All Courses
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Fall 2019 - Physical Chemistry Lab 1 (CHEM-4525-01)
Illustrates principles of physical chemistry, techniques of measurement, and analysis and interpretation of data with an emphasis on quantum mechanical (spectroscopic) methodologies. Laboratory: 3 hours per week. Prerequisites: CHEM 4507 or concurrent enrollment. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Practicum
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Fall 2019 - Laboratory (PHYS-1110-19)
First course of two-semester sequence. Introduces elementary college physics without calculus. Primarily for premedical, predental, preoptometry, prephysical therapy and other students requiring insight into workings of the physical world. Includes classical mechanics, gravitation and heat. Laboratory sessions illustrate principles studied. Students receiving credit for PHYS 1110 cannot receive credit for PHYS 1050, 1210 or 1310. Prerequisite: MATH 1450, 1405 or equivalent. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lab
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Fall 2019 - Laboratory (GEOL-2010-11)
Introduction to rock-forming minerals. Includes introduction to crystallography, crystal chemistry, and the occurrence and identification of the common minerals, with emphasis on silicates. Field trip required. 3.0 credit hours. Prerequisites: GEOL 1005, 1100, or 1500; CHEM 1020 or concurrent enrollment. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lab
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Fall 2019 - Pharmacokinetics (PHCY-6357-01)
Course will provide the student with an overview of the clinical application of pharmacokinetic concepts as used in providing quality patient care. Principles of pharmacokinetics may be applied to the therapeutic use of all medications, including those inherently discussed during this course. Prerequisite: PHCY 6102. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture
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Fall 2019 - Metalsmithing II (ART-3350-01)
Introduces intermediate approaches to fabricating small scale, non-ferrous metals through hammer-raised forming, lost-wax casting, enameling and hardware fabrication. Historical and innovative contemporary applications are fostered through sculptural objects and jewelry-based pieces. Individual studio projects, critical discussion and presentations address aesthetic, conceptual, and technical aspects of metalsmithing. Prerequisites: ART 2000 and 2350. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Studio
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Fall 2019 - Chemical Process Analysis (CHE-2005-01)
Introduces analysis of chemical processes using stoichiometry, material and energy balances, thermodynamics and economics. Prerequisites: C- or better in either CHEM 1050 or CHEM 1020 and concurrent enrollment in MATH 2205. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture
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Fall 2019 - Unit Oper Lab (CHE-3040-01)
Illustrates fluid-flow and heat-transfer principles with experiments, for example, on pipe flow, fluid viscosity, and convective heat transfer. Emphasizes experimental-error analysis and technical communication, both written and oral. Prerequisite: C- or better in CHE 3026, & CHE 3028 or ES 4060. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture
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Fall 2019 - Intro Pete Computing (PETE-2060-01)
Introduces Petroleum Engineering problems and principles, develops computational skills needed to solve them, and reinforces a computational tool that will be useful for other Petroleum Engineering classes. Prerequisites: C or better in PETE 1060, and either a D or better in MATH 2310 or concurrent enrollment in MATH 2310. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture
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Fall 2019 - Group Procedures (CNSL-5110-01)
Designed as an introduction to group work used in various organizational settings. Basic group techniques and procedures are covered using lecture/discussion methods, video, observation, and participation in practicing group leadership skills. Participation in a group experience during the course is required. Prerequisite: CNSL 4520/5520, 6 semester hours of education and/or psychology, consent of instructor, and graduate standing. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture
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Fall 2019 - Intro Part Diff Equations (MATH-4440-01)
Survey of analytic methods for solving partial differential equations. Topics include: method of characteristics for solving first-order linear and quasi-linear equations; classification of second-order equations and canonical forms; background to separation of variables with applications; transform methods and Green functions; elliptic equations; heat and wave equations in one dimension. Prerequisites: grade of C or better in MATH 2210 and MATH 2310. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture
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Fall 2019 - Investment Management (FIN-3310-01)
Covers fundamental principles of investments and practical implications of financial theory. Students acquire a framework for understanding returns on financial assets, risk and return, fundamentals of portfolio theory, efficient market hypothesis, and asset pricing models. Other topics include financial statement analysis, behavioral finance, and introduction to options and futures. Prerequisites: FIN 3250 and Advanced Business Standing. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture
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Fall 2019 - Voice for the Actor (THEA-1700-01)
Introduction to voice work. Emphasizes breath freedom, flexibility and support for the actor. Methodologies studied include: Fitzmaurice Voicework, Linklater and Lessac systems. Prerequisites: none. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Studio