program, 265–266 Residential Life and Housing, 261–263 student organizations, 260–261 Student organizations, 260–261 Study Abroad programs, 8, 124, 182 Summer Certificate Program (IEP, CEP, SCP), 179, 198 Sustainability, commitment to, 11 Sustainable Environmental Systems curricula, 52 faculty, 52 general information, 49–52 Sustainable Planning and Development City and Regional Planning, 43–48 Facilities Management, 57–60 general information, 8, 15 Historic Preservation, 53–56 Real Estate Practice, 61–63 Urban Placemaking and Management, 39–42

U Undergraduate preparation, deficiencies in, 223 Undergraduate programs, linkages to, 35 United States Bureau of Indian Affairs Aid to Native Americans Higher Education Assistance Program, 228–229 Urban Design curricula, 34 faculty, 34 general information, 31–34 Urban Placemaking and Management curricula, 42 faculty, 42 general information, 39–42 User Experience, Advanced Certificate, 169 V Venice, Study Abroad program, 182 Veterans Administration Educational Benefits, 229 Veterans Affairs, 246–247 W Withdrawals, 224, 249–250 Work experience credit, 248 Writing (School of Liberal Arts and Sciences department) curricula, 196 general information, 193–196 Writing and Tutorial Center, 179, 198 Z Zero-credit internships, 241

T Teacher certification. see New York State Education Department (NYSED) certification requirements Technology fees, 240 Technology, initiatives, 7 Test of English as a Foreign Language (TOEFL), 146, 159, 165, 214, 217, 220–221, 223 Thesis-in-progress fees, 240, 256 Title IX, 224 Tokyo, Study Abroad program, 124 Tours, 213 Transcript policies, 241, 251–252 Transfer credits, 223, 247–248 Transportation and Main Street Management Concentration, 40 Trustees, board of, 271 Tuition and fees, 239–244 adjustments, 243 alternative loan checks, 243 auditing courses, 241–242 collection accounts, 243 direct loans (Staffod, Plus), 243 fee types, 240–241 FlyWire for international students, 243–244 general information, 239 payments/payment plans, 239–240, 242 refund disbursement, 242–243 refund policy, 242 registration (first day of class), 243, 245 returned checks, 243 Turkey, Study Abroad program, 8

Index

288


Produced by the Pratt Institute Office of Communications and Marketing © 2017 Pratt Institute Photography: © William Abranowicz, Fernando Colon, Bob Handelman, Peter Tannenbaum, Daniel Terna, or provided by the departments and individual artists. Unless otherwise indicated, all images of art, design, and arch­itecture are of work created by students while studying at Pratt. This publication has been edited for accuracy at the time of pub­lication. Information contained herein is subject to change. Printed by Unimac Graphics


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