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Exercise Physiology |
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Finance |
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French |
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FREN 4233 - The Nineteenth Century in France 3 (3-0)
Prerequisite(s): FREN 2233 .
Study of this very rich literary and artistic century in France. This course covers romanticism, realism, symbolism, and naturalism in the writings of Hugo, Balzac, Stendhal, Flaubert, Baudelaire, Mallarmé, Rimbaud, Verlaine, and Zola.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
Click here for the Summer I 2024 Schedule of Classes
Click here for the Summer II 2024 Schedule of Classes
Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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General Mathematics |
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General Science |
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Geography |
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Geosciences |
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GEOS 3014 - Meteorology, Climate, and Climate Change 4 (3-2)
Prerequisite(s): GEOS 1134 or GEOS 1234 or CHEM 1143 or CHEM 1243 or BIOL 1144 ; or GNSC 1104 and GNSC 1204 ; or the consent of the instructor.
This course focuses on the essential aspects of meteorology, climate, and climate variability as evidenced in the geological record and historical record, as well as the mathematics and physics that underlie the numerical models used to forecast weather (short term) and climate (long term). Material covered includes the composition and structure of the Earth’s atmosphere, weather at the local scale (temperature, wind, clouds, fronts, precipitation, and severe weather), weather forecasting, climate zones of the Earth, variation of climate as documented in the historical record as well as the geological record, climate modeling, and climate forecasting. Laboratory sessions will reinforce the lecture topics and will include descriptive hands-on and numerical exercises.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 3034 - Oceanography 4 (3-2)
(formerly 3133)
Prerequisite(s): GEOS 1134 or GEOS 1234 or BIOL 1144 ; or GNSC 1104 and GNSC 1204 ; or consent of the instructor.
An introduction to the physical, chemical, geological, and biological processes of the oceans. Integration of tectonic biologic, ecologic, and chemical processes will be stressed. Topics include bathymetry, ocean currents, hurricanes, atmospheric circulation, chemical cycles, marine biology, and the history of ocean exploration. Labs include analysis of NASA and NOAA datasets.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 3044 - Geographic Information Systems (GIS) 4 (2-4)
This course will focus on developing spatial science skills using ESRI ArcGIS Desktop software. The course will introduce students to the concepts of spatial data analysis and spatial representations of environmental data. Students will learn the basic functions of a GIS and the specific operating procedure of ArcGIS. Students will learn to apply their functional knowledge of GIS to analyze spatial data that concerns distributions of anthropogenic, hydrologic, geomorphological, climatological, biological, geological environmental factors. Specific examples include, but are not limited to watershed boundaries, river drainage patterns, landcover and landcover change, species distributions, sediment distributions, geophysical data, elevation data, and precipitation gradients.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 3424 - Geology of the Solar System 4 (3-3)
Prerequisite(s): GEOS 1134 or the approval of the instructor. GEOS 3234 is recommended but not required.
This class features comparative geology of the terrestrial (Mars, Mercury, Venus, and Earth) and jovian planets (Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, Neptune) and their associated moons. The class emphasizes the development of the solar system and how the geological observations we make today inform us of the past. Additional topics include: sedimentary rocks on Mars, impact cratering, volcanism, tectonism, geomorphology, remote sensing, and unmanned space exploration.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 3533 - Solid Earth and Exploration Geophysics 3 (3-1)
Prerequisite(s): GEOS 1134 and either PHYS 1244 or 2644 ; or consent of instructor.
This course provides a thorough introduction to solid Earth geophysics and exploration geophysics. Includes the theory and application of various geophysical methods including seismic, gravity, electrical, and magnetic methods to understanding the shallow and deep structure of the Earth and integration of geophysical data with laboratory data including high pressure and high temperature mineralogical studies. The practical application of geophysical techniques to oil and gas exploration, mineral deposit exploration, and environmental assessment are also presented. Laboratory sessions focus on data acquisition planning, processing, and particularly on practical interpretation of geophysical data for resource and environmental assessment. Course may include a half or full day field trip to gather a geophysical data set for processing and interpretation.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 3634 - Fundamentals of Remote Sensing 4 (3-2)
Prerequisite(s): GEOS 1134 or consent of the instructor.
An introduction to the principles and concepts of digital remote sensing, including an introduction to electromagnetic radiation, remote sensing instrumentation, sensor technology (multispectral, hyperspectral, radar, etc.), earth resource satellites, digital image interpretation and processing, and GIS integration. Course emphasis will include an analysis of remote sensing images (photographs, satellite imagery, radar imagery, etc.) and their interpretation and use for a variety of applications specific to geologic, biologic, and environmental assessment.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 3734 - Geomorphology 4 (3-2)
Prerequisite(s): GEOS 1134 , GEOS 1234 , or consent of the instructor.
This course will focus of the relationship between landforms and the earth surface processes that create and modify them. Students will learn how the discipline of geomorphology has grown into a modern scientific pursuit applicable to geology, geography, and environmental science. Topics will include weathering, soil development, mass movements, drainage basin development, and process-landform relationships (fluvial, aeolian, glacial, costal, and karst). Students will become familiar with the types of datasets used to describe and interpret landforms and processes. The course will incorporate lecture and laboratory components that will utilize literature readings, map interpretation, and statistical analysis.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 4013 - Data Analysis for the Geological Sciences 3 (3-0)
Prerequisite(s): STAT 3573 or the approval of the instructor.
This course focuses on using univariate and multivariate statistics to address geologic problems, and interpreting and understanding data as presented in the scientific literature. Basic concepts in elementary statistics (p-values, distributions, hypothesis testing) will be reviewed with a geologic viewpoint. Advanced topics will be applied to geologic examples, and include matrix algebra, eigenvectors, regression, non-parametric resampling, spatial analysis, ordination methods, and multidimensional scaling. Examples will be taken from various geoscience subfields, and students will apply their understanding to both original projects and previously published work. Analyses will be performed in the “R” software environment, designed for statistical applications.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 4034 - Petroleum Geology 4 (3-3)
Prerequisite(s): GEOS 1134 , GEOS 3134 , and GEOS 3434 , or consent of the instructor.
An introduction to the geology of petroleum and natural gas. Topics include the origin, occurrence, movement, and accumulation of oil and natural gas and the exploration for and development of hydrocarbon reservoirs. Additional topics include geophysical and geochemical exploration techniques, basin analysis, well site operations, representative exploration and reservoir development case histories, and subsurface geology of CO2 sequestration. Fundamental skills routinely used by petroleum geologists, such as basic well log analysis, well correlation, cross section construction, mapping, and volumetric calculations are the major lab session topics.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 4134 - Applied Petroleum Geology 4 (3-2)
Prerequisite(s): GEOS 1134 , 3134 , and 3434 ; or GEOS 1134 and PETE 2103 ; or consent of instructor.
Using the reservoir lifecycle as a unifying theme, this course focuses on practical aspects of formation evaluation, reservoir characterization, geological modeling, and dynamic forecasting for oil and gas reservoirs. Major topics are (1) interpretation and integration of reservoir data obtained from well logs, cores, reservoir fluids, and seismic data and (2) building and using geological reservoir models to assess hydrocarbon in place volumes within a probabilistic framework. Additional topics include reservoir engineering concepts and forecasting tools, reserves calculation, the use decision analysis for value of information (VOI) and economic decisions, reservoir development planning, and reservoir monitoring techniques. (Same as PETE 4204 .)
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GEOS 4533 - Introduction to Ore Deposits and Energy Resources 3 (2-2)
Prerequisite(s): GEOS 3234 and either CHEM 1143 or 1243 or approval of the instructor.
This course provides a thorough introduction to the main sub-fields of economic geology: metallic and non-metallic ore deposits, petroleum geology, coal geology, and building materials geology. Specific types of metallic and non-metallic ore deposits covered include porphyry-type copper deposits, hydrothermal gold, and silver deposits, massive sulfide copper, zinc, and silver deposits, Mississippi Valley type lead and zinc deposits, sedimentary iron deposits, weathering-related aluminum and nickel deposits, gold, diamond, and other heavy mineral placer deposits, phosphate, and evaporate-mineral deposits. The course will cover the various tectonics and the spatial and temporal occurrence of metallic and non-metallic ore deposits. Practical aspects of mining, mining economics, and ore deposit exploration and evaluation are also included. The course will provide an introduction to the formation of petroleum reservoirs and their exploitation, the formation of coal deposits and their exploitation, and the geology and exploitation of building materials such as sand, gravel, and quarried stone.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Summer II 2024 Schedule of Classes
Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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German |
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GERM 3133 - Contemporary German Culture 3 (3-0)
Germany is Europe’s largest and most densely populated country. Since 1989 it has gone through fundamental transformations. Its borders have changed, its geopolitical significance has changed, its population has changed. It has become the motor of the European Union. It has gone from being one of the closest allies of the United States to one of its chief critics. Its new capital Berlin has become the cultural capital of the 21st century. It is a place of daring experiments and reactionary violence. It is a place of fascinating contradictions that present many challenges. This course will offer students an introduction to and overview of this dynamic country on the move. Through introductory lectures and class discussions, we will explore a variety of issues: e.g., the cost of unification, the Nazi legacy, post-communism, immigration, citizenship, the European Union, Old Europe, managing capitalism, and the role of gender and sexual minorities in Germany today. The language of instruction and all class materials are in English.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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GERM 3333 - German Film History 3 (3-0)
This course provides an overview of German history and culture through the filmic lens from the silent Weimar Cinema until today. It will attend to both art house and popular film, and examine various eras, genres, and topics, such as Expressionism, Nazi propaganda, the rubble film, the New German Cinema, the East German Socialist film, and the contemporary Berlin School film. The films will be analyzed both in terms of their cinematic aesthetics as well as their social and historical contexts of their production. This course is a combination of lectures, film viewings in German with English subtitles, readings in English language, class discussions, and writing assignments.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Global Studies |
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Health Sciences and Human Services |
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Health Services Administration |
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HSAD 4006 - Public Health - Determinants of Health Disparities - A Comparative International Perspective 6 (6-0)
Course will investigate (1) the delivery of health care needs/services of selected populations in the U.S. and Great Britain; (2) the description of health disparities and measurement issues; (3) the determinants of health disparities: politics and health insurance coverage, economics, social and physical environmental factors, behavioral and emotional variables; (4) the impact of aging of the populations, increased racial and ethnic diversity and technological developments; (5) the intervention strategies and evaluation results. Each student will be expected to complete a substantial, original research paper or project to satisfy the six hour requirement. This course will only be taught as part of the British Studies program in London, England.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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HSAD 4103 - End-of Life-Care 3 (3-0)
This course provides students from multiple health care disciplines the opportunity to explore issues related to end-of-life care. Topics to be emphasized include legal issues, standards of care, advanced care planning, assisted suicide/euthanasia, medical futility, gaps and barriers to good care, pathophysiological changes associated with death, holistic assessment, the normal grieving process, communication and decision-making, pain management, mental health management, and symptom control.
Click here for the Spring 2024 Schedule of Classes
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Click here for the Summer II 2024 Schedule of Classes
Click here for the Fall 2024 Schedule of Classes
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History |
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