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Computing, Culture, and Society

  • About CCS
    • Track Description
    • Qualifying Exams
    • Qualifying Exam Reading List
    • Courses
  • Faculty
    • Nathan Ensmenger
    • Christena Nippert-Eng
    • John Paolillo
    • Selma Sabanovic
    • Patrick C. Shih
    • Jennifer Terrell
  • Students
  • Research Areas
  • News
  • Apply

Courses

Graduate courses taught by CCS faculty include:

 

I501 – Introduction to Informatics 

I502 – Human-Centered Reseach Methods in Informatics

I540 – Human Robot Interaction

I590 Topics courses including

  • Social Media Research
  • Enacting Identity

I609 – Advanced seminar 1 in CCS

I709 – Advanced seminar 2 in CCS

I651 – Ethnographies of Information

 

What is CCS?

Grounded in the Science and Technology Studies (STS) tradition, the Computing, Culture and Society (CCS) track focuses on the relationship between technological innovation and larger social, political, legal, and economic developments.

From social media and artificial intelligence, gaming, domestic and workplace applications, little data and Big Data, to mobile technologies and giant server farms, computing technologies are a constant presence in our lives.

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  • About CCS
  • Track Description
  • Qualifying Exams
  • Qualifying Exam Reading List
  • Courses
  • Faculty
  • Nathan Ensmenger
  • Christena Nippert-Eng
  • John Paolillo
  • Selma Sabanovic
  • Patrick C. Shih
  • Jennifer Terrell
  • Students
  • Research Areas
  • News
  • Apply