2019-2020 2020-2021 2021-2022 2022-2023 2023-2024
Browse
by subject...
    Schedule
view...
 

21 - 30 of 123 results for: PATHWAYS::* ; Currently searching offered courses. You can also include unoffered courses

CHEMENG 482: The Startup Garage: Design (SOMGEN 282)

(Same as STRAMGT 356) The Startup Garage is an experiential lab course that focuses on the design, testing and launch of a new venture. Multidisciplinary student teams work through an iterative process of understanding user needs, creating a point of view statement, ideating and prototyping new product and services and their business models, and communicating the user need, product, service and business models to end-users, partners, and investors. In the autumn quarter, teams will: identify and validate a compelling user need and develop very preliminary prototypes for a new product or service and business models. Students form teams, conduct field work and iterate on the combination of business model -- product -- market. Teams will present their first prototypes (business model - product - market) at the end of the quarter to a panel of entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, angel investors and faculty.
Terms: Aut | Units: 4

CHEMENG 484: The Startup Garage: Testing and Launch (SOMGEN 284)

This is the second quarter of the two-quarter series. In this quarter, student teams expand the field work they started in the fall quarter. They get out of the building to talk to potential customers, partners, distributors, and investors to test and refine their business model, product/service and market. This quarter the teams will be expected to develop and test a minimally viable product, iterate, and focus on validated lessons on: the market opportunity, user need and behavior, user interactions with the product or service, business unit economics, sale and distribution models, partnerships, value proposition, and funding strategies. Teams will interact with customers, partners, distributors, investors and mentors with the end goal of developing and delivering a funding pitch to a panel of entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, angel investors and faculty.
Terms: Win | Units: 4

CHPR 212: Methods for Health Care Delivery Innovation, Implementation and Evaluation (HRP 218, MED 212)

Terms: Win | Units: 2

CHPR 228: Theoretical Foundations and Design of Behavioral Intervention Trials

Focuses on the knowledge and skills, respect and thoughtful practice of designing health promotion interventions that are relevant, theoretically-informed, have broad impacts, and can endure. Provides an in-depth review of intervention approaches for health promotion and disease prevention and covers the leading theories of behavior change. Follows an integrative model to demonstrate similarities and differences between the theoretical approaches, seeking what is useful and worthwhile in each theoretical model rather than looking primarily for what is most easily criticized. Practical in nature with emphasis on the specifics of needs assessments and intervention development and delivery and how these may vary across community settings, with diverse populations, addressing different behaviors, and leveraging traditional and emerging delivery channels. Explores intervention creation, delivery, effectiveness, and sustainability to identify and better understand the resources and other practical considerations necessary to produce, deliver, monitor, and disseminate an intervention with demonstrated effectiveness. Examples drawn from across the behavioral spectrum and include tobacco control, physical activity, healthy diet, stress and distress, as well as consideration of the complexities of extending interventions to target multiple risk behaviors. Students develop a foundational understanding of behavior change theory, rigorous research methods, and creative design strategies to advance the health of individuals and communities.
Terms: Win | Units: 3

CHPR 255: The Responsible Conduct of Research for Clinical and Community Researchers (MED 255C)

Engages clinical researchers in discussions about ethical issues commonly encountered during their clinical research careers and addresses contemporary debates at the interface of biomedical science and society. Graduate students required to take RCR who are or will be conducting clinical research are encouraged to enroll in this version of the course. Prequisite: research experience recommended.
Terms: Aut, Spr | Units: 1
Instructors: Stafford, R. (PI)

COMM 138: Deliberative Democracy Practicum: Applying Deliberative Polling (COMM 238, CSRE 38)

In this course, students will work directly on a real-world deliberative democracy project using the method of Deliberative Polling. Students in this course will work in partnership with the Center for Deliberative Democracy at Stanford, a research center devoted to the research in democracy and public opinion around the world. This unique practicum will allow students to work on an actual Deliberative Polling project on campus. In just one quarter, the students will prepare for, implement, and analyze the results for an Deliberative Polling project. This is a unique opportunity that allows students to take part in the entire process of a deliberative democracy project. Through this practicum, students will apply quantitative and qualitative research methods in a local community or local high school and subsequently, analyze the relevant quantitative and qualitative data. Students will explore the underlying challenges and complexities of what it means to actually do community-engaged research in the real world. As such, this course will provide students with skills and experience in research design in deliberative democracy, community and stakeholder engagement, and the practical aspects of working in local communities. This practicum is a collaboration between the Center for Deliberative Democracy, the Bill Lane Center for the American West and the Haas Center for Public Service.nnCDD website: http://cdd.stanford.edunBill Lane Center website: http://west.stanford.edunHass Center website: https://haas.stanford.edu
Terms: Win, Spr | Units: 3-5 | Repeatable 3 times (up to 15 units total)
Instructors: Siu, A. (PI)

COMM 274D: Public Affairs Data Journalism II

Learn how to find, create and analyze data to tell news stories with public service impact. Uses relational databases, advanced queries, basic statistics, and mapping to analyze data for storytelling. Assignments may include stories, blog posts, and data visualizations, with at least one in-depth project based on data analysis. Prerequisites: COMM 273D or Journalism M.A. student.
Terms: Win | Units: 4 | Repeatable 2 times (up to 4 units total)
Instructors: Phillips, C. (PI)

COMPMED 85N: Animal Use in Biomedical Research

Preference to freshmen. How and why animals are used in biomedical science. Addresses human and animal disease entities and how animal research has contributed to the treatment and cure of disease. Significantnportions of this course are devoted to documenting the humane care and treatment of laboratory animals in research, including, but not limited to such topics as laws and ethics, animal behavior, animal modeling, and the animal activist movement. Course topics will also include: What advances have been made as a result of the use of animals in research? Who conducts animal research? Predominant animal species used in biomedical research, facts and myths; the regulation of biomedical research; housing and care of laboratory animals; why new drugs must be tested; animal use in stem cell research, cancer research and genetically engineered mice; career choices in biomedical research.
Terms: Spr | Units: 3

CS 192: Programming Service Project

Restricted to Computer Science students. Appropriate academic credit (without financial support) is given for volunteer computer programming work of public benefit and educational value.
Terms: Aut, Win, Spr, Sum | Units: 1-4 | Repeatable for credit
Instructors: Aiken, A. (PI) ; Altman, R. (PI) ; Baker, M. (PI) ; Barbagli, F. (PI) ; Batzoglou, S. (PI) ; Bejerano, G. (PI) ; Bernstein, M. (PI) ; Boneh, D. (PI) ; Bradski, G. (PI) ; Brafman, R. (PI) ; Cain, J. (PI) ; Cao, P. (PI) ; Cheriton, D. (PI) ; Cooper, S. (PI) ; Dally, B. (PI) ; De-Micheli, G. (PI) ; Dill, D. (PI) ; Dwork, C. (PI) ; Engler, D. (PI) ; Fedkiw, R. (PI) ; Feigenbaum, E. (PI) ; Fikes, R. (PI) ; Fisher, K. (PI) ; Fogg, B. (PI) ; Fox, A. (PI) ; Garcia-Molina, H. (PI) ; Genesereth, M. (PI) ; Gill, J. (PI) ; Girod, B. (PI) ; Goel, A. (PI) ; Guibas, L. (PI) ; Hanrahan, P. (PI) ; Heer, J. (PI) ; Hennessy, J. (PI) ; Horowitz, M. (PI) ; Johari, R. (PI) ; Johnson, M. (PI) ; Jurafsky, D. (PI) ; Katti, S. (PI) ; Kay, M. (PI) ; Khatib, O. (PI) ; Klemmer, S. (PI) ; Koller, D. (PI) ; Koltun, V. (PI) ; Konolige, K. (PI) ; Kozyrakis, C. (PI) ; Lam, M. (PI) ; Latombe, J. (PI) ; Leskovec, J. (PI) ; Levis, P. (PI) ; Levitt, M. (PI) ; Levoy, M. (PI) ; Li, F. (PI) ; Manna, Z. (PI) ; Manning, C. (PI) ; Mazieres, D. (PI) ; McCarthy, J. (PI) ; McCluskey, E. (PI) ; McKeown, N. (PI) ; Meng, T. (PI) ; Mitchell, J. (PI) ; Motwani, R. (PI) ; Musen, M. (PI) ; Nass, C. (PI) ; Nayak, P. (PI) ; Ng, A. (PI) ; Nilsson, N. (PI) ; Olukotun, O. (PI) ; Ousterhout, J. (PI) ; Parlante, N. (PI) ; Plotkin, S. (PI) ; Plummer, R. (PI) ; Prabhakar, B. (PI) ; Pratt, V. (PI) ; Raghavan, P. (PI) ; Rajaraman, A. (PI) ; Roberts, E. (PI) ; Rosenblum, M. (PI) ; Roughgarden, T. (PI) ; Sahami, M. (PI) ; Salisbury, J. (PI) ; Schwarz, K. (PI) ; Shoham, Y. (PI) ; Thrun, S. (PI) ; Tobagi, F. (PI) ; Trevisan, L. (PI) ; Ullman, J. (PI) ; Van Roy, B. (PI) ; Widom, J. (PI) ; Wiederhold, G. (PI) ; Williams, R. (PI) ; Winograd, T. (PI) ; Young, P. (PI) ; Zelenski, J. (PI)
Filter Results:
term offered
updating results...
teaching presence
updating results...
number of units
updating results...
time offered
updating results...
days
updating results...
UG Requirements (GERs)
updating results...
component
updating results...
career
updating results...
© Stanford University | Terms of Use | Copyright Complaints