Building 494, Telephone: (805) 893-2364,
Provost: William J. Ashby
Associate Provost: Armand Kuris
Open a new browser window to view the divisional web page
for the College of Creative
Studies.
The College of Creative Studies at UCSB is unique in the University of California. The adjective "creative" is not intended to suggest that students create their own majors, although there is a great deal of flexibility in the Creative Studies programs. Rather, the Creative Studies major is for talented students who are committed to advanced and independent work in one of the disciplines represented in the college. Each of the approximately 200 students enrolled in the college enjoys close individual advising and conscientious academic attention from a faculty committed to undergraduate teaching. Courses offered by the college are designed to allow students to rigorously explore or even modify a field of knowledge rather than merely expose them to a predetermined quantity of fixed subject matter. Through intense creative work and research projects typically reserved for graduate school, students acquire a thorough comprehension of their discipline and are encouraged to begin making original contributions to the field. Most classes in the college are tutorials and small seminars.
In addition to taking courses within the College of Creative Studies, students are guided and encouraged to work within academic departments in the Colleges of Letters and Science and Engineering, taking full advantage of the many courses, extensive research equipment, facilities, and expertise available at UCSB.
Students choose one of the eight emphases offered by the College of Creative Studies when they apply for admission. The flexibility in curricular design, however, allows considerable latitude. Ambitious students occasionally complete two emphases. When appropriate to their educational goals, students may choose to complete both a CCS major and a major in either the College of Letters and Science or the College of Engineering. Students also have the option to complete one of the many minors now available through the College of Letters and Science.
Most Creative Studies courses are open to students from other UCSB colleges, although CCS students normally have priority. Permission of the instructor is required to remain enrolled in the course. Because Creative Studies course offerings are not published in the quarterly Schedule of Classes, students should contact the college office for registration details.
The college publishes the annual College of Creative Studies Announcement, containing detailed information and an application. It may be obtained, along with additional information, from the college office.
AdmissionTransfer. Students may apply at any time for transfer into another academic unit of the university, with appropriate credit granted for their standing in the college. Those applying for transfer to the college, if accepted, will be enrolled at the equivalent College of Creative Studies level. Students are normally expected to spend at least six quarters enrolled in the college to receive a degree from the College of Creative Studies.
Courses taken outside the College of Creative Studies will be graded according to the grading system of the college in which the courses were taken. Students must maintain a 2.0 grade-point average in courses taken for letter grades outside the College of Creative Studies.
Each unit of credit earned is counted toward graduation; 180 quarter-units of credit qualify the student to be evaluated for graduation with a bachelor of arts degree or a bachelor of science degree in the College of Creative Studies.
In addition to completing an emphasis with the guidance of an advisor, each student must fulfill the College of Creative Studies general education requirements. These are designed to accommodate individual interests while still ensuring that each student acquires a broad education. Each student is required to complete a) two courses in fields related to the student's emphasis, as determined in consultation with a CCS advisor; b) eight courses broadly distributed in fields unrelated to the student's emphasis, as determined in consultation with the advisor. These may be selected from courses offered by the College of Creative Studies, the College of Letters and Science, and the College of Engineering.
One of these courses must fulfill the ethnic studies requirement: a course that concentrates on the intellectual, social, and cultural experience and history of one of the following groups: Native-Americans, Afro-Americans, Chicanos/Latinos, Asian-Americans. This course may be selected from a list of ethnic studies courses offered through the College of Letters and Science, or it may be a College of Creative Studies course that is classified as an ethnic studies course.
All College of Creative Studies courses, except the Computer Science CS courses, General Studies CS 10, and Physics CS 1A through CS 6, are considered upper-division. The only prerequisite for enrollment in any course is the instructor's approval.
Students in the college work closely with their advisors, reviewing their planned courses of study each quarter. Contingent upon completion of all requirements, the advisor recommends the student for graduation. Final certification for graduation is vested in the College of Creative Studies Executive Committee.
William Ashby, Ph.D., University of Michigan, Professor (romance philology, linguistics)
Apostolos Athanassakis, Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania, Professor (Greek poetry, classical linguistics)
Donald Aue, Ph.D., Cornell University, Associate Professor (organic chemistry)
David D. Awschalom, Ph.D., Cornell University, Professor (condensed matter physics-experimental)
Robyn Bell, Ph.D., UC Santa Barbara, Lecturer with security of employment (literature)
Alison Butler, Ph.D., UC San Diego, Associate Professor (bio-inorganic chemistry)
Karen Carson, M.F.A., UC Los Angeles, Assistant Professor (art studio)
Dan Connally, M.F.A., UC Davis, Lecturer (art)
Andrew E. Duffy, Ph.D., Harvard University, Professor (english)
Roger Freedman, Ph.D., Stanford University, Lecturer (physics)
William Kraft, M.A., Columbia University, Professor (music composition)
Armand Kuris, Ph.D., UC Berkeley, Professor (parasitology, marine ecology)
Suzanne Jill Levine, Ph.D., New York University, Professor (Spanish and Latin literature, literary translation)
Darren Long, Ph.D., Cambridge University, Professor (mathematics)
Hank Pitcher, Lecturer with Security of Employment (art)
Harry Reese, M.A., Brown University and UC Santa Barbara, Associate Professor (printmaking)
John Ridland, Ph.D., Claremont Graduate School, Professor (writing, poetry)
Francesc Roig, Ph.D., Amherst, Lecturer with Security of Employment (physics)
Charles Ryavec, Ph.D., University of Michigan, Lecturer with Security of Employment (mathematics)
Logan Speirs, M.A., Cambridge University, Associate Professor (literature)
Bruce H. Tiffney, Ph.D., Harvard University, Associate Professor (evolutionary biology, paleobotany)
Robert R. Warner, Ph.D., Scripps Institution of Oceanography, Professor (marine ecology)
Rosalind Wholden, M.F.A., UC Los Angeles, Lecturer (art history and criticism)
John Wilson, Ph.D., UC Santa Barbara, Lecturer (literature)
Kim Teru Yasuda, M.F.A., University of Southern California, Assistant Professor (art studio)
Adrian Wenner, Ph.D., University of Michigan, Professor Emeritus (biology)
Since these courses are arranged and scheduled after the Schedule of Classes has been printed, interested students should inquire about CCS courses a few weeks before the beginning of each quarter. Further information, including detailed descriptions of courses, is available at the College of Creative Studies office.
CS 20. Advanced Group Interdisciplinary Studies
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Advanced group studies in focused topics in an interdisciplinary
area, supervised by a member of the faculty of the College of Creative
Studies.
CS 2. Themes
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Drawing and painting in sequences, and according to themes.
CS 4. Prints
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Emphasis on practice in graphic media (e.g., etching);
various methods and materials utilized will be determined by particular
faculty interest.
CS 5. Book Arts
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
The study and practice of typography; letterpress printing;
both traditional and experimental uses of the printing press; and the book
arts.
CS 6. Art Symposium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
A continuing series of lectures and presentations by
artists and professionals closely associated with the arts.
CS 7. History, Theory, and Criticism
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Non-studio emphasis on historical, theoretical, and contemporary
ideas and issues. A range of concepts will be discussed, from various approaches,
according to the particular interests of faculty and students.
CS 10. Graphic Study of the History of Graphic Ideas:
Drawing
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
The surviving works of art from the Paleolithic period
until now constitute an existing order that may be considered the proper
material for study by aspiring draughtsmen and painters. Art CS 10 emphasizes
drawing.
CS 11. Graphic Study of the History of Graphic Ideas:
Painting
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
The surviving works of art from the Paleolithic period
until now constitute an existing order that may be considered the proper
material for study by aspiring draughtsmen and painters. Art CS 11 emphasizes
painting.
CS 12. Special Topics
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
This special studies course allows faculty to design
and execute courses that reflect their particular research and teaching.
CS 15. Art Colloquium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Students receiving credit will present talks in their
field on material arranged in consultation with the instructor. Credit
assigned by the instructor will reflect the extent and quality of participation.
CS 20. Sculpture
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Practice in the design and development of making a sculpture
using various materials as determined by particular faculty interest.
CS 25. Sculpture-Related Studies
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Non-studio emphasis on generation and development of
images, ideas, and imagination through field trips, slides, presentations,
and videos. Primarily for sculptors.
CS 50. Elements of Filmmaking
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Practice in theory and technique of filmmaking or video.
Students will learn to use the basic equipment, and will make films or
videos both individually and in collaboration. Medium utilized will be
determined by particular faculty interest.
CS 2. Laboratory Project
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Set up by the student in consultation with the instructor,
and concluding with the student's report of progress.
CS 3. Reading Project
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Set up by the student in consultation with the instructor,
and concluding with the student's report of progress.
CS 9. Advanced Independent Research
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Independent research on an original subject under faculty
supervision carried out in a biology faculty research group. These advanced
projects will attempt research of publishable quality; generally resulting
in the preparation of a written report or manuscript for publication.
CS 10. Biology Colloquium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Students receiving credit will present talks in their
field on material arranged in consultation with the instructor. Credit
assigned by the instructor will reflect the extent and quality of participation.
CS 2. Project
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Investigation of a specific problem in chemistry, set
up in consultation with the instructor, and concluding with the student's
report of progress.
CS 3. Seminar
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Presentation and critical discussion of topics in chemistry.
CS 4. General Chemistry Seminar
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Accelerated course in general chemistry.
CS 5. Physical Chemistry Seminar
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Accelerated course in elementary physical chemistry.
CS 6. Organic Chemistry
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Accelerated course in elementary organic chemistry.
CS 7. Organic Chemistry Laboratory
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Laboratory and discussion section on organic chemistry
and spectroscopy, taken in conjunction with Chemistry 7B-C.
CS 10. Chemistry Colloquium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Students receiving credit will present talks in their
field on material arranged in consultation with the instructor. Credit
assigned by the instructor will reflect the extent and quality of participation.
CS 15. Theoretical Chemistry Seminar
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Course in theoretical physical chemistry emphasizing
quantum mechanics.
CS 2. Foundations of Computer Science
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be repeated
for credit to a maximum of 8 units.
Mathematical foundations of computer science. Including
sets, relations, functions, logic, and cobinatorics.
CS 10. Computer Science Colloquium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be repeated
for credit.
Students receiving credit will present talks in their
field on material arranged in consultation with the instructor. Credit
assigned by the instructor will reflect the extent and quality of participation.
CS 20. Special Topics
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be repeated
for credit.
Lectures on a coherent body of computer science topics
which are not usually presented in standard computer science courses.
CS 2. Writing: Narrative Prose
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Practice in the writing of fiction.
CS 3. Writing: Expository Prose
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Practice in the writing of essays and criticism.
CS 5. Literature Symposium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
A continuing series of lectures, readings, and presentations
by faculty, guest writers, and other professionals in the literary fields.
CS 10. Genres
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Emphasis on the development of literary forms, represented
in the work of major authors, essential traditions. Exploration of ways
genre directs and, discovered by a topic, takes individual shape. Intensive
reading, substantial exposition.
CS 11. Literary Structure: Chronological
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Emphasis on periods and influences: intervals during
which literary production especially corresponds with or responds to activity
in the culture at large. Extensive reading and exposition.
CS 12. Literary Structure: Nonchronological
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Logical, analogical, cyclical, and repetitive schemes.
CS 13. Subjects and Materials
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Emphasis on style and content of literary texts: critical
investigation of how matter and manner work together in serious literature.
Extensive reading and exposition.
CS 14. Themes and Motifs
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Emphasis on structure and meaning in literary texts:
analytic focus on principles of representation, and on recurrent features,
in the literature studied. Extensive reading and exposition.
CS 15. Literature Colloquium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Students receiving credit will present talks in their
field on material arranged in consultation with the instructor. Credit
assigned by the instructor will reflect the extent and quality of participation.
CS 2. Project
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Set up by the student in consultation with the instructor,
and concluding with the student's report of progress.
CS 3. Topics in Modern Algebra
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Topics may include groups; modules; vector spaces; algebras;
metric structures on vector spaces; representation theory; multilinear
algebra; graded structures; universal properties; a survey of important
algebraic structures.
CS 5. Computer Applications
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Applications of the various campus computers and departmental
microcomputers to problems in mathematics, biology, chemistry, and physics.
CS 9. Advanced Independent Research
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be repeated
for credit to a maximum of 18 units.
Independent research on an original subject under faculty
supervision carried out in a mathematics faculty research group. These
advanced projects will attempt research of publishable quality; generally
resulting in the preparation of a written report or manuscript for publication.
CS 10. Mathematics Colloquium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Students receiving credit will present talks in their
field on material arranged in consultation with the instructor. Credit
assigned by the instructor will reflect the extent and quality of participation.
CS 20. Special Topics
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Lectures on a coherent body of mathematical topics which
are not usually presented in standard mathematics courses.
CS 40. Introduction to Mathematical Problems
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Several nontrivial solved and unsolved mathematical problems
are considered which require a minimal background. These include tiling
and network problems, the solutions of which are ultimately useful in the
natural sciences.
CS 2. Analysis: Materials
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Small group instruction in theoretical subjects (harmony,
composition, orchestrations, etc.).
CS 3. Analysis: Forms
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Small group instruction in musical forms and their development.
CS 4. Aural Disciplines
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Ear training, dictation, and sight singing.
CS 5. Special Topics
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Individual or small group instruction in selected subjects
(individual composers and their works, special compositional techniques,
etc.).
CS 6. Computer Applications
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Applications of the various campus computers to problems
in music.
CS 15. Music Colloquium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Students receiving credit will present talks in their
field on material arranged in consultation with the instructor. Credit
assigned by the instructor will reflect the extent and quality of participation.
CS 2A. Mechanics and Waves
(1-4) Staff
Prerequisites: consent of instructor.
Oscillatory motion. Rotational motion. Angular momentum.
Gravity and central force motion. Elastic waves.
CS 3A. Waves, Kinetic Theory, and Relativity
(1-4) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Sound waves. Fluid dynamics. Kinetic theory of matter.
The Maxwell-Botzmann distribution. Specific heat. Entropy. The special
theory of relativity.
CS 4. Electromagnetism
(1-4) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Electrostatics. DC circuits. Magnetostatics. Faraday's
law of induction.
CS 5. Electromagnetism and Optics
(1-4) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Magnetic materials. AC circuits. Maxwell's equations.
Electromagnetic waves. Ray optics. Wave optics. Kirchhoff diffraction theory.
CS 6. Quantum Physics
(1-4) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
Wave-particle duality. Photons. Matter waves. The uncertainty
principle. The Schrodinger equation. Potential wells and barriers. The
quantized simple harmonic oscillator. The hydrogen atom.
CS 9. Advanced Independent Research
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be repeated
for credit to a maximum of 18 units.
Independent research on an original subject under faculty
supervision carried out in a physics faculty research group. These advanced
projects will attempt research of publishable quality; generally resulting
in the preparation of a written report or manuscript for publication.
CS 10. Physics Colloquium
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Students receiving credit will present talks in their
field on material arranged in consultation with the instructor. Credit
assigned by the instructor will reflect the extent and quality of participation.
CS 15A. Introduction to Experimental Physics
(1-2) Staff
Prerequisite: Physics CS 3 or consent of instructor.
Laboratory course focusing on using the experimental
method to explore physical phenomena and to discover the specific mathematical
laws describing them. Students are expected to carry out and interpret
their own experiments. Three reports in the form of short papers are required.
(F)
CS 15B-C. Experimental Physics
(1-3) Staff
Prerequisite: Physics CS 15A or consent of instructor.
Laboratory course focusing on the art and science of
experimentation. Each student will design experiments to measure well-defined
physical quantities, and build, borrow, and assemble the necessary apparatus.
A research paper presenting the method, results, and conclusions, together
with an oral presentation, will be required for each experiment.
CS 20. Laboratory Project
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Set up by the student in consultation with the instructor,
and concluding with the student's report of progress.
CS 30. Reading Project
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Set up by the student in consultation with the instructor,
and concluding with the student's report of progress.
CS 40. Special Topics
(1-6) Staff
Prerequisite: consent of instructor. May be taken as
often as once each quarter for credit.
Lectures on a coherent body of physical topics which
are not usually presented in standard undergraduate physics courses.