Apply for University Courses “The Ethics of Museums” and “Living Through Change”

Apply for University Courses “The Ethics of Museums” and “Living Through Change”

Category : News/Events

Two Spring 2022 University courses are accepting applications for students to enroll.

The first is The Ethics of Museums, Ownership, and Display: Art, Artifacts, Bodies, and Memory. This is a 3-credit course that will meet Mondays from 2:30-5:30 PM.

To submit your interest in the course click here.

You can read the below flyer for this course to learn more.

The Ethics of Museums, Ownership, and Display Flyer 10_13 v4

The second course, Living Through Change, will meet Wednesdays from 2:30-5:30. This course aims to cultivate our individual and collective resources for creatively engaging the challenges of an era of global change.

The flyer for this course is below.

Living Through Change flyer


Log out of this account

Leave a Reply

Upcoming Events

  • EGDRC Seminar: Lynn Aboue-Jaoudé January 14, 2025 at 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm Seminar Series; tinyurl.com… Online Location: https://tinyurl.com/Lynn-Abou-JaoudeEvent Type: Seminar SeriesSeries: Health System Users in Vulnerable Situations: Normative Experiences and “New Ways of Life”Speaker: Lynn Abou-JaoudéContact Name: Wendy GillContact Email: wggill@emory.eduLink: https://tinyurl.com/Lynn-Abou-JaoudeDr. Lynn Abou-Jaoudé studies sociocultural challenges in healthcare experiences, focusing on qualitative research and diabetes prevention at the University of Lille’s LUMEN lab.
  • GCDTR Seminar: Erin Ferranti, PhD, MPH, RN January 21, 2025 at 12:00 pm – 1:00 pm Seminar Series; tinyurl.com… Online Location: https://tinyurl.com/ErinFerrantiEvent Type: Seminar SeriesSeries: Cardiometabolic Risk and Resource Connection in Maternal HealthSpeaker: Erin Ferranti, PhD, MPH, RNContact Name: Wendy GillContact Email: wggill@emory.eduRoom Location: RRR_R809Link: https://tinyurl.com/ErinFerrantiDr. Erin Ferranti, Emory Assistant Professor, researches women’s cardiometabolic disease prevention, health inequities, maternal morbidity, farmworker health, diabetes, and hypertension using biomarkers for early risk identification.

Follow Us on Social Media: