ECON S2226 (CRN: 30059)
Instructors: Rohen Shah
Dates: Session A, May 25 - June 26, 2026
Course Mode: In-Person
Meeting Times: TTh 1.00-4.15
Distributional Requirements: Social Sciences
Eligibility: Open to pre-college and college students
In-person Course. Standard economic theory typically assumes a fully rational decision maker. While this is a powerful modeling tool, it has faced substantial critique for being unrealistic. Rather than discarding this framework, behavioral economics investigates how relaxing some of these rationality assumptions changes economic predictions and insights. This course introduces key cognitive biases that shape real-world decision, and their implications for classical economic analysis. We will develop both an intuitive and mathematical understanding of these biases (present bias, loss aversion, decoy effect, etc.) and will explore empirical evidence that demonstrates biases in practical settings. The course strikes a balance between accessibility and rigor by discussing formal logic underlying behavioral patterns without requiring training in calculus or advanced microeconomic theory. Prerequisites: ECON 1108, 1110, 1115, or completed AP Microeconomics with a score of a 4 or 5. 1 Credit. Session A: May 25 – June 26. Tuition: $5480.
ANTH S3245 (CRN: 30026)
Dates: Session B, June 29 - July 31, 2026
Course Mode: Online
Online Course. Blends urban history with educational and housing policy to explore how spatial relationships have shaped opportunity since the groundbreaking Supreme Court decision, Brown V. Board of Education. Investigates a range of historical…
EDST S2555 (CRN: 30178)
Dates: Session B, June 29 - July 31, 2026
Course Mode: Online
Online Course. Blends urban history with educational and housing policy to explore how spatial relationships have shaped opportunity since the groundbreaking Supreme Court decision, Brown V. Board of Education. Investigates a range of historical…
URBN S3319 (CRN: 30179)
Dates: Session B, June 29 - July 31, 2026
Course Mode: Online
Online Course. Blends urban history with educational and housing policy to explore how spatial relationships have shaped opportunity since the groundbreaking Supreme Court decision, Brown V. Board of Education. Investigates a range of historical…
ECON S2159 (CRN: 30261)
Dates: Session B, June 29 - July 31, 2026
Course Mode: In-Person
In-person Course. An introduction to the theory of multi-person decision problems and its application in economic analysis. Discussion of static and dynamic noncooperative games with particular attention to the notions of Nash equilibrium…
WGSS S2255 (CRN: 30169)
Dates: Session B, June 29 - July 31, 2026
Course Mode: Online
Online Course. This seminar plunges into the unruly life of power: how it inhabits laws and states, moves through gendered and racialized bodies, and conceals itself in the seeming neutrality of words. What makes a rule feel legitimate? …
PLSC S2253 (CRN: 30129)
Dates: Session A, May 25 - June 26, 2026
Course Mode: Online
Online Course. This course explores theoretical and empirical work in political science to study the relationship between gender and politics in the United States and around the world. In doing so, we will examine women’s access to power over…