These courses are only applicable for seniors graduating in 2025 and 2026. The course requirements will be changing for students who graduate in 2027 and beyond. Do not rely on any of these courses to count toward the minor that will be in place starting fall 2026.This course requirement is intended to provide an understanding of the technology and societal aspects through a discipline-based study of both sides.Technology Courses:Each student is required to taketwo technology coursesfrom a list that includes the courses below. These courses are mostly drawn from a set that includes courses specifically designed for a wider campus audience (no prerequisites). An advanced/one-time only course may be used to replace one or both of these courses with the permission of the program adviser.APC 524/MAE 506/AST 506 – Software Engineering for Scientific ComputingCOS 109/EGR 109 – Computers in Our World (may be taken instead of COS 126, but not both)COS 126 – General Computer Science (may be taken instead of COS 109, but not both)COS 324 – Introduction to Machine LearningCOS 350 - Ethics of ComputingCOS 424/SML 302 – Fundamentals of Machine Learning (previously entitled: Interacting with Data)COS 429 – Computer VisionCOS 432/ECE 432 – Information SecurityCOS 433/MAT 473 – CryptographyCOS 436 - Human-Computer Interaction (also a breadth technology course)COS 445 – Economics and Computing (was Networks, Economics and Computing)COS 455/MOL 455/ QCB 455 (undergrads) and COS 551/MOL 551/QCB 551 (grads) – Introduction to Genomics and Computational Molecular BiologyCOS 461 – Computer NetworksCOS 551/MOL 551/QCB 551 – Introduction to Genomics and Computational Molecular Biology (was COS/MOL/QCB 455)ECE 201 – Information SignalsECE 206/COS 306 – Contemporary Logic DesignECE 364 – Machine Learning for Predictive Data AnalyticsECE 368 - Introduction to Wireless Communication SystemsECE 435 - Machine Learning and Pattern RecognitionECE 464 – Embedded ComputingECE 470/COS 470 – Principals of BlockchainECE 472 - Architectures for Security Computers and Smartphones (previously ECE 470 – Smartphone Security and Architecture)ECE 473/COS 473 - Elements of Decentralized FinanceECE 535 – Machine Learning and Pattern RecognitionECE 574 – Security and Privacy in Computing and CommunicationsEGR 371/ENT 371 - Designing the Future of Work: Public Interest Technology DevelopmentMAE 345 – Introduction to RoboticsORF 387 - NetworksORF 401 – Electronic CommerceORF 467 – Transportation Systems AnalysisORF 473 - Special Topics in ORFE - Financial Technology and Data-Driven InnovationPOL 346 – Applied Quantitative AnalysisQCB 455/MOL 455/COS 455 - Introduction to Genomics and Computational Molecular BiologySML 354/PHI 354 - Artificial Intelligence: A Hands-on Introduction from Basics to ChatGPTSOC 555/COS 598J – Limits to PredictionsTRA 301/COS 401/LIN 304 – Introduction to Machine TranslationSocietal Courses:Each student is required to take two societal courses from a list that includes the courses below. An advanced/one-time only course may be used to replace one or both of these courses with the permission of the program advisor.AAS 301/SOC 367 – Black to the Future: Science, Fiction, and SocietyAAS 339/EGR 339 - Black Mirror: Race, Technology and JusticeANT 211 - Surveillance, Technoscience, and SocietyANT 238 - Human, Machine, and In-Between: The Anthropology of AIANT 455 – Visible Evidence: Documentary Film and Data VisualizationCOM 332/HUM 332/TRA 332 - Who Owns This Sentence? Copyright Culture from the Romantic Era to the Age of the InternetCOS IW - Seminar Policy Clinic or Technology Policy Clinic (There is a different number every semester, and only the seminars taught by Mihir Kshirsagar or Katrina Ligett (only fall 2022) count toward the T&S certificate. This seminar may count as a RSC or used as a student's independent work for the certificate, but not both.COS 351 - Information Technology and Public PolicyCOS 448/EGR 448 – Innovating Across Technology, Business, & MarketplacesCOS 586/SPI 586F* – Topics in STEP: Technology Policy and Law (title was Information Technology and Public Policy)COS 597C - Advanced Topics in Computer Science: Computer Science for Public Policy and LawECO 326 – Economics of the Internet: The Digital RevolutionEGR 395 – Venture Capital and Finance of InnovationEGR 495/ENT 495 – Special Topics in Entrepreneurship: Critical Design StudioENV 377 - Sustainable Cities in the US and India: Technology Policy & Entrepreneurship PathwaysFRS 122 – Connection and Communication in the Digital BazaarFRS 128 - Tech/EthicsFRS 159 (was FRS 163 for fall 2016 and fall 2017) – Science, Technology and Public PolicyFRS 179 - Princeton and the Dawn of the Information AgeHIS 278 – Digital, Spatial, Visual, and Oral HistoriesHIS 298 - Information RevolutionsHUM 331/HIS 336 - A History of Words: Technologies of Communications from Cuneiform to CodingHUM 346/ENG 256 – Introduction to Digital HumanitiesJRN 260 – Media in America: What to Read and Believe in the Digital AgePHI 350/CHV 356 - Ethics of Emerging TechnologiesPHI 371 - Philosophical Foundations of Probability and Decision TheoryPHI 411/CHV 411/POL 407 - Free Speech in the Internet AgePOL 327 - Mass Media, Social Media, and American PoliticsPOL 341 – Experimental Methods in Social ScienceSOC 204 – Social NetworksSOC 215 - The Sociology of the InternetSOC 306/SML 306 - Machine Learning with Social Data: Opportunities and ChallengesSOC 382 - Political Economy of the Digital SocietySOC 409*/COS 409 – Critical Approaches to Human Computer InteractionSOC 414/COS 415 - Can We Build Anti-Racist Technologies?SPI 334/SOC 319 - Media and Public PolicySPI 338 - When Old Debates Were New Again: Exploring the Theoretical Origins of Internet PolicySPI 352 - Artificial Intelligence and Public PolicySPI 365 - Tech/EthicsSPI 492 – Down the Rabbit Hole: Combating Far-Right Radicalization and Disinformation on U.S. Social PlatformsSPI 586F - Topics in STEP: Technology Policy and Law (was (1 course required):In addition to the technology and society courses, each student is required to take one course that combines technology and society in an area outside of IT. For engineering/science students this should be based in the societal disciplines, and for humanities and social science students this should be based in the science/technology disciplines.Breadth Technology Courses: ANT 325/MAE 347 – Robots in Human Ecology: A Hands-on Course for Anthropologists, Engineers, and Policymakers (also a breadth societal course)APC 199/MAT 199 – Math AliveAST 309/MAE 309/PHY 309/ENE 309 – The Science of Fission and Fusion EnergyCEE 102B/EGR 102B/MAE 102B – Engineering in the Modern WorldCEE 325 – Environmental Biotechnology (also a breadth societal course)COS 436 - Human-Computer Interaction (also a required technology course)ECO 416 – FintechEGR 421/SPI 487/SAS 421 – Reimagining Digital Public Infrastructure in India and Globally (also breadth societal course)ENV 367/GEO 367 – Modeling the Earth System: Assessing Strategies for Mitigating Climate ChangeFRS 141 - The Mathematics of Secrecy, Search, and Society! (fall 2019 only)FRS 174 - The Science and Art of Mapping the World (spring 2021 only)MAE 228/EGR 228/CBE 228/ENE 228 – Energy Technologies for the 21st CenturyMAE 328/EGR 328/ENV 328/ENE 328 – Energy for a Greenhouse-Constrained WorldNEU 537/MOL 537/PSY 517 – Computational NeurosciencePOL 345/SOC 305/SPI 211 – Introduction to Quantitative Social Science (also breadth societal course)SOC 301 - Statistical Methods in Sociology (also breadth societal course)SOC 555/COS 598J – Limits to PredictionsSPI 200 - Statistics for Social ScienceSPI 353/MAE 353 – Science and Global Security: From Nuclear Weapons to Cyberwarfare and Artificial IntelligenceBreadth Societal Courses:AMS 399/HIS 399 – In the Groove: Technology and Music in American History, From Edison to the iPodANT 302 - Ethnography for Research DesignANT 223/AMS 223/AAS 224/ URB 224- Policing and Militarization TodayANT 325/MAE 347 – Robots in Human Ecology: A Hands-on Course for Anthropologists, Engineers, and Policymakers (also a breadth technology course)ANT 354 – Digital Anthropology: Methods for Exploring Virtual WorldsANT 360/CHV 360 - Ethics In Context: Uses and Abuses of Deception and DisclosureANT 437/AAS 437 - Gaming Blackness: The Anthropology of Video Games and RaceARC 492/URB 492/ENV 492 - Topics in the Formal Analysis of the Urban Structure: Environmental Challenges of Urban SprawlCBE 260/EGR 260 – Ethics and Technology: Engineering in the Real WorldCEE 102A/EGR 102A/MAE 102A – Engineering in the Modern WorldCEE 325 – Environmental Biotechnology (also a breadth technology course)CEE 392/HUM 392 - Engineering Justice and the City: Technologies, Environments, and PowerCEE 401/ENV 401 - Zero Carbon, Resilient, Equitable Cities: Infrastructure Innovations and System AnalysisCHV 333/PHI 344 – Bioethics: Clinical and Population-LevelECO 332/GHP 332 – Economics of Health and Health CareEGR 219/ENT 291/REL 219 - Professional Responsibility & Ethics: Succeeding Without Selling Your SoulEGR 383/ENT 393 - Design Research and Humanistic InnovationEGR 421/SPI 487/SAS 421 – Reimagining Digital Public Infrastructure in India and Globally (also breadth technology course)EGR 488 – Designing Ventures to Change the WorldEGR 491/ECE 491 – High-Tech EntrepreneurshipEGR 494 – Leadership Development for BusinessEGR 497 – Entrepreneurial LeadershipENE 475/PSY 475 – Human Factors 2.0 – Psychology for Engineering, Energy, and Environmental DecisionsENV 303/EEB 303 – Agriculture, Human Diets and the EnvironmentENV 304/ECO 328/EEB 304/SPI 455 – Disease Ecology, Economics, and PolicyENV 316 – Climate Science and CommunicationFRE 380/ECS 387 - TechnophobiaFRS 114 - Technology and the EnvironmentFRS 118 - Life on Mars - or Maybe NotFRS 139 - The Coming of Driverless CarsFRS 162 - Bioethics: Public Policy, Ethics and the LawFRS 172 - Two titles: Origins of Modern Communications and Principles of Innovation and Money, Markets and MoralsGER 211 – Introduction to Media TheoryGHP 350/SPI 380/ANT 380 – Critical Perspectives in Global HealthHIS 295 – Making America: Technology and History in the United StatesHIS 390 - Formations of Knowledge: Historical Approaches to Science, Technology, and Medicine. Former title: History of Science, Technology, and Medicine: Ideas and MethodsHUM 349/STC 350/COM 374 - Making Sense of Artificial Intelligence: Fiction, Technology, StorytellingITA 320/COM 378 – Cybernetics, Literary Ghosts and the Italian WayNES 366/ENV 366 – Oil, Energy and The Middle EastPHI 277/CHV 277 – Biomedical EthicsPOL 345/SOC 305/SPI 211 – Introduction to Quantitative Social Science (also breadth technology course)PSY 409 – Cyborg PsychologySOC 301 - Statistical Methods in Sociology (also breadth technology course)SOC 384 - Steering the Future: Exploring the Impact of Driverless CarsSOC 373/AMS 428/URB 373 - Systemic Racism: Myths and RealitiesSPI 354 – Modern Genetics and Public PolicySTC 349 – Writing About Science (was called Science Journalism)THR 210A-B/STC 201A-B – Storytelling for Technology and PerformanceVIS 206 - Feminist Technoscience: Art, Technology, & GenderRegistrar Course Offerings Homepage*Indicates the course may not always be offered.« Back