All Courses
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Spring 2021 Intro To Research (PSYC-5520-01)
Restricted to graduate students in psychology
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Spring 2021 Trumpet I (MUSC-1230-01)
Trumpet I
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Spring 2021 Piano I (MUSC-1200-05)
Prerequisite: Classic Piano I or previous experience
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Spring 2021 Seminar (REWM-4530-01)
Discusses pertinent range management problems. Prerequisite: REWM 2000 (C or better) or ENR 4000.
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Spring 2021 Poisonous Plants (REWM-4000-01)
Plants poisonous to livestock in Wyoming and the Mountain West; identification, ecology, toxic principles, physiologic responses of animals, situations leading to poisoning, control and management to prevent losses. Prerequisite: 12 hours of biological and chemical sciences.
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Spring 2021 Watershed Mgt (REWM-4700-01)
Studies hydrological cycle with specific emphasis on the role of vegetation in hydrologic processes such as interception, surface detention storage, infiltration, percolation, runoff and water quality. Utilization of watersheds and vegetation manipulation practices to modify these hydrologic processes. Prerequisite: LIFE 1001 or 1010.
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Spring 2021 Range Veg Mgmt Tech (REWM-4850-01)
Uses applied ecological principles in restoration of degraded rangeland ecosystems to introduce methods for manipulating rangeland vegetation that satisfy land management objectives. Provides ecologically-sound practices to maintain optimal and sustained yield of rangeland products. Prerequisites: C or better in REWM 2000
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Spring 2021 Petroleum Engineering Seminar (PETE-5890-01)
Departmental seminar on current research with formal training for student presentation of technical papers. Prerequisite: graduate standing.
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Spring 2021 Biopharm Pkinetic (PHCY-6102-01)
Discusses biopharmaceutic and pharmacokinetic aspects of dosage form design. Basic pharmacokinetics and biopharmaceutics are interrelated to clinical applications. Also covers classical kinetics and dissolution. Prerequisites: MATH 2200 and PHCY 6100.
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Spring 2021 Pharmacology II (PHCY-6231-01)
Students must enroll in a discussion section.
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Spring 2021 21 C Iss Prof Writing (ENGL-4000-01)
The capstone course in the professional writing minor and also satisfies the COM 3 USP requirement. This spring, we will spend some time constructing a theoretical framework geared toward understanding key issues in the study and practice of professional and technical communication. We’ll start with some foundational material, looking at the role of rhetoric, design, and audience in increasingly digital professional writing spaces and then move to more focused study of ethics, visual rhetoric, and the impact of technology on professional communication, among other things. More traditionally academic (journal review) and professional (e.g., usability test and documentation) projects will range widely and include both individual and collaborative work done in different media for different audiences, some academic, some professional. Students will develop a final portfolio project at the end of the term.