All Courses

  • Spring 2021 Bus & Prof Communication (COJO-3010-41)

    Studies theories and techniques of professional communication activities including interviewing skills, group processes, and professional presentations; for students who are beyond elementary oral communication level. Students develop oral communication skills through projects and presentations. Prerequisite: COJO 1010 or COJO 2010 and junior standing.

  • Spring 2021 Elec & Magnet II (PHYS-4420-01)

    Follows PHYS 4410 and continues intermediate discussion of electricity and magnetism. Covers magnetstatics, magnetoquasistatics, alternating currents, electromagnetic waves, transmission lines and antennae. Prerequisite: PHYS 4410.

  • Spring 2021 Writers Workshop:Fiction (CW-4050-01)

    Students in this course will write in several short fictions forms, from flash fiction (~1/2 page to 3 pages) to slightly longer forms (3-5, 5-8) as well as longer form (~10-15 pages). Writing prompts will vary from structural imitation, to thematic inspiration, to traditional writing prompts such as epistolary (letter, email, etc.) models, stories based on news and tabloid pieces, stories that cover an entire life in a few pages, stories made mostly from dialog, and so on. There will be weekly writing as well as longer projects, and an emphasis on new work as opposed to previously written or -submitted work. Text/reading provided by instructor. Prerequisite: 3 hours of a 2000-level creative writing class in the appropriate genre or consent of instructor.

  • Spring 2021 Composition & Rhetoric II (ENGL-2015-06)

    ENGL2015 helps students become stronger writers, speakers, and thinkers, and features assignments that explore issues that pertain to students’ majors and future careers. Students will engage in different genres for a range of audiences, revise substantially, and practice critical thinking in academic, civic, and professional contexts. Prerequisite: ENGL/Synergy 1010 (COM1).

  • Spring 2021 FYS: Pests, Plagues & Plants (AECL-1101-01)

    AECL 1101 Pests, Plagues, and Plants- Science improves our lives through better food production, improved human health and more-efficient machines. Or does it? While some scientists suggest that new technologies promote human health and sustainable agriculture, other scientists warn of harmful, if not catastrophic, outcomes. This course examines current controversies in the science and technology of agriculture and pest management, including the development of “superweeds,” biofuels, and genetically modified mosquitoes.

  • Spring 2021 Laboratory (ES-1060-12)

    An overview of the methodology and tools used in the engineering profession for analyzing problems. Example problems are solved using spreadsheet tools and structured programming language. Laboratory. Prerequisite: MATH 2200 or concurrent enrollment.

  • Spring 2021 Lab Exp in Exercise Physiology (KIN-3022-01)

    A trad F2F class with online synchronous components

  • Spring 2021 Lab Exp in Exercise Physiology (KIN-3022-02)

    A trad F2F class with online synchronous components

  • Spring 2021 Lab Exp in Exercise Physiology (KIN-3022-03)

    A trad F2F class with online synchronous components

  • Spring 2021 Phy of Exercise (KIN-3021-01)

    A trad F2F class with online synchronous components

  • Spring 2021 Soc-Cult Asp of Physic Activit (KIN-2050-40)

    This course examines the role of physical activity, exercise and sport in the promotion of individual and collective physical health and wellness. Students will understand the historical, individual, socio-cultural, environmental and political factors that have shaped the role of these behaviors in contemporary US society. Prerequisites: Completion of an FYS course, COM 1.

  • Spring 2021 Book Arts (ART-3500-01)

    Introduces students to the history of the book as an object and the traditional crafts associated with book construction through the exploration of the book as a vehicle for artistic expression. A basic knowledge of technical processes pertaining to book construction, a general familiarity with the history of the book and a conceptual exploration of image making will be gained through demonstrations, hands-on studio work, slide lectures, visits to the museum and archives and through assigned readings. Prerequisite: Art 2000 and completion of WB, COM2 or junior standing.

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