Program Guide

What You're
Walking Into.
Course by Course.

69
Total Credits
15
Required Courses
7
Semesters

Every required course broken down — what it teaches, what you'll actually do, how hard it is, and how to prepare before you walk in.

7-Semester Plan · 69 Credits
13.5
MDes Core cr
4
Studio cr
24
MPA cr
27.5
Elective cr
69
Total Credits
Fall 2026Semester 1
Balanced Start
Stress
Medium
12
credits
this sem
IDN 508
User Research
3cr
W
IDX 550
Building Context
3cr
W
IDN 556
Strategic Comm.
1.5
7wk A
IDN 571
Systems Theory
1.5
7wk B
PA 501
Intro Public Admin
3cr
Eve
Spring 2027Semester 2
Studio Intensive
Stress
High
Studio 3–6hrs/wk project time — kept at 10cr intentionally
10
credits
this sem
IDX 542
Analysis + Synthesis
3cr
W
IDN 503
Embodied Design ★
4cr
Studio
PA 502
Org. Behavior
3cr
Eve
Fall 2027Semester 3
Elective Depth
Stress
Medium-High
Two MPA evenings + design depth — varied enough to stay engaged
10.5
credits
this sem
IDN 541
Civic Design ★★
1.5
Elec
IDN 568
Service Systems Workshop
3cr
Elec
IDX 508
Modes of Human Exp.
1.5
7wk A
PA 522
HR Management
3cr
Eve
PA 580
Policy Forecasting
1.5
Eve
Spring 2028Semester 4
Civic Deep Dive
Stress
Medium
PA 532 is quantitative — budget extra time. Design courses balance it.
9
credits
this sem
IDN 520
Co-Design + Social Interventions
3cr
Elec
IDX 535
Politics of Design
1.5
Elec
IDN 522
Research Synthesis
1.5
Elec
PA 532
Public Financial Mgmt ⚠
3cr
Eve
Fall 2028Semester 5
Hard MPA · Light Electives
Stress
Medium
PA 568 Optimization is the hardest math — keep electives light and creative
9
credits
this sem
IDN 575
Re-Thinking Systems
3cr
Elec
IDN 542
Behavioral Design
1.5
Elec
IDX 597
AI for Rapid Prototyping
1.5
Elec
PA 568
Optimization ⚠ Hard
3cr
Eve
Spring 2029Semester 6
Hardest MPA · Light Electives
Stress
High
PA 581 Econ Modeling is the peak difficulty — electives are creative relief
9
credits
this sem
IDX 537
Designing Futures
3cr
Elec
IDN 531
Adaptive Leadership
1.5
Elec
IDX 551
Facilitation Methods
1.5
Elec
PA 581
Econ. Modeling ⚠ Hardest
3cr
Eve
Fall 2029Semester 7 · Final
Capstone Focus
Stress
Low-Medium
PA 599 Practicum is real-world work — you'll want the mental space
9
credits
this sem
IDN 550
Communication Design Workshop
3cr
Elec
IDN 544
Diagram Development
1.5
Elec
IDN 546
Design Rhetoric
1.5
Elec
PA 599
Practicum — Real World
3cr
Field
MDes Core
Studio
MPA (evenings)
Elective
★ Most intensive course  ·  ⚠ Quantitative — plan ahead  ·  W = 14-week  ·  A/B = 7-week halves
01

MDes Core Courses

6 required courses · 13.5 credits · Foundation of your design identity at IIT

IDN 508
Workshop · 14wk 3 cr
Principles and Methods of User Research
Difficulty
Moderate — methods-heavy but learnable

The foundational research course for everything you'll do at IIT. You'll learn how to plan, conduct, and synthesize design research — interviews, observation, ethnography, surveys, and field studies. The methods you learn here unlock IDN 522 Research Synthesis later, so take it first semester without question.

  • Plan and conduct real user interviews with strangers in the field
  • Write discussion guides, research plans, and screeners
  • Observe behavior in context — public spaces, institutions, offices
  • Synthesize findings into insight statements and opportunity areas
  • Present research findings to faculty and peers in formal critique
  • Read "Interviewing Users" by Steve Portigal — the best primer on the craft of asking questions
  • Practice taking field notes on your own — sit in a coffee shop, observe, write what you see without judgment
  • Read Chapter 1–3 of "Practical Ethnography" by Sam Ladner
  • Watch IDEO's "Human Centered Design" field videos on YouTube

"This is the most important course you'll take first semester. Everything downstream — context, synthesis, design decisions — starts here. If you're strong in research, you're strong in everything."

IDX 550
Workshop · 14wk 3 cr
Building and Understanding Context
Difficulty
Moderate — field-work intensive

Context is everything in civic design. Before you can design for a community, a government service, or a public system — you have to deeply understand the environment that design will live in. This course teaches contextual inquiry: how to read a situation, map stakeholders, understand power dynamics, and identify the invisible forces shaping people's lives.

  • Go into real environments — transit systems, community centers, government offices — and map what's actually happening
  • Build stakeholder maps that show who holds power, who is affected, who is invisible
  • Create context maps and journey maps from field observation
  • Develop "point of view" statements grounded in real evidence
  • Present contextual findings with visual clarity
  • Start noticing context everywhere — when you're on the CTA, at the VA, at court. Ask: who designed this? Who is it for? Who is it failing?
  • Read "Thoughtful Interaction Design" by Jonas Lowgren — short, essential
  • Study any stakeholder map or service blueprint you can find online
  • Practice making simple maps of places you already know — Sarah's school drop-off route, the VA waiting room layout

"Your 20 years of observing the world as a designer is your advantage here. You already see things most students haven't learned to see yet. Trust that — and then learn the formal language to communicate what you see."

IDX 542
Workshop · 14wk 3 cr
Analysis + Synthesis
Difficulty
Moderate — thinking-intensive

The bridge between research and design. Once you've gathered research and understood context, you still have a room full of information and no design yet. Analysis + Synthesis teaches you to make sense of complexity — to find patterns, build frameworks, and turn messy data into clear design directions. This is where designers earn their keep.

  • Run affinity mapping sessions — organizing hundreds of observations into themes
  • Build analytical frameworks: 2x2 matrices, journey timelines, system diagrams
  • Develop insight statements that are evidence-based and actionable
  • Create "How Might We" questions that open design space
  • Present synthesis work in a structured, visual argument to critique panels
  • Practice affinity mapping with anything — your grocery list, your case study notes, your court documents. Group things. Find patterns.
  • Read "The Art of Innovation" by Tom Kelley — chapter on synthesis
  • Look at IDEO.org's design kit frameworks — free online
  • Practice making 2x2 diagrams about anything: cities, design movements, music genres

"Take this second semester, after IDN 508. You'll have real research to synthesize. Students who take it before doing research often struggle to understand what they're synthesizing. Sequence matters."

IDX 508
Lecture · 7wk 1.5 cr
Modes of Human Experience
Difficulty
Moderate-Hard — dense reading, abstract thinking

The most philosophical course in your required set. It asks: what does it mean to experience something as a human? How do perception, memory, emotion, culture, and environment shape how people move through the world? It's theoretical — heavy on reading, discussion, and written response — but it gives your design decisions a deeper grounding than most designers ever develop.

  • Read primary texts from phenomenology, cognitive science, and design theory
  • Write short analytical responses connecting theory to design practice
  • Participate in seminar-style discussions — your voice and argument matter here
  • Apply theoretical frameworks to analyze real designed experiences
  • Get comfortable reading slowly and carefully — academic texts reward re-reading
  • Read "The Design of Everyday Things" by Don Norman — the bridge between psychology and design
  • Read the Wikipedia summary of phenomenology — just to have a mental model before class
  • Practice writing one analytical paragraph per week about something you've experienced — a space, an interaction, a system

"This course will feel hard at first if you've never read philosophy. Don't panic. The key is to stay curious and connect every abstract idea back to something you've actually designed or experienced. Your life is the case study."

IDN 556
Lecture · 7wk 1.5 cr
Strategic Communication
Difficulty
Accessible — plays directly to your strengths

How to communicate design decisions to people who aren't designers — executives, government officials, community members, funders. Civic design lives or dies on communication. You can have the best research and the strongest design in the room, but if you can't frame it in a way that moves people to act, it doesn't matter. This course teaches you that framing.

  • Structure and deliver design presentations to non-design audiences
  • Write design briefs, proposals, and executive summaries
  • Practice narrative structure — problem, insight, opportunity, solution
  • Give and receive rigorous critique on how clearly you're communicating
  • Learn to adjust tone and register for different audiences
  • You are already good at this — 20 years of client work is your foundation
  • Study one TED talk specifically for structure — not content — and notice how the narrative is built
  • Read "Resonate" by Nancy Duarte — the best book on presentation narrative
  • Practice explaining your portfolio projects in 90 seconds to someone who doesn't know design

"This is where your professional experience becomes a direct advantage. Most of your classmates have never had to sell a design decision to a client or a skeptic. You've done it for decades."

IDN 571
Lecture · 7wk 1.5 cr
Introduction to Systems Theory
Difficulty
Moderate — conceptual, requires real engagement

Cities, governments, transit systems, healthcare systems, schools — these are all systems. Systems theory gives you the vocabulary and the mental models to understand how complex things work, why they fail, and where small interventions can create large change. This is the intellectual foundation of civic design. Without it, you're designing features. With it, you're designing for change.

  • Learn and apply core systems concepts: feedback loops, stocks and flows, emergence, leverage points
  • Map real systems — Chicago transit, the VA healthcare pipeline, the court system
  • Identify leverage points: where a small change can shift a system's behavior
  • Read and discuss foundational systems thinking texts
  • Build causal loop diagrams and system maps as visual arguments
  • Read "Thinking in Systems" by Donella Meadows — the clearest introduction ever written
  • Watch the "Leverage Points" paper by Meadows — free online, 12 pages, will rewire how you think
  • Start noticing systems around you: why does the CTA run late? What's the feedback loop? Who holds the leverage?
  • Map one system you already know well — the VA benefits process, your custody schedule — before class starts

"This course will make everything else click. The reason you want to combine design with public policy is exactly what systems theory explains — you can't design a good service inside a broken system. Now you'll have the language to prove it."

02

Studio Course

Choose one · 4 credits · The most intensive course in the program

IDN 503
Studio · 14wk · 3–6hr/wk 4 cr
Embodied Design
Difficulty
Hard — most demanding course you'll take

Design that starts with the body — how humans move through, feel, and inhabit space and objects. Embodied Design pushes you beyond screens and into physical, tactile, and spatial design thinking. For a civic designer, this means understanding how policy is felt in a body — the experience of waiting in a government office, navigating a broken transit system, or sitting in a courtroom. It expands your vocabulary as a designer in ways that pure UX work never will.

  • Design and prototype physical and spatial experiences from scratch
  • Work in the Steelcase studio with materials, tools, and hands
  • Collaborate intensively with peers across long, unstructured studio sessions
  • Iterate rapidly — make something, break it, make it better, in the same day
  • Present work-in-progress at regular critique sessions with honest, demanding feedback
  • Develop a final project that demonstrates mastery of embodied design principles
  • Get comfortable with physical making — foam, cardboard, paper prototyping. If you haven't made something physical in a while, start now
  • Visit the IIT campus before the semester — walk the Mies buildings, feel the architecture. Notice how your body responds to space
  • Read "The Eyes of the Skin" by Juhani Pallasmaa — architecture + embodiment, directly relevant
  • Schedule this when your MPA load is lightest — this course will demand your full creative energy
  • Plan for long studio days — bring food, a good bag, the right shoes

"This is where your identity as a designer gets tested and expanded. It's the most demanding course in the program — but students who lean into it, rather than just surviving it, come out with a design voice that's genuinely their own."

IDN 501
Studio · 14wk · 3–6hr/wk 4 cr
Communication Systems
Difficulty
Hard — visual and systems thinking combined

How information flows and how design shapes that flow. Communication Systems looks at design not as a single artifact but as a system of messages, channels, and meaning-making. Given your visual background — 20 years of graphic and UI design — this studio may feel like the most natural fit. But it will push you well beyond aesthetic craft into systemic thinking about how communication works at scale.

  • Design complex communication systems — wayfinding, information architecture, civic messaging
  • Map how messages travel through systems and where they break down
  • Build prototypes of communication experiences, not just single artifacts
  • Work across visual, digital, and spatial channels simultaneously
  • Present and defend communication design decisions under rigorous critique
  • Read "Information Architecture" by Peter Morville — the foundational text
  • Study Chicago's public signage, transit maps, and government communications. Where do they fail?
  • Practice designing for clarity, not just aesthetics — pick something confusing and redesign it

"Given your visual strength, this studio is where your past 20 years become a direct asset. But don't coast on aesthetics — the studio will push you to think about communication as a system, not a surface."

03

MPA Courses

8 required courses · 24 credits · Stuart School of Business · Evenings

PA 501
Evening 3 cr
Introduction to Public Administration
Difficulty
Accessible — foundational, reading and case studies

The map of the territory. Before you can design for government, you have to understand how government actually works — its structure, its incentives, its constraints, and its culture. This course gives you that map: federal, state, and local government structures, how public agencies function, how decisions get made, and why government services so often fail the people they're meant to serve.

  • Read public administration theory and case studies of real government programs
  • Analyze why specific policies succeeded or failed in implementation
  • Write analytical papers connecting theory to real-world examples
  • Discuss and debate public sector management challenges in seminar format
  • Follow Chicago city government news for one month before class — know who the mayor is, what the major policy debates are, how the aldermanic system works
  • Read about your own VA experience through a systems lens — why does it work the way it does? Who designed it?
  • Skim the City of Chicago's annual budget summary — it's public, it's revealing, and it will make class discussions concrete

"Take this first semester. It's the easiest MPA course and the most clarifying. You've lived inside government systems as a veteran and VA patient — this course will give you the language to explain what you already know from experience."

PA 502
Evening 3 cr
Organizational Behavior
Difficulty
Accessible — behavioral and organizational theory

Design doesn't happen in a vacuum — it happens inside organizations, and organizations are made of people with incentives, cultures, fears, and habits. Organizational Behavior teaches you how people behave in institutional contexts: how leadership works, why change is resisted, how culture forms, and how to navigate the human side of systems. For a civic designer, this is essential — because your designs will need to be adopted by government employees who didn't ask for them.

  • Study organizational theory through case studies of real institutions
  • Analyze group dynamics, leadership styles, and institutional culture
  • Learn frameworks for managing change in resistant organizations
  • Write papers connecting behavioral theory to public sector cases
  • Think about organizations you've been inside — the Army, the VA, client companies. What made them work or fail?
  • Read "Switch" by Chip and Dan Heath — accessible introduction to behavior change in organizations
  • Think about your own experience with institutional resistance — the VA, the court system — through the lens of organizational culture

"Your Army experience is directly relevant here. You've lived inside one of the most complex organizations in the world. You understand command culture, bureaucratic resistance, and what happens when leadership fails people on the ground."

PA 522
Evening 3 cr
Human Resource Management
Difficulty
Accessible — policy and personnel management

How public sector organizations recruit, develop, manage, and retain people. Less directly relevant to design than your other courses, but it gives you a critical lens: public sector services fail not just because of bad design, but because of workforce issues — understaffed agencies, demoralized employees, poor training, misaligned incentives. Understanding HR in government means understanding one of the root causes of service failure.

  • Study public sector employment law, civil service systems, and union dynamics
  • Analyze HR policy case studies in government agencies
  • Write policy memos and analytical papers on workforce challenges
  • Understand how government hiring, promotion, and firing actually work
  • Read about the Chicago city employee union structure — it's publicly documented and will ground the course immediately
  • No heavy preparation needed — approach with genuine curiosity about why government workforce is designed the way it is

"Use this course to understand the human infrastructure behind every public service you'll ever design for. The form at the DMV was designed by someone. The wait time at the VA clinic is a workforce problem. HR is design at the organizational level."

PA 532
Evening 3 cr
Public Financial Optimization and Management
Difficulty
Moderate — numbers-focused, budget analysis

Government runs on budget. Every design decision you'll ever propose in a civic context will be evaluated against a budget. This course teaches you how public money works — how it's allocated, how it's tracked, how it's optimized, and how to make a financial case for investment in design. It's the most quantitative MPA course you'll take outside of the modeling courses.

  • Read and analyze real government budgets at city, state, and federal level
  • Build basic financial models in spreadsheet tools
  • Learn cost-benefit analysis — the framework governments use to justify spending
  • Write budget memos and financial justifications for policy proposals
  • Understand how funding streams (grants, bonds, tax revenue) shape what's possible
  • Be comfortable with basic Excel — no advanced formulas needed, but basic spreadsheet navigation is essential
  • Download the City of Chicago's public budget summary and spend one hour reading it. Just look at the numbers and ask: what does this tell me?
  • Don't fear the math — this is arithmetic and logic, not calculus

"Your VR&E case taught you something important: money and policy are inseparable. This course will give you the vocabulary to sit in a budget meeting and speak the same language as the people who control whether your design ever gets funded."

PA 568
Evening 3 cr
Optimization in Policy and Administration
Difficulty
Hard — most quantitative MPA course

Quantitative methods for making better policy decisions. How do you allocate limited resources across competing needs? How do you optimize a government service delivery system? This course uses mathematical and analytical tools — linear programming, decision analysis, optimization models — to answer those questions. It's the most technically demanding MPA course and the furthest from your comfort zone. Plan accordingly.

  • Work through quantitative problem sets using optimization techniques
  • Build and interpret decision models for policy problems
  • Apply linear programming concepts to resource allocation scenarios
  • Connect optimization thinking to real public administration challenges
  • Take this in a later semester — not before S3 at the earliest
  • Brush up on basic algebra and probability before the semester starts — Khan Academy is free and excellent
  • Don't take this the same semester as PA 581 — stack the hard quantitative courses across different semesters
  • Find a study partner early — this course benefits from talking through problem sets with someone

"You loved math and biology as a student. That part of your brain still works — it just needs to be reactivated. The design thinking you use every day is actually a form of optimization: constraints, tradeoffs, best solution given real limits. This course is the formal version of what you already do."

PA 580
Evening 3 cr
Policy Forecasting and Evaluation
Difficulty
Moderate — analytical writing and evaluation frameworks

How do you know if a policy or program actually worked? How do you predict whether a proposed intervention will succeed? This course teaches you the tools of program evaluation and policy forecasting — how to design studies that measure impact, how to interpret evidence, and how to communicate findings to decision-makers. For a civic designer, this is how you prove your work matters.

  • Design evaluation frameworks for real public programs
  • Learn logic models — the tool governments use to plan and measure programs
  • Analyze existing policy evaluations and critique their methodology
  • Write policy evaluation reports and forecasting memos
  • Connect evaluation findings to design recommendations
  • Search "logic model" and read the CDC's free logic model workbook — it's the standard framework
  • Read one government program evaluation report (GAO reports are public and readable) — notice how evidence is structured
  • Think about your own portfolio projects: how would you measure whether they worked?

"This course connects directly to your design research skills. Evaluating a policy program uses the same fundamental thinking as evaluating a design — did it change the behavior we intended? Did it serve the people it was meant for? You already think this way."

PA 581
Evening 3 cr
Policy Economic Modeling and Design
Difficulty
Hardest MPA course — economic modeling and quantitative analysis

The most demanding course in the MPA program. Economic modeling applied to policy design — how economists think about designing incentives, predicting behavior, and modeling the effects of policy interventions before they're implemented. Think of it as systems thinking with mathematical precision. It will stretch you further than any other course in the program.

  • Build economic models that predict the effects of policy interventions
  • Work through problem sets using economic analysis tools
  • Study real policy designs and analyze their economic logic
  • Write policy design memos grounded in economic evidence
  • Take this in semester 6 or later — after PA 568 and PA 532 have built your quantitative confidence
  • Do NOT take this the same semester as PA 568 — that's two hard quantitative courses at once
  • Before the semester: watch 10 episodes of "Crash Course Economics" on YouTube — free, fast, and builds the mental models you need
  • Find a study group early and meet weekly — this course is survivable in community, hard in isolation

"This is the course where most design students feel most out of their depth. That's okay. You don't need to become an economist — you need to understand economic logic well enough to have a credible conversation with one. That's the goal."

PA 599
Field Placement 3 cr
Practicum
Difficulty
Moderate — demanding but applied, real-world work

The capstone of your MPA. A real placement inside a public sector organization where you apply everything you've learned. This is where the dual degree pays off most visibly — you show up as both a trained public administrator and a trained designer. Most practicum students are policy analysts. You can be a civic designer who understands policy. That combination is rare and valuable.

  • Work inside a real government agency, nonprofit, or civic organization for a semester
  • Complete a defined project scoped with your practicum supervisor
  • Apply your design + policy skill set to a real problem that matters
  • Write a final practicum report documenting your work and findings
  • Present your project to an academic and professional audience
  • Take this last — semester 7. You want your full toolkit available when you enter a real organization
  • Start building relationships with Chicago civic organizations NOW — City of Chicago, Metropolitan Planning Council, LISC Chicago, Code for America Chicago
  • Think about where you want to be placed as early as semester 3 — good placements go to students who ask early
  • Your portfolio should be ready before you start — you will need it

"This is the moment the whole program has been building toward. You walk into a real organization, with real stakes, and do real work. Everything else — the research methods, the systems theory, the budget analysis, the design studio — is preparation for this."

04

Elective Strategy

27.5 credits · Your most powerful design decision in the program

27.5 Credits · Your Design Decision

Electives are 40% of your MDes degree. They're where you build your specialization. The full catalog is below — organized by theme, with the courses most relevant to your civic design goals marked with ★★ (must-take) or ★ (strongly recommended). Rule: follow the faculty who challenge you, not just the title.

Your Top Picks — Civic Design Track
★★ Must Take
IDN 541
Civic Design
1.5 cr
Literally the course your entire program is built around. This is your north star elective.
★★ Must Take
IDN 568
Service Systems Workshop
3 cr
Hands-on service design workshop. This is exactly the applied civic design practice you came for.
★★ Must Take
IDN 520
Co-Design + Social Interventions
3 cr
Community-centered design. How to design with people, not for them. Essential for civic work.
★ Strong Rec.
IDX 535
Politics of Design
1.5 cr
Design + power + policy. This is the intellectual bridge between ID and MPA thinking.
★ Strong Rec.
IDN 575
Re-Thinking Systems
3 cr
Applied systems redesign — pairs directly with IDN 571 Systems Theory you take S1.
★ Strong Rec.
IDX 537
Designing Futures
3 cr
Speculative and futures-oriented design. Rare skill set for a civic designer — makes you stand out.
Full Elective Catalog
Civic + Systems
IDN 541Civic Design ★★1.5
IDN 520Co-Design and Social Interventions ★★3
IDN 568Service Systems Workshop ★★3
IDN 575Re-Thinking Systems 3
IDX 535Politics of Design 1.5
IDX 537Designing Futures 3
IDN 562Modeling Complexity1.5
IDN 573Sustainable Solutions Workshop3–4
IDX 541Critical Contexts1.5–3
IDX 560Introduction to Design Thinking3
Research + Methods
IDN 522Research Synthesis (prereq: IDN 508)1.5
IDN 542Behavioral Design 1.5
IDN 502Making the User-Centered Case1.5
IDN 504Introduction to Observing Users3
IDN 506Research Planning and Execution1.5
IDN 510Research Photography1.5
IDN 514Experience Modeling3
IDN 518Survey Methods1.5
IDN 519Evidence-based Design1.5
IDN 564Bias + Sensemaking1.5
IDX 504Prototyping Methods1.5
IDX 505Critique Methods1.5
Visual + Communication
IDN 550Communication Design Workshop 3
IDN 544Diagram Development (prereq: IDN 552)1.5
IDN 546Design Rhetoric1.5
IDN 548Animated Diagramming1.5
IDN 552Fundamentals of Visual Communication1.5
IDX 509Data Literacy1.5
IDX 513Generative Design3
IDX 597Special Topics: Data Visualization Studio3
Strategy + Innovation
IDN 531Adaptive Leadership 1.5
IDN 530Innovation Frontiers1.5
IDN 534Business Design1.5
IDN 535Organizational Models of Innovation1.5
IDN 536Introduction to Product Strategy1.5
IDN 538Strategic Design Workshop3
IDN 540Implementing Innovation1.5
IDN 558Innovation Narratives1.5
IDX 548Innovation Methods3
IDX 562Multidisciplinary Innovation3
Digital + Interaction
IDX 597Special Topics: AI for Rapid Prototyping 3
IDX 506Fundamentals of Product Design1.5
IDX 512Product Design Workshop3
IDX 518Interaction Design Methods1.5
IDX 519Fundamentals of Web Development1.5–3
IDX 524Interaction Design Workshop3
IDX 528Prototyping Interactions3
IDX 530Interaction Design for Immersive Systems1.5
Org + Culture
IDX 551Facilitation Methods 1.5
IDX 552Managing Interdisciplinary Teams3
IDX 554Agile Culture1.5
IDX 594Faculty Research1–10
IDX 598Independent Study1.5–6

★★ Must-take for civic design goals  ·  ★ Strongly recommended  ·  Not all courses offered every semester — confirm with adviser  ·  Up to 6cr may be taken outside ID with adviser approval