All Courses
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Summer 2020 Legal Externships (LAW-6960-04)
The externship program provides second and third year students with an opportunity to learn through practice by working directly with attorneys or judges for academic credit. Externship placements are limited to judges, government agencies and nonprofit organizations, and must be pre-approved by the College of Law faculty.
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Fall 2020 CE Seminar I (CE-5710-01)
A seminar type class furnishing motivation for advanced study of current problems in broad field of civil engineering by means of library research, study of current literature, and carefully guided class discussion. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
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Fall 2020 Thesis Research (SPAN-5960-01)
Designed for students who are involved in research for their thesis project. Also used for students whose coursework is complete and are writing their thesis. Prerequisite: enrollment in a graduate degree program.
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Fall 2020 TEM: Transmission Elec Mic (CHEM-5100-02)
A course designed for students with an interest in contemporary inorganic chemistry. Recent problems in the literature and techniques for their solution will be addressed.
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Fall 2020 Tpcs: Oil and Gas Accounting (ACCT-4900-40)
An arrangement whereby students may investigate a particular problem area in accounting on an individual basis. Prerequisites: 6 hours in accounting; advanced business standing; junior standing; and written consent of instructor.
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Fall 2020 1st Yr French I (FREN-1010-03)
Fundamentals of grammar, composition, conversation and reading.
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Fall 2020 FYS:Home to Here-Cultures Meet (UWYO-1101-01)
Course Description: Transitions are a certainty in life. From childhood to adolescence, high school to college, dependence to autonomy, school to the world of work, singleness to relationship, career to retirement – all of us experience profound transitions at different life stages. Knowing how to learn from prior experiences and anticipate future changes is essential to defining and pursuing success in adulthood. Through readings, guided discussions, and an individual research project, you will explore how life transitions affect your personal identity development, goal setting, and motivation. As a class, we will also work to understand how current college experiences will affect your future decision making and career
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Fall 2020 FYS: Hamilton's America (HIST-1101-02)
Over the last few years, Hamilton: An American Musical has taken the world by storm. Taking the musical as a starting point, we will consider the real Alexander Hamilton's life and times; the relationship between history, memory, storytelling, and art: and the newfound love of an historical figure who was, in his own time, less than universally popular. The course satisfies the First Year Seminar requirement.