(This information is updated as needed and does not reflect the current, published Graduate Catalog. A new edition of the Graduate Catalog is printed annually in April.)
SAKALOWSKY, PETER, Coordinator of Urban Studies, Professor; B.S., Worcester State College; M.A.,
Clark University; Ph.D., Indiana State University.
Tel. (203) 392-5832. E-mail: sakalowskyp1@southernct.edu.
Application deadline:
Rolling admissions
The Master of Science degree program in Urban Studies is designed to
prepare students for professional practice and responsible roles in the broad range
of governmental and private sector activities including: city planning and
urban development, urban government management, human resource services,
urban education, inter-group relations, and community development. Urban Studies
at Southern Connecticut State University provides a high caliber of quality
education to undergraduate and graduate students through study, practice, and
research, and to engage the local community in an increasingly globalized and
urbanized world.
The Urban Studies program provides participants with a systematic,
critical overview of contested ideas, concepts, principles and practices which are
relevant to the understanding and promotion of co-existence and social justice in
an increasingly diverse urban context. The program aims to equip students with
the tools and techniques of appropriate urban policy and planning, which
are culturally relevant, embracing community level collaboration and
positive responses to cultural group conflict in differentiated cities. The Urban
Studies program is multidisciplinary in nature, drawing on numerous bodies of
knowledge and academic departments. The Urban Studies program is designed to
enable students to evaluate and integrate knowledge, skills, values and ethics, and
to impart tools for scholarship, critical thinking and leadership emanating from
the educational process and experience.
The Urban Studies program offers students several areas of concentration:
Urban Planning and Management, Urban Management, and Urban Education. There
is also an Interdisciplinary option within Urban Studies. Joint degree programs
with Social Work and Environmental Education are available. Please consult with
the Director of Urban Studies for various program options.
Program requirements 36 credits
Students may choose from the following courses with the approval of the Program Director.
URB 550 Ethnicity and the American Society
URB 551 Urbanization and the American Society
URB 552 Public Policy Analysis
URB 553 City Planning and the Urban Process
URB 554 Urban Design and Land Development
URB 555 Land Use Planning: Problems and Prospects
URB 556 Education in the Urban Community
URB 559 Application of Public Policy Research in Urban Affairs
URB 560 Ethnic Realities in the American Community
URB 597 Housing in an Urban Society
URB 598 Seminar in Urban Affairs
URB 600 Directed Independent Study
Master's Thesis
Thesis Seminar (URB 590) and Thesis 6 credits
Special Project
In lieu of the thesis, the student enrolls in URB 600 Independent Study
and completes a research project as part of the independent study.
URBAN STUDIES COURSES
URB 552 Public Policy Analysis
An examination of the basic governmental, political, financial, and structural issues
in developing and deciding policy in the public arena. State statutes,
organizational frameworks and the overt and covert forces in policy analysis will be
presented. Scheduled fall semesters. 3 credits.
URB 553 City Planning and the Urban Process
Analysis of basic city planning principles and their relationship to urban
development and sprawl. Environmental, physical, legal, statutory and economic issues in
city planning and their impact on urban problems and solutions will be covered.
Presentation of actual planning tools and techniques, including planning and zoning procedures.
Scheduled fall semesters. 3 credits.
URB 554 Urban Design and Land Development
The social purposes, economic processes, and cultural imperatives that shape
the design renewal of American cities. Scheduled spring semesters of even years.
3 response to ethnicity, cultural heritage, and inter-group relations in a
pluralistic society. Scheduled spring semesters. 3 credits.
URB 555 Land Use Planning: Problems and Prospects
Examination of basic land use issues and the conflicting forces involved
in use and reuse of land development. Actual land use problems will be examined within the context
of statutory authority, envrionmental restraints, and political realities. Scheduled spring semesters of odd years. 3 credits.
URB 556 Education in the Urban Community
Analysis of the manner in which educaton is organized and functions with regard to
issues of social, economic, and cultural stratification. Assessment of the way education has portrayed
urbanization and notions of urban communities. The challenge for educators and planners is to make education a space
of opportunity despite the barriers explored in this course. 3 credits.
URB 559 Application of Public Policy Research in Urban Affairs
Evaluation research studies as applied to programs in urban affairs. Scheduled spring semesters. 3 credits.
URB 560 Ethnic Realities in the American Community
Application of social theory and practice affecting institutional and individual response to ethnicity, cultural
heritage, and inter-group relations in a pluralistic society. Scheduled spring semesters. 3 credits.
URB 590 Thesis in Urban Studies
For thesis students only. Prerequisite: department permission. Scheduled fall
and spring semesters. 6 credits.
URB 597 Housing in An Urban Society
Social, political, and economic elements affecting the urban-suburban
housing market. National local needs, policy formulation, federal programs,
private planning, costs and finances. Scheduled fall semesters. 3 credits.
URB 598 Seminar in Urban Affairs
Analysis of urban and regional issues and the implications to today's society.
The relationship of the central city to the suburbs and the region, growth issues,
and the conflicting forces will be examined. Involvement in current urban
affairs. Scheduled spring semesters. 3 credits.
URB 600 Directed Independent Study
For special projects, not to be taken in conjunction with thesis.
Prerequisite: department permission. Scheduled fall and spring semesters. 3 credits.