All Courses
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Fall 2020 Repeat Lab - Sec 2 (CHEM-1020-91)
First semester of one-year introductory series. Provides broad coverage of chemistry principles with inorganic and organic systems applications. Credit will not be allowed for more than one of CHEM 1020, 1050 and 1000. Laboratory: 3 hours per week. Prerequisite: ACT math score of 23 or above, or concurrent enrollment in MATH 1400, 1405 or 1450.
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Fall 2020 Agric Methods II (EDSE-4278-01)
Advanced content and pedagogy in Agriculture Education. Prerequisites: Grade of C or better in EDST 3000/ EDCI 5550; Background check on file; 2.75 overall UW cumulative GPA; 2.5 in content GPA (grade of C (2.0) or better in specific content courses required in major); concurrent enrollment in EDSE 3278/EDCI 5250-08.
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Fall 2020 Writing in Tech & Sci (ENGL-2005-01)
Develops writing styles specifically suited to technological and scientific fields of study. Includes focus on disciplinary conventions and styles as well as audience/readership considerations. Introduces techniques for data interpretation and visualization, and helps students analyze, understand, and adapt common field genres and formats. Prerequisite: successful completion of WA/COM1
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Fall 2020 Senior Design I (COSC-4950-01)
Students choose a senior design project, investigate alternate solutions and submit a preliminary project design. Periodic oral and written project progress reports are required. Prerequisites: COSC 3011 and COSC 3020.
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Fall 2020 Printmaking I (ART-3510-40)
Investigates and experiments with processes and properties of print media, including intaglio, lithography and relief. Explores ideas and works of traditional and contemporary printmaking. Prerequisite: ART 1050 and 1110 and 1130 or concurrent registration in ART 1130.
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Fall 2020 Drawing II (ART-2005-01)
An intensive level drawing course building upon fundamentals of observation, artistic invention, perspective and composition through problems in still life, landscape, explorations in wet and dry media, and color with pastels. Lectures, drawing sessions and critiques develop formal, conceptual, expressive, and technical understanding. Prerequisites: ART 1005.
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Fall 2020 Drawing I (ART-1005-02)
A foundation level drawing course introducing fundamentals of observation, artistic invention, and basic principles of perspective and composition through problems in still life, landscape, and live model. lectures, drawing sessions, and critiques develop formal, conceptual, and technical understanding of the drawing process.
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Fall 2020 Life Drawing I (ART-3052-01)
An advanced drawing course working from a live model with an emphasis on composition, monochromatic media, drawing techniques, and the skeletal and muscular construction as related to action and proportion in the human figure. Lectures, drawing sessions, and critiques develop formal, conceptual, and technical understanding. Prerequisites: ART 2000 and 2005.
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Fall 2020 Chemical Thermodynamics II (CHE-3015-01)
Introduces mixture properties, such as chemical potentials, excess properties, partial molar properties, heats of mixing, fugacities, and practical tools for estimating them from solution theories and equations of state. These tools and concepts are applied to phase and chemical equilibria. Prerequisite: C- or better in CHE 2060, & CHE 2070 or ES 2310. Students must be a Petroleum Engineering major.
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Fall 2020 Advanced Topics in Pedag (EDCI-5250-05)
A graduate level seminar to be taken concurrently with undergraduate methods courses in specific content areas (EDSE 425X-4260, EDEL 4309) EDCI 5250 is restricted to students pursuing teacher certification leading to a Master of Arts in Curriculum and Instruction. Prerequisite: Successful completion of EDCI 5550, EDST 3500, EDCI 5870, Seminar in Assessment, earned Bachelor's degree from an accredited institution.
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Fall 2020 Int Acct II (ACCT-3430-01)
Prerequisites: ACCT 3230 (or equivalent), min. grade C, Advanced Business Standing. ..................................... Second of three courses studying financial reporting. Topics include recording and reporting events in the investing and financing cycles.
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Fall 2020 - Sem: Adv Res and Env Econ (ECON-5410-01)
This course focuses on the application of economic concepts and methods to pollution control and related environmental problems, with attention to theory, empirical tools, and policy implications. After completing this course you should understand and be prepared to use the foundational concepts of environmental economics in your future research as a scholar or practitioner. The main themes to be covered include:\ ethics and welfare economics, economically efficient pollution control, policy instrument choice and mechanism design, second-best policy design, international environmental challenges including climate change, non-market valuation methods including travel cost, hedonic property value, and stated preference methods, benefit-cost analysis and discounting, and environmental accounting theory and practice. Prerequisites: ECON 4400 and ECON 5020. 8/24/2020 - 12/11/2020, Seminar