All Courses
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Fall 2020 Discussion (MATH-1405-23)
Emphasizes aspects of trigonometry important in the study of calculus. Interplay between trigonometric expressions and their graphs. Students are expected to use a graphing calculator in the course and on exams. See instructor for specifications. Topics include angle measurement, trigonometric functions, graphing, laws of sines and cosines, identities, equations, polar equations and graphs, vectors, complex numbers and DeMoivre's theorem. For students with little or no prior knowledge of trigonometry who plan to enroll in MATH 2200. Students receiving credit for MATH 1450 may not receive credit for this course. Prerequisites: grade of C or better in MATH 1400 or Level 4 on the Mathematics Placement Exam or Math ACT of 25 or Math SAT of 600.
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Fall 2020 Cmplx Variables I (MATH-5230-01)
Develops the function theory of holomorphic (analytic) and harmonic functions. Topics covered include the Cauchy-Riemann equations, Cauchy-Goursat theorem, Cauchy integral theorem, Morera's theorem, maximum modulus theorem, Liouville's theorem, power series representation, harmonic functions, theory of singularities of functions of one complex variable, contour integration, analytic continuation, Riemann mapping theorem and topology of spaces of holomorphic functions. Prerequisite: MATH 4200.
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Fall 2020 Laboratory (MICR-4321-10)
Using a problem-based student learning model, student conceptualize, propose, perform and present a microbiology research study to address a real community problem. Student maintain a lab notebook, write an NSF-style research proposal, formulate hypotheses, engage in hands-on laboratory hypothesis testing and design and present a scientific poster. Prerequisites: Microbiology (MICR) majors with Junior or Senior standing.
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Fall 2020 FYS: The Power of Confidence (STAT-1101-01)
The world is based on specific rules which no oneactually knows. Your opinions about how life worksare molded from your experiences. That belief thenshapes your decisions. Power is the ability to knowwhen it is time to upgrade your model of the universe,while confidence is moving forward with what youbelieve to be true. Others may try to fool youinto believing what they want with carefully crafteddata. This non-mathematical class explores theprocess of making choices in a world filled with errorsand uncertainty, also known as statistical analysis.
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Fall 2020 Livestock Slaughter Practicum (FDSC-3061-01)
Students learn and practice proper techniques of livestock slaughter. Prerequisite:4 credits of biological sciences.
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Fall 2020 FYS: Decision Making in BUSN (BUSN-1101-01)
Students must enroll in a discussion section. *************** Examines decision making in business and the process of critical thinking and ethical reasoning. Will help students develop the skills and habits of mind to be successful in college.
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Fall 2020 Discussion (BUSN-1101-20)
Decision Making in Business examines the processof critical thinking, ethical reasoning, and decisionmaking in business. Decision Making in Business investigatesthe role of motivation and rationality in decision makingand develops frameworks for making economic decisions whilestudying topics of financial literacy.
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Fall 2020 Discussion (BUSN-1101-21)
Discussion
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Fall 2020 English Comp Int'l Students (ESL-1210-01)
The objective is to equip international students with procedural knowledge - a set of routines that can be applied in various academic writing patterns, such as description, process analysis, argumentation and the research essay.Prerequisites: TOEFL Writing sub-score of 18 or higher, IELTS Writing sub-score of 5 or higher; or instructor’s consent.
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Fall 2020 English Oral Skills (ESL-2110-01)
Instruction for Novice to advanced Low speakers in refining English pronunciation, stress and intonation, listening comprehension, oral grammar practice and building vocabulary. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory only. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
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Fall 2020 FYS: One Health (PATB-1101-01)
One Health is a philosophy centered on the fact that thehealth of people, animals, and the environment areinextricably connected. People working in One Healthcome from a variety of scientific and medical disciplines,and share an interest in working somewhere at theinterface of humans, animals, and the environment tosolve problems that impact health and sustainability.One Health affects us locally and extends to issues ofglobal significance, spanning the gamut fromenvironmental issues (water and air quality, contaminantsand pollutants, functioning healthy ecosystems includingagricultural systems, and climate change) to emergingand zoonotic diseases (like Ebola virus and avianinfluenza) to comparative medicine (ways to detect andcombat diseases like cancer in humans and animals)and includes many other disciplines including foodsafety, biosecurity, delivery of healthcare, and more.We will use topics in One Health (some chosen by you)as tools to meet the student learning outcomes.
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Fall 2020 FYS: Outdoor Leadership (UWYO-1101-06)
Enrollment limited to Outdoor Leadership FIG students....................What is Outdoor Leadership? This seminar course willcritically examine and evaluate two significant historicalexpeditions: the Everest disaster of 1996 and EarnestShackleton’s 1914-1917 Trans-Antarctic Expedition. Eachexpedition will be evaluated from multiple perspectivesthrough active learning, ethical reasoning and groupcollaboration. In doing so, students will gain a betterperspective on what outdoor leadership is and thecontent of the outdoor leadership framework.