Week |
Subject |
Related Preparation |
1) |
Jewish and Early Christian art: Catacombs and Dura Europos
Constantinople and Early Byzantine Art
Mosaics and Manuscripts |
Reading: Stokstad, Chapter 7: “Early Christian, Jewish and Byzantine Art,” to page 254.
On-line sources: Selections from the Bible |
2) |
BYZANTIUM AND ISLAM
Byzantine icons
Byzantium and Europe |
Stokstad, Chapter 8: “Islamic Art”
On-line sources: Selections from the Qur’an, and from medieval geographers. |
3) |
ARTS OF THE ISLAMIC WORLD.
Mosque and palace.
Luxury arts in the Islamic world.
Celtic and Germanic arts of Northern Europe |
Stokstad, Chapter 9: “Early Medieval Art in Europe”
On-line sources: Short selections from Beowulf |
4) |
EARLY MEDIEVAL WEST
Sutton Hoo ship burial
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5) |
GOTHIC ART AND ARCHITECTURE
The Gothic cathedral
Gothic sculpture and decorative arts
The Fourteenth Century in Europe |
Stokstad, Chapter 11: “Gothic Art of the Twefth and Thirteenth Centuries” and Chapter
12, “Fourteenth Century Art in Europe.” |
6) |
Selection of Isms in European art |
|
7) |
From Gothic to Renaissance: The Fourteenth Century in Italy |
Chapter 20, “Piety, Passion, and Politics: Fifteenth-Century Art in Northern Europe and Spain |
8) |
Beauty, Science, and Spirit in Italian Art: The High Renaissance and Mannerism” |
Chapter 22 |
9) |
Humanism and the Allure of Antiquity: Fifteenth Century Italian Art”
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Chapter 21 |
10) |
Of Popes, Peasants, Monarchs, and Merchants: Baroque and Rococo Art |
Chapter 24 |
11) |
Neoclassicism and the Industrial Revolution |
Chapter 25 |
12) |
Modernism, modernity, and modern art. |
Paul Wood, “Introduction: The Avant-Garde and Modernism,” in
The Challenge of the Avant-Garde, ed. Paul Wood (New Haven:
Yale University Press, 1999): 7-31. |
13) |
Sculpture and Photography: From Academy to Arcades |
Potts, The Sculptural Imagination |
14) |
Revision |
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15) |
Final exam |
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16) |
Final exam |
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Program Outcomes |
Level of Contribution |
1) |
To be able to dominate medical laboratory medical terms and terminology specific |
1 |
2) |
To have knowledge medical laboratory tests in every area of the analysis of the relevant tests |
1 |
3) |
To have knowledge about the working principle of human body metabolism and to be knowledge able about and in all areas of medical laboratory tests and results with the knowledge necessary to establish the relationship between metabolism and gain intellectual structure |
1 |
4) |
To able to make preparations processes before analysis and after to apply disinfection and sterilization techniques |
1 |
5) |
To extract the errors that occur during application of the test and to resolve problems that occur |
1 |
6) |
To have professional authority and responsibility |
1 |
7) |
To be able to do their work under the rules of professional ethics and proper to be able to properly display . |
1 |
8) |
To have the consciousness of responsibility who is respectful to history and social values, communicating effectively with patient and health staff to conduct in terms of health services and who is able to make teanwork when needed |
1 |
9) |
To able to be an individual who is interested in new information and changes life-long and the development of coordinating skill to the improvements in country and in the world. |
1 |