Producing Knowledge about China: Social Science Perspectives
Welcome Remarks Kevin OBrien, Alann P. Bedford Professor of Asian Studies & Professor of Political Science, University of California, Berkeley Wen-hsin Yeh, Director, Institute of East Asian Studies, Haas Chair in East Asian Studies, Morrison Chair in History, University of California, Berkeley
Roundtable: Historiography & Area Studies Moderator: William Kirby, T. M. Chang Professor of China Studies; Spangler Family Professor of Business Administration; Director, Fairbank Center for Chinese Studies, Harvard University
Dialogic History and Producing Knowledge about China ...
What can researcher do when community partnerships fall apart? A successful community-based participatory project needs a strong collaborative partnership between community members, local leaders and researchers. But communities across the country are experiencing major demographic shifts as new residents move in while long-time residents move out.
Join this diverse panel of guests in a discussion that will range from highlighting the challenges created by changing demographics and power differentials to uncovering local solutions:
• Meredith Minkler, Facilitator, Professor of Health and Social Behavior, UC Berkeley School of Public Health
• Victor Rubin, PhD, Victor Rubin PhD, Vice-President for Research, Policy Link
• Kenneth LoBene, Field Office Director, Las Vegas office of the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development

• Catalina Garzon, Acting Program Co-Director, the Pacific Institute, and PhD candidate in the Department of Environmental Science, Policy and Management, UC Berkeley

• Cheryl Walton, MPH, Consultant, formerly of the Office of the Director, Alameda County Department of Community of Health Services
Also in attendance to participate in the follow-up discussion will be:
...
eCHEM 1A: Online General Chemistry
College of Chemistry, University of California, Berkeley
http://chemistry.berkeley.edu/echem1a
Curriculum and ChemQuizzes developed by Dr. Mark Kubinec and Professor Alexander Pines
Chemical Demonstrations by Lonnie Martin
Video Production by Jon Schainker and Scott Vento
Developed with the support of The Camille & Henry Dreyfus Foundation
General Chemistry. This webcast contains dramatizations of cigar smoking and alcohol consumption, but Professor Pines does not encourage these activities.
CS 61A - Spring 08 - The Structure and Interpretation of Computer Programs
Instructor Brian Harvey
Introduction to programming and computer science. This course exposes students to techniques of abstraction at several levels: (a) within a programming language, using higher-order functions, manifest types, data-directed programming, and message-passing; (b) between programming languages, using functional and rule-based languages as examples. It also relates these techniques to the practical problems of implementation of languages and algorithms on a von Neumann machine. There are several significant programming projects, programmed in a dialect of the LISP language.
http://www.cs.berkeley.edu
Prof. Edward Lee - "The Swarm at the Edge of the Cloud"
New research that aims to enable the simple, reliable, and secure deployment of a multiplicity of advanced distributed sense-and-control applications on shared, massively distributed, heterogeneous, and mostly uncoordinated swarm platforms through an open and universal systems architecture.
Welcome - Professor David Culler, EECS Department Chair
Announcement of EE and CS Distuinguished Alumni award winners
http://www.eecs.berkeley.edu/bears/
Computer Science 188, 001 - Spring 2015
Introduction to Artificial Intelligence - Pieter Abbeel, Dan Klein
Creative Commons 3.0: Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs