All Courses

  • Fall 2019 - Voting&Participation inAmerica (POLS-3520-01)

    Examines the ways citizens participate in government, including campaigning, donating money, and voting. Topics include mobilization by parties and campaigns, social and demographic differences in participation, explanations of voting behavior, civic responsibility, and the role of participation in a democracy. Prerequisite: POLS 1000. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Global Econ Issues (ECON-1000-01)

    Economics: creating value through trade, enhancing society through ideas, and protecting the environment by design. This introductory course will help you understand better on how people use both free markets and government regulations to create value, enhance society, and protect nature. You will explore how economic ideas and tools address big global issues like poverty and prosperity, inequality of wealth, capital and labor, sustainable development, free trade vs fair trade, climate change, war and peace, migration, brain drains, and science and nature. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Cognitive Psyc (PSYC-3120-01)

    Deals with higher mental processes that are primarily unique to human beings from theoretical and research orientations. Emphasizes interrelationships between various cognitive processes and continuity of those processes with perceptual and non-cognitive activities. Discusses how information is processed and remembered. Prerequisite: A grade of C or better in 6 hours of psyhology, including PSYC 1000. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Technical Writing in Professns (ENGL-4010-46)

    Enhances professional writing skills applicable to a variety of professions. Includes audience analysis and adaptation, information design and use of visuals, and a range of formats and genres. Emphasizes clarity and precision of language. May feature primary research and problem-based or service-learning projects. Prerequisites: WA and WB or COM1 and COM2; junior or senior standing. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Technical Writing in Professns (ENGL-4010-47)

    Enhances professional writing skills applicable to a variety of professions. Includes audience analysis and adaptation, information design and use of visuals, and a range of formats and genres. Emphasizes clarity and precision of language. May feature primary research and problem-based or service-learning projects. Prerequisites: WA and WB or COM1 and COM2; junior or senior standing. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Senior Seminar (ENGL-4999-01)

    This course is the capstone course in the English major. Subject matter varies by section. In all sections students will exercise skills acquired in the major (close-reading, historical analysis, application of theory) to explore significant texts and to reflect on the nature of English study today. Prerequisite: ENGL 3010; Senior standing. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Seminar

  • Fall 2019 - Film Dir: Black American Direc (ENGL-4070-80)

    Offers an intensive examination of representative films by selected film makers. Prerequisite: 6 hours of 2000-level literature courses. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Writing for Non-Profits (ENGL-4075-41)

    Designed for students interested in working in the non-profit sector. Explores rhetorical, political, and social dimensions of writing and communicating in the non-profit world and features intensive study of special topics and problems related to non-profit communication, including activism, grant writing, organizational rhetoric, and non-profit genres. Content varies. Prerequisite: WB or COM2. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - App to Rhet, Comp Ped & Prof (ENGL-3010-02)

    9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture, HO, 011

  • Fall 2019 - Senior Seminar (ENGL-4999-02)

    9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Seminar, HO, 037

  • Fall 2019 - Atmospheric Chem (ATSC-5350-01)

    Origin and composition of the atmosphere. Sources, lifetimes, transport of gases and aerosols. Cycles of C, S, N and trace elements. Removal processes: precipitation, and dry deposition. Homogenous and Heterogeneous kinetics. Anthropogenic influences: effect of air pollution on radiation balance and cloud processes. Prerequisite: graduate standing in a physical science or engineering. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Severe and Unusual Weather (ATSC-2200-01)

    A nontechnical course on severe and unusual weather events that occur around the globe. The focus of the course is on a wide range of weather events that have profound impacts on societies, economies, and cultures, and the material is presented in a qualitative manner such that it is highly accessible by students coming from all backgrounds. This course fulfills 3 credits of the USP 2015 PN - Physical & Natural World requirement. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

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