Carleton Programs
Carleton programs are led by Carleton faculty for Carleton students for one term. Students apply and register for seminars on campus and receive Carleton credit. Program offerings change every year, but are always posted at least a full year in advance. Each program is sponsored by an academic department and has a particular focus.
2011 - 2012
- Summer
- Fall Term
- Winter Break
- Winter Term
- Spring Term
2012 - 2013
- Summer
- Fall Term
- Winter Break
All Programs, Listed Alphabetically
-
American Studies - "Visions of California"
-
Chinese Studies in China
-
Conservation and Development in Tanzania and Kenya
-
Cross-Cultural Psychology in Prague
-
Cross-Cultural Studies in Montreal
-
Ecology in Australia
-
Economics in Cambridge
-
English - London
-
French Studies in Mali
-
French Studies in Paris
-
Geology in Italy
-
Geology in New Zealand
-
German in Berlin
-
Irish Studies in Ireland
-
Media Studies in Europe
-
Middle East Mosaics
-
Political Economy in Beijing
-
Political Economy in Madrid and Maastricht
-
Political Science in Washington, D.C.
-
Russian - Moscow
-
Sociology and Anthropology - Guatemala
-
Sociology in Australia
-
Spanish in Madrid
-
Spanish in Mexico
-
Studio Art - South Pacific
-
Winter Break: Afro-Arab Women's History in Dubai
-
Winter Break: Agricultural Sustainability in the U.S. and China
-
Winter Break: Animal Behavior in the Galapagos
-
Winter Break: Biogeoscience in Belize
-
Winter Break: Dance in Jamaica - The African Thread
-
Winter Break: Dream and Reality: Turn of the Century Vienna
-
Winter Break: English Gothic and Gothic-Revival Art and Architecture
-
Winter Break: Environmental Justice in New Orleans
-
Winter Break: Field Investigation in Tropical Rainforest Ecology
-
Winter Break: History, Memory, and the Atlantic World in Ghana
-
Winter Break: Jazz History in New York
-
Winter Break: Latin American Studies in Brazil
-
Winter Break: Microeconomic Development in Bangladesh
-
Winter Break: Netherlandish Art on Site
-
Winter Break: Photography in Hawaii
-
Winter Break: Religion & Literature in Israel







