All Courses

  • Spring 2021 Pharmaceutical Homicide (PHCY-5240-40)

    Legal pharmaceutical products are sometimes used by healthcare professional criminals to kill people. This course focuses on identifying the zone of risk for people who could be harmed by pharmaceuticals, and the development of best practices to protect patients and others from the harm. Dual listed with: PHCY 4240. Prerequisite: Enrollment in graduate or professional program or department permission.

  • Spring 2021 Adv Clinical Pract-Molecular (MLSK-4982-40)

    Principles of molecular technology used in clinical laboratories. Laboratory experiences include cytogenetics, nucleic acid extraction, hybridization, detection, amplification, sequencing, microarrays, and in-situ hybridization. Emphasis is on the areas of the clinical laboratory that use molecular techniques related to genetics, oncology, infectious disease, and identity testing for forensic and transplant purposes. Prerequisites: Medical Laboratory Technician (ASCP) certification or completion of an AS degree in medical laboratory technician within last 5 years.

  • Spring 2021 Laboratory (LIFE-2022-16)

    An integrative course addressing the evolution, anatomy, physiology, and ecology of animals. Continues building upon the four themes in LIFE 1010, cell and molecular biology, genetics, evolution, and ecology. Preserved animal specimens are dissected during some labs. Intended for students majoring in the life sciences. Laboratory is required. Prerequisites: LIFE 1010 with a grade of C or better.

  • Spring 2021 Power of Words (HP-3151-40)

    Introduces study of nature and grounds of knowledge, its limits and validity. Examines epistemological basis of selected areas of academic thought. Topics vary from year to year. Required of UW Honors Program students. Prerequisites: junior standing and participation in UW Honors Program.

  • Spring 2021 Laboratory (LIFE-2022-19)

    An integrative course addressing the evolution, anatomy, physiology, and ecology of animals. Continues building upon the four themes in LIFE 1010, cell and molecular biology, genetics, evolution, and ecology. Preserved animal specimens are dissected during some labs. Intended for students majoring in the life sciences. Laboratory is required. Prerequisites: LIFE 1010 with a grade of C or better.

  • Spring 2021 Marketing Manhattan (HP-4151-02)

    Asks students to confront a complex social issue, examine it from several perspectives and take a stance on some aspect of the issue. Topics vary from year to year. Required of UW Honors Program students. Prerequisites: senior standing and participation in UW Honors Program.

  • Spring 2021 Romanticism (ENGL-5280-01)

    A seminar in selected genres, figures, and themes of the romantic and Victorian periods. Prerequisite: graduate status or 12 hours or 4000-level work.

  • Spring 2021 American Women Writers (ENGL-5320-01)

    A seminar designed to acquaint graduate students with selected principal works of American literature, relevant secondary works, and scholarly method. Prerequisite: graduate status or 12 hours or 4000-level work.

  • Spring 2021 Intro to Healthcare Quality (PHCY-5341-40)

    This course will provide an overview of healthcare quality and performance measurement. It will also provide a review of quality improvement strategies used in various healthcare settings. Prerequisite: Must be enrolled in the HSA program, or by permission.

  • Spring 2021 Consumption, Markets, Cultures (ENGL-5890-80)

    An interdisciplinary investigation of the ways in which cultural venues curate and market stories, history, and texts. Analyzes and applies theories and methodologies from literary and cultural tourism studies, as well as marketing and consumer culture, to museums, performances, tourist sites and theme parks. This class will include hands-on field research. Prerequisite: graduate status or 12 hours of 4000-level work.

  • Spring 2021 Medication Malpractice (PHCY-5670-40)

    Using a case-study approach, potential legal liability issues are studies, within a health care context that primarily focuses on legal liability related to the use of medications. Strategies for reduction of legal liability are explored. The implementation and oversight of legal risk management programs is addressed. Dual listed with: PHCY 4670. Prerequisite: Enrollment in graduate or professional program or departmental permission.

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