For more details on the courses, please refer to the Course Catalog
Code | Course Title | Credit | Learning Time | Division | Degree | Grade | Note | Language | Availability |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ESM4100 | Independent Research for University and Industry Collaboration in Smart FactoryⅠ | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor/Master | Industrial Engineering | Korean | Yes | |
The students will participate in a collaborative research project among industry, university and research institution in Smart Factory, and conduct practical independent research related to design and operation of smart factory, or development of software solutions. | |||||||||
ESM5220 | Advanced in Digital Twin and Advanced Treatment | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | 1-8 | Industrial Engineering | Korean | Yes |
This course offered to understand backgrounds, basic theories, and applications, and technical issues of cyber-physical system, digital twin and advanced treatment by lectures and problem-based learning classes. - Product/Factory design and operation - Advanced treatment - Smart manufacturing and smart factory - Cyber physical system, digital twin | |||||||||
ESM5221 | Advanced in Smart Manufacturing and Advanced Treatment | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | 1-8 | Industrial Engineering | Korean | Yes |
This course offered to understand backgrounds, basic theories, and applications, and technical issues of smart manufacturing and advanced treatment by problem-based learning classes. - Product design and development, PLM, advanced treatment - Factory design and production operation, manufacturing engineering and information system - Smart Manufacturing and Smart Factory - IIoT, Smart Sensor, Cloud, Platform, Cyber Physical System, Digital Twin | |||||||||
GSP4001 | Policy Science: Theory & Korean Smart Policy Framework | 3 | 6 | Major | Bachelor/Master | Public Administration | English | Yes | |
As the 21st century unfolds, we are living in a chaotic and turbulent society. Speed of thought becomes very important as information and knowledge is the most critical factor of national competitiveness. To achieve national competitiveness, thereby building a great and strong nation, effective policymaking is crucial to achieve government innovation and national transformation. How these kinds of enormous change and innovation, swirling from the high-technological environmental changes such as the SMART revolution and the INDUSTRIAL revolution, will impact the academic discipline of policy science, effective policy-making specifically? What should be the new theoretical principle and philosophy of policy science to break-away the so-called criticism of the ‘impoverished professionalism’ facing the science of public administration? And how could we then academically link the theoretical principles of the knowledge-created Smart e-Government with the traditional Policy Science? This lecture concentrates on the attempt to answer these kinds of academic as well as practical questions, searching for a new paradigm of the policy framework to presenting the most appropriate strategy facing the developing countries in this 21st century. | |||||||||
GSP5174 | Information Communication Technology and Public Management | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | 1-4 | Public Administration | Korean | Yes |
This course aims to understand and discuss how Information Communication Technologies (ICTs) influence public management and the future of citizen-government relationships. Participants in the class will explore and discuss the impact of technological changes and especially the Internet on public administration and societies. ICTs have contributed to innovating operation and management of government agencies in terms of internal efficiency, citizen engagement, and public service quality. The mechanisms enabling the innovation include various concepts such as big data, Internet of Things, cloud computing, mobile government, and smart government. Students will discuss the past, the present, and the future of ICT-based and even ICT-driven changes in governments and societies across the world. | |||||||||
GSP5210 | Urban Mobilities | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | Public Administration | Korean | Yes | |
Transportation is far more than how we get around. It determines not only the shape of cities, but more importantly economic, social and environmental outcomes. Urban transportation problems will be explored in the context of general economic, social, and spatial trends. Substantive topics to be addressed include economic land use models and how they account for transport systems, behavioralist understandings of travel, private and public transportation, environmental problems, and the relationship between transport and social opportunity. Through the topic of urban transport students will learn key analytical skills in social science (both qualitative and quantitative), and advance their skill in critical thinking. | |||||||||
GSP5228 | Disaster Management for the Future | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | Public Administration | - | No | |
Disaster Management is the study of how to reduce the negative effects of human-made and natural disasters. Disaster Management has long been a concern of engineering and earth sciences as a technical issue to be confronted. Only recently has Disaster Management moved into the realm of public administration study and now there is recognition that it must be an inter-disciplinary subject that calls upon expertise and experience from many perspectives. As the frequency and intensity of disasters increases around the world, there has been a strong effort to emphasize disaster risk reduction as the primary focus of disaster management. This course will introduce the types and classifications of disasters, the disaster management cycle, and public administration's role in making society safer. There will be study of both international and Korean disaster management organizations, current research findings in effective disaster management, and case studies. | |||||||||
GSP5245 | SMART E-GOVERNMENT & E-POLICY: Theory & Korean Policy Case | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | Public Administration | English | Yes | |
This lecture concentrates on the rapid developments in the telecommunications and information fields that play a major role in shaping future political, economic and human dimensions in the 21st century. The purpose of the seminar is to examine the main economic, political, cultural, legal and technical forces generated by Information and Knowledge Revolution, for which new e-Governance must be developed. In this teaching, we will discuss the theoretical as well as strategic dimensions of knowledge-based society, Electronic Government and its Policy Implications. | |||||||||
GWR5001 | Flow Analysis for River Systems | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | 1-8 | Water Resources | - | No |
Theoretical aspects of flow in open channels. Derivation of one-dimensional form of continuity, momentum, and energy equations. Flow resistance. Steady uniform and nonuniform flow in open channels including lateral inflow and outflow. Significance of the Froude Number; sub- and supercritical flow and channel transitions. Flow around hydraulic structures; weirs, sluice gates, spillways, stilling basins. Unsteady flows: flood routing, dam-breaking waves; overland flow. | |||||||||
GWR5003 | Computational River Hydraulics | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | 1-8 | Water Resources | - | No |
Numerical methods for steady/unsteady flow and contaminant transport in rivers. General review of numerical methods for partial differential equations. Steady gradually varied flow. Unsteady contaminant dispersion in rivers. One-dimensional unsteady flow. Branched- and looped-network models. Internal boundaries. Flood-plain flow. | |||||||||
GWR5004 | Analysis and Management of River Water Quality | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | 1-8 | Water Resources | Korean | Yes |
Course objective is to develop an understanding of the physics and mathematical description of molecular and turbulent diffusion, and their contribution to environmental dispersion, with emphasis on natural waterways. Topics include: Fickian diffusion, random-walk interpretation, analytic solutions to advective diffusion equation, statistical interpretation of diffusion in turbulent flows, Taylor's theory of longitudinal dispersion, Dispersion in turbulent shear flow, dispersion in natural channel, and dispersion of non-conservative contaminants, river water quality modeling, and water quality management. | |||||||||
GWR5005 | Hydrologic Modeling: Theory and Practice | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | 1-8 | Water Resources | - | No |
Focuses on modeling of hydrologic processes for engineering applications based on the understanding of each component of the hydrologic cycle. Rainfall-runoff models. Flood routing. Urban hydrology. Flood/drought frequency analysis. Loss estimation. Groundwater models. Hydrologic data analysis. Model limitations. | |||||||||
GWR5007 | Integrated Water Resources Management | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | Water Resources | - | No | |
Inrtoductory course on concept, background, elements and procedures for integrated water resources management. Topics include governance and community approaches for IWRM, organizational and management issues, procedures for IWRM planning process, economic analysis, legal and institutional aspects, integrated watershed management, integrated flood management, and examples and lessons learnt in IWRM. | |||||||||
GWR5008 | Integrated Flood Risk Management | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | 1-8 | Water Resources | - | No |
Focuses on concept, background, elements and procedures for integrated flood risk management. Topics include flood hazard, vulnerability and risk analysis, multi-criteria flood risk assessment, structural/non-structural mitigation measures, risk governance, evaluating management alternatives and decision making, and urban flood management. | |||||||||
GWR5009 | Scientific Computing: Theory and Practice | 3 | 6 | Major | Master/Doctor | Water Resources | - | No | |
Intermediate course on numerical algorithms and their implementation for solving scientific/engineering problems. Topics include nonlinear algebraic equations, computational linear algebra, approximation theory, numerical differentiation and integration, ordinary/partial differential equations. |