Login
Contact
Professor Gerald Oppenheimer
Office hours: Monday, 4:00-5:00 pm or by appointment in Office: 4133N
Email: geraldo@brooklyn.cuny.edu
Telephone: 718-951-5000 X2740
Instructional Technology Fellow: Margaret Galvan
Office hours: Mondays, 10:50am-12:50pm and Tuesdays, 9am-11am in Boylan 2231O.
Email: margaret.galvan@macaulay.cuny.edu
Sign up for office hours here: http://eportfolios.macaulay.cuny.edu/ brooklynitfs/your-itfs/
Category Archives: Week 2 (9/10)
Frederick Engels-Biography and His Work – Chhada Nathan Kabariti
Frederick Engels’ life has some connection to his writing. As a young teenager, his father pushed him to join the business world and to reject the political ideas Engels kept thinking and writing most of his articles about. Instead, Engels … Continue reading
Posted in Week 2 (9/10)
Comments Off on Frederick Engels-Biography and His Work – Chhada Nathan Kabariti
Questions: Week 2
Dear members of seminar III: We have 3 excellent commentaries by David Zilberman, Jesse Geisler and Megan Low. They each take slightly different tacks and there is a lot to respond and add to. Each week I will have questions … Continue reading
Posted in Questions, Week 2 (9/10)
1 Comment
Statistics, and its role in the improvement of Public Health- David Zilberman
A vital tool that was used by epidemiologists to convey findings in regards to social conditions is statistics. In Victorian Social Medicine: The Ideas and Methods of William Farr, four major components of statistics are listed. These divisions are: economic, … Continue reading
Posted in Week 2 (9/10)
1 Comment
Urbanization, Industrialization and Population: Mobilizing for the Public’s Health-Jesse Geisler
Jesse Geisler August 29, 12 Seminar III With Professor Oppenheimer Urbanization, Industrialization and Population: Mobilizing for the Public’s Health This week’s readings focused on the ill health effects wrought by rapid industrialization. All of the readings suggest … Continue reading
Posted in Week 2 (9/10)
2 Comments
The Link Between Destitution and Disease- Megan Low
In the midst of the British Industrial Revolution, demand for labor sparked a march of opportunistic proletariats into industrial areas, with rapid urbanization leading to less than adequate living conditions for the working poor. Those higher up on the food … Continue reading
Posted in Week 2 (9/10)
13 Comments