HUMS 105 / FAITH AND POWER: EXPLORING THE WORLD MIDDLE AGES
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: TUES THURSTimes: 11:30:00-12:45:00

Introduction to the key issues in the cultural history of Europe, Near Eastern Mediterranean, Eurasia and Americas from the 5th century A.D. to the 15th century, emphasis on aspects, which have contributed to our modern cultures. Various sources, methods of analysis of history, society, religion and art of medieval cultures as well as their mutual relationships and connections. Focusing on the Byzantine world and Medieval Europe, the rise and spreading of Islamic civilizations, the developments in Eurasian and Mesoamerican civilizations before the 15th century.

HUMS 105 / FAITH AND POWER: EXPLORING THE WORLD MIDDLE AGES
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: TUES THURSTimes: 16:00:00-17:15:00

Introduction to the key issues in the cultural history of Europe, Near Eastern Mediterranean, Eurasia and Americas from the 5th century A.D. to the 15th century, emphasis on aspects, which have contributed to our modern cultures. Various sources, methods of analysis of history, society, religion and art of medieval cultures as well as their mutual relationships and connections. Focusing on the Byzantine world and Medieval Europe, the rise and spreading of Islamic civilizations, the developments in Eurasian and Mesoamerican civilizations before the 15th century.

HUMS 107 / HEGEMONY, POWER AND THE PEOPLE
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: TUES THURSTimes: 11:30:00-12:45:00

Understanding the ways modern nation-state system influence the common people. Examining the world history between the 18th century and the early 21th century. Inquiry on the modern nation-state through the rising hegemonic states and changes in international balance of power. Focusing on societies of a wide geographical range, from Latin America to Europe; from China and South East Asia to Africa and understanding how `the masses? are affected from changes in hegemonic power(s) and challenges posed to the modern nation-state system. Learning to account for different methodologies, such as qualitative process tracing of newspaper articles and quantitative descriptive analysis of country and individual level data.

HUMS 108 / IDENTITY, POWER AND CULTURE
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: MON WEDTimes: 14:30:00-15:45:00

Focusing on how power structures and different cultural encounters including trade, religious conversion, conquest, migration, colonization and warfare influence the way people see themselves and `the others? from the 18th century to the beginning of 21st century. Understanding how individuals conceive and experience their identities along nation, class, race, ethnicity, gender in the broader context of different geographic regions across the globe. Recourse to a variety of historical sources from photos to cartoons.

HUMS 108 / IDENTITY, POWER AND CULTURE
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: MON WEDTimes: 11:30:00-12:45:00

Focusing on how power structures and different cultural encounters including trade, religious conversion, conquest, migration, colonization and warfare influence the way people see themselves and `the others? from the 18th century to the beginning of 21st century. Understanding how individuals conceive and experience their identities along nation, class, race, ethnicity, gender in the broader context of different geographic regions across the globe. Recourse to a variety of historical sources from photos to cartoons.

HUMS 108 / IDENTITY, POWER AND CULTURE
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: MON WEDTimes: 13:00:00-14:15:00

Focusing on how power structures and different cultural encounters including trade, religious conversion, conquest, migration, colonization and warfare influence the way people see themselves and `the others? from the 18th century to the beginning of 21st century. Understanding how individuals conceive and experience their identities along nation, class, race, ethnicity, gender in the broader context of different geographic regions across the globe. Recourse to a variety of historical sources from photos to cartoons.

HUMS 109 / THINGS: THE MATERIAL WORLDS OF HUMANITY
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: FRITimes: 14:30:00-17:15:00

Explores the relationship between people and things. Examines a wide variety of approaches to the world of objects, artifacts and material goods using several disciplines and perspectives, including archaeology, philosophy, materialist and cognitive approaches, consumption studies, phenomenology, social constructivism, actor-network-theory. Explores the relationship between people and things. Examines a wide variety of approaches to the world of objects, artifacts and material goods using several disciplines and perspectives, including archaeology, philosophy, materialist and cognitive approaches, consumption studies, phenomenology, social constructivism, actor-network-theory.

HUMS 113 / THE CRUSADES
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: MON WEDTimes: 11:30:00-12:45:00

The roots of the crusading movement in Western Christian society; the ways in which the crusades brought three world cultures (Western Europe, Byzantium and the Islamic Near East) into contact and confrontation; the type of cultural interaction that took place and the impact of the crusades in the societies of the Eastern Mediterranean.

HUMS 113 / THE CRUSADES
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: MON WEDTimes: 13:00:00-14:15:00

The roots of the crusading movement in Western Christian society; the ways in which the crusades brought three world cultures (Western Europe, Byzantium and the Islamic Near East) into contact and confrontation; the type of cultural interaction that took place and the impact of the crusades in the societies of the Eastern Mediterranean.

HUMS 114 / HISTORY OF ISTANBUL: ANCIENT TO CONTEMPORARY
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: TUES THURSTimes: 11:30:00-12:45:00

This course will examine the multi-layered history of Istanbul, focusing primarily on the built environment. In a chronological fashion, the course will explore changes and continuities in the urban space in relation to the city's political, social and economic history, from the Byzantine imperial capital to its transformation into an Ottoman city, and from an Ottoman into a modern city in the Late Ottoman and Republican periods. Within the chronological framework, the course will give a thematic overview over fortifications, imperial palaces, mosques, churches, synagogues, modest neighborhoods, commercial centers, and spaces for civic ritual and entertainment.

HUMS 117 / RATIONALITY & IRRATIONALITY
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: TUES THURSTimes: 16:00:00-17:15:00

An inquiry concerning the idea with which Western philosophy begins: we are rational animals. An investigation of what kind of power rationality is and in what respects it sets humans apart from non-rational creatures. An examination of the commonplace instances of irrationality such as weakness of the will, wishful thinking, and self-deception in order to explain the possibility of irrationality in the lives of beings which are by nature rational.

HUMS 122 / HISTORY OF TURKISH NATIONALISM
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: MON WEDTimes: 8:30:00-9:45:00

Investigating the evolution and the defining features of Turkish nationalism from the demise of the Ottoman Empire until today. Providing students with a better understanding of how different scholars conceptualize nationalism as a force shaping and reshaping the state and societies in the 19th and 20th centuries. Included topics: ideological consolidation of Turkish nationalism, the other, and the relationship of Islam and Turkish nationalism.

HUMS 122 / HISTORY OF TURKISH NATIONALISM
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: MON WEDTimes: 10:00:00-11:15:00

Investigating the evolution and the defining features of Turkish nationalism from the demise of the Ottoman Empire until today. Providing students with a better understanding of how different scholars conceptualize nationalism as a force shaping and reshaping the state and societies in the 19th and 20th centuries. Included topics: ideological consolidation of Turkish nationalism, the other, and the relationship of Islam and Turkish nationalism.

HUMS 129 / CRITICAL THINKING
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: TUES THURSTimes: 10:00:00-11:15:00

An introduction of the distinction between an argument and merely a set of sentences. An examination of the distinction between good cases and bad cases of reasoning. In depth study of some of the basic distinctions between different types of reasoning.

IICR 301 / ENFEKSİYON, İNFLAMASYON, HÜCRESEL YANITLAR
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Times: 0:00:00-0:00:00

Tıbbi mikrobiyolojide temel kavramlar, farmakoloji ve patolojiye giriş. Tıbbi önemi olan bakteriyel, viral, parazitik ve fungal patojenlerin biyolojisi, enfeksiyonların epidemiyolojisi, patojenlerin hastalık yapma özellikleri ve yaptıkları hastalıklar, enfeksiyonlardan korunma yolları, zedelenmeye ve enfeksiyonlara karşı hücrenin verdiği yanıtlar, akut ve kronik iltihap, doku iyileşmesi, hemodinamik bozukluklar ve hemostaz konularını içerir. Ayrıca ilaçlara karşı organizma cevabını etkileyen faktörler ve ilaç metabolizmaları, emilim, dağılım, biyotransformasyon, atılım ve ilaç etki süreleri konuları da işlenecektir.

IMED 402 / INTERNAL MEDICINE
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Times: 0:00:00-0:00:00

Communication with the patient and the caregivers, essential history taking and physical examination practices, requesting goal-directed laboratory tests and interpretation of all patient-related information accurately. Common and important medical diseases, signs and symptoms of diseases, laboratory methods and imaging modalities. Acute, chronic diseases and their management.

IMED 600 / INTERNAL MEDICINE
Term: Fall 2016Units 5Times: 0:00:00-0:00:00

Effective communication with the patients and their relatives, taking medical history and performing physical examination, improving physical examination skills, evaluation of signs and symptoms of the diseases, selection of the most appropriate laboratory or diagnostic tests, a reasonable analysis of patient data, and reporting patient information. To have critical knowledge about the diagnosis and management of common, foremost acute/chronic medical illnesses. Ability to select and interpret laboratory tests and imaging modalities and rational drug therapies. (8 weeks; compulsory on-call nights and weekends)

IMED 600 / INTERNAL MEDICINE
Term: Fall 2016Units 5Times: 0:00:00-0:00:00

Effective communication with the patients and their relatives, taking medical history and performing physical examination, improving physical examination skills, evaluation of signs and symptoms of the diseases, selection of the most appropriate laboratory or diagnostic tests, a reasonable analysis of patient data, and reporting patient information. To have critical knowledge about the diagnosis and management of common, foremost acute/chronic medical illnesses. Ability to select and interpret laboratory tests and imaging modalities and rational drug therapies. (8 weeks; compulsory on-call nights and weekends)

IMED 600 / INTERNAL MEDICINE
Term: Fall 2016Units 5Times: 0:00:00-0:00:00

Effective communication with the patients and their relatives, taking medical history and performing physical examination, improving physical examination skills, evaluation of signs and symptoms of the diseases, selection of the most appropriate laboratory or diagnostic tests, a reasonable analysis of patient data, and reporting patient information. To have critical knowledge about the diagnosis and management of common, foremost acute/chronic medical illnesses. Ability to select and interpret laboratory tests and imaging modalities and rational drug therapies. (8 weeks; compulsory on-call nights and weekends)

INDR 100 / INTRODUCTION TO INDUSTRIAL ENGINEERING
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: TUES WEDTimes: 14:30:00-15:45:00

Introduction to industrial engineering concepts. Fundamentals of systems analysis and modeling. Basics of production and service systems. Computer and programming applications of several industrial engineering topics. Hands-on experience for industrial engineering subjects in team projects

INDR 201 / DISCRETE MATHEMATICAL STRUCTURES
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: TUES THURSTimes: 16:00:00-17:15:00Ön Koşullar: MATH. 106 or consent of the instructor

Fundamentals of logic, mathematical induction, basic set theory, relations and functions, fundamental principles of counting, inclusion-exclusion principles, basic graph theory, trees, algorithms for basic industrial engineering and operations research problems on graphs and networks.

INDR 343 / STOCHASTIC MODELS
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: MON WEDTimes: 11:30:00-12:45:00Ön Koşullar: (ENGR. 200 and INDR. 262) or consent of the instructor

Introduction to inventory management, deterministic economic quantity models and extensions. Stochastic continuous-review and periodic-review models. Markov chains and Markov processes. Introduction to queueing systems and the Poisson process. Markovian queues, networks and management of queueing systems. Markov decision models and applications. Probabilistic dynamic programming and algorithmic solution methods.

INDR 363 / MATHEMATICAL PROGRAMMING
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: MON WEDTimes: 16:00:00-17:15:00Ön Koşullar: INDR. 262 and INDR. 201

Introduction to modeling with integer variables and integer programming; network models, dynamic programming; convexity and nonlinear optimization; applications of various optimization methods in manufacturing, product design, communications networks, transportation, supply chain, and financial systems.

INDR 371 / OPERATIONS AND FACILITIES DESIGN
Term: Fall 2016Units 3Days: TUES THURSTimes: 8:30:00-9:45:00Ön Koşullar: INDR. 262 or consent of the instructor

Facilities design process; strategic facilities planning, product, process, and schedule design, flow, space, and activity relationships, personnel requirements; material handling principles, equipment, unit load concept; facility layout, types, procedures, computer-aided tools; warehousing, order picking, automated storage/retrieval systems; quantitative models for facilities planning; evaluating, selecting, preparing, presenting, implementing, and maintaining the facilities plan.