ACE 199

Spring 2021 Part of Term B

Part of Term B
Mar 22-May 5

Credit: 1 TO 5 hours.

Experimental course on a special topic in agricultural and consumer economics. Topic may not be repeated except in accordance with the Code.

Approved for Letter and S/U grading. May be repeated if topics vary, up to 5 hours in the same semester, to a maximum of 12 hours.

Section Status updates every 10 minutes.
ACE 199 class schedule data for spring 2021
CRN Type Section Time Day Location Instructor Section Details
44953
Lecture-Discussion
LKE
10:00AM -10:50AM
TR
Mumford Hall
Karplus, L
Part of Term:
B
Date Range:
03/22/21-05/05/21
Credit:
1 hours
Section Title:
Food Security in CU
Section Info:
This in-person experiential learning course will exam the layout of food security in Champaign Urbana while conducting project-based work with local food security actors. The context of local food security will be examined through multiple lenses and perspectives. Site visits to various local actors involved in food security will be conducted as part of this course, so safety permitting, students must be local and willing to visit local food security organizations occasionally outside of course hours. Contact lkarpl2@illinois.edu with questions. This class is in person and utilizes Compass (compass2g.illinois.edu) as the course platform for assignments and readings.
71962
Online
Online
NPS
NPS
2:00PM -3:20PM
ARRANGED
M
n.a.
n.a.
n.a.
Stoddard, P
Stoddard, P
Part of Term:
B
Date Range:
03/22/21-05/05/21
Credit:
2 hours
Section Title:
Negotiation
Section Info:
Negotiation is a critical business skill that is of great value to students throughout their financial lives. Whether they want to or not, graduates will enter into possible negotiation scenarios any time they buy, sell, borrow, repay, lend, invest, divest, lease, seek employment, or hire others. Knowing how to negotiate and, just as importantly, how others are likely to negotiate with you, will give our students an additional valuable skillset that will empower them throughout their careers. Graduates enter a workplace where differing points of view among multiple constituencies are the norm. Students who understand the interplay between parties with opposing interests will do better for their employers and themselves. Every student will benefit from this course and learn useful skills they can apply immediately across a very wide range of careers and in their personal financial lives as well. Students are required to login and use Compass (compass2g.illinois.edu) in order to complete this course.
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