All Courses

  • Fall 2019 - Rng Eco Assess & Mon (REWM-4330-01)

    Assessment, monitoring, and analysis of rangeland ecosystems and processes. Students integrate sampling design, measurements of vegetation attributes, indicators of rangeland health, ecological site information, riparian and wildlife habitat values, utilization, and statistical applications to evaluate rangeland resource integrity and sustainable use. Students collect, analyze, and report data using current technologies. REWM students will be given enrollment preference. Prerequisites: REWM 2400 and STAT 2050 or STAT 2070. Concurrent enrollment in REWM 2400 and STAT 2050 or STAT 2070 is allowed with permission. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Ethnographic Methods (ANTH-3300-01)

    Introduces the anthropology major to ethnographic fieldwork, the fundamental method in cultural anthropology. Students conduct fieldwork and discuss research problems including ethics and the role of the researcher. Also open to students in related fields of humanities and social sciences. Prerequisite: ANTH 1200. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Civil Engineering Tools (CE-1010-40)

    9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Studio

  • Fall 2019 - Architectural Design Studio I (ARE-1600-01)

    Freshman-level architectural design in a project-based learning environment. Introduction to Building Information Modeling (BIM); architectural presentation drawings; freehand sketching; essentials of architectural design and building code compliance. Prerequisites: None. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Studio, EN, 3056

  • Fall 2019 - Intro Environ Eng (CE-3400-01)

    For seniors and graduate students in civil engineering who desire to learn design of municipal water distribution and wastewater collection (storm and sanitary) systems by combining principles from hydraulics, hydrology and environmental engineering course work into an integrated design approach. Prerequisites: MATH 2205 and CHEM 1020 or equivalent. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Hydrology (CE-4800-01)

    Analysis of elements of the hydrologic cycle and design with emphasis on precipitation, evapotranspiration, infiltration, runoff and groundwater. Precipitation/Runoff relationships, routing methods, flood predication, groundwater yield and drawdown in unconfined and confined aquifers, unsteady well behavior, method of images are also introduced. Prerequisites: CE 3300. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Wyo Wildlands:Science & Stewar (RNEW-1000-01)

    Introduces students to the breadth of Wyoming natural resources and ecosystems. In this class we investigate the science and management of the Wyoming landscape. Students are introduced to the rangelands, wildlife, forests, watersheds, and disturbed lands of Wyoming with an emphasis on understanding the ecology and natural history of the region. Throughout the course, students are exposed to how the extensive ecosystems of the West are managed by public and private groups and how human decisions change the landscape. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Laboratory (ES-2210-11)

    Basic concepts of electric circuit theory, dependent sources, network theorems, first and second order circuits, phasors, three-phase circuits. Laboratory. Prerequisite: MATH 2205 or concurrent enrollment. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lab

  • Fall 2019 - StudiesIn: Storytelling as Rhe (ENGL-5000-02)

    9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Seminar, CR, 144

  • Fall 2019 - Feminist Theoretical Persp (WMST-5710-80)

    Intensive introduction to the epistemology and application of a wide range of trans-historical, trans-cultural, and trans-national feminist theories. Students will be asked to apply self-selected feminist theories to their own thesis work and graduate fields, as well as to current examples of sex, gender, gender performance, and gendered coding in American media. Prerequisite: graduate standing. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Seminar

  • Fall 2019 - Wyoming Earth Syst (ESS-1000-01)

    Introduces the study of environmental systems science by investigating Earth's athrosphere, atmosphere, biosphere, and lithosphere. Studying Wyoming's unique environments and current issues, students will access, analyze, and interpret date to understand how natural and human-caused changes influence larger Earth and environmental systems. Prerequisites: none. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lecture

  • Fall 2019 - Physiology of Exercise Lab (KIN-3022-01)

    An in-depth examination of the measurement of physiological principles and mechanisms related to human movement. Lab exercises emphasize skills necessary for basic morphological through advanced exercise performance testing variables. Laboratory writing exercises focus on improving students’ ability to read and comprehend scientific articles and produce scientific writing based on their own experiments and data. Prerequisites: KIN 3021 completed or concurrent enrollment. 9/4/2019 - 12/13/2019, Lab

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