USF 2000-2001 Undergraduate Catalog - Page 204 - 279
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EAS 4121 Hydro and Aerodynamics (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 3701, MAP 2302. Advanced fluid dynamics, ideal and viscous flows, applications to flow around immersed bodies.
ECH 3023 Introduction to Process Engineering (3) EN ECH
PR: EGN 3343. Mass and energy balances on steady state systems with and without chemical reactions. Combustion processes. Psychrometrics.
ECH 3264C Transport Processes I (3) EN ECH
PR: ECH 3023. Design, sizing, and selection of fluid flow and heat transfer equipment to satisfy safety and process demands. Lecture/laboratory.
ECH 3702 Instrument Systems I (4) EN ECH
PR: EGN 3373. Application of discrete logic operations for sensor interfaced and process control situations in Chemical & Mechanical Engineering, use of programmable logic controllers in process control. Introduction to the use of personal computer I/O interface cards of control application.
ECH 4123C Phase and Chemical Equilibria (3) EN ECH
PR: For majors, ECH 3023; for non-majors ECH 3023 or CHM 4410. Correlation of thermodynamic properties of real systems and solutions. Description of multicomponent, multiphase systems in equilibrium. Applications to separation processes and reactor design. Lecture/laboratory.
ECH 4244L Chemical Engineering Laboratory II (2) EN ECH
PR: ECH 4415C, EGN 3702. Chemical Engineering Processes laboratory experiments: fluid flow, heat transfer, phase and chemical equilibria, reacting systems, and process control.
ECH 4265C Transport Processes II (3) EN ECH
PR: ECH 3264C, ECH 4123C. Design, sizing. and selection of mass transfer equipment. Absorption, distillation, extraction, humidification. Lecture/laboratory.
ECH 4323C Automatic Control I (4) EN ECH
PR: ECH 4265C, ECH 3702, ECH 4415C. Analysis of factors affecting process dynamics. Instrumentation required for control system design. Modes of control and feedback controllers. Stability. Design case studies. Simulation of processes. Lec./Lab.
ECH 4415C Reacting Systems (3) EN ECH
PR: CHM 4412, ECH 4265C, ECH 4244L. Equilibrium and rate phenomena in reacting systems. Description of homogeneous chemical reactors for design and control. Lecture/laboratory.
ECH 4605 Strategies of Process Engineering (3) EN ECH
PR: ECH 3264C, ECH 4123C, EGN 4450. Methods of process cost estimation, profitability analysis, selection among alternatives, and optimization. Uncertainty and risk analysis. Reliability and safety. Project management.
ECH 4615 Plant Design and Optimization MW (3) EN ECH
PR: ECH 4415C, ECH 4323C, ECH 4605. Synthesis processing of and analysis of optimal chemical processing routes. Design and selection of process equipment. Process flowsheet simulation troubleshooting case studies.
ECH 4905 Independent Study (1-4) EN ECH
PR: CI. Specialized independent study determined by the student’s needs and interests. Students must have contract with instructor.
ECH 4930 Special Topics in Chemical Engineering I (1-4) EN ECH
PR: CC.
ECH 4931 Special Topics in Chemical Engineering II (1-4) EN ECH
PR: CI.
ECH 5285 Transport Phenomena (3) EN ECH
PR: Senior or GS in Engineering Basic descriptive equations of fluid, heat, and mass transport. Description and solution to intermediate problems, including unsteady state and multidimensional systems. Estimation of transport and convective coefficients.
ECH 5324 Automatic Process Control II (3) EN ECH
PR: ECH 4323C or CI, majors only / 2 hrs lec., 3 hrs. lab/week. The course covers the root locus and frequency response methods to study stability of control loops. The techniques of ratio, cascade, feed forward, selective, override, and multi-variable control techniques are discussed in detail and shown how to utilize to design control systems, z-transforms and discrete controllers including PID, Dahlin and deadline compensation.
ECH 5740 Theory and Design of Bioprocesses (4) EN ECH
PR: Senior standing in engineering or CI. Open to majors and non-majors with CI. Introduction to biotechnology, including applied microbiology, enzyme technology, biomass production, bioreactor design, and transport processes in biosystems.
ECH 5742 Pharmaceutical Engineering (2) EN ECH
PR: Senior or graduate standing in engineering or CI. Introduction to pharmaceutical engineering, including dosage forms (tablets, capsules, powders, liquids, topical forms, and aerosols), excipients, regulatory issues, clinical studies, and good manufacturing practices.
ECH 5746 Introduction to Biomedical Engineering (3) EN ECH
PR: Senior standing in engineering or CI. Open to non-engineering students with CI. Introduction to biomedical engineering, including transport phenomena in biomedical systems, biometerials, biomedical instrumentation, prosthetic devices, and clinical engineering.
ECH 5747C Selected Topics in Chemical Engineering Biotechnology (1-3) EN ECH
PR: Senior standing in engineering or CI. Open to majors and non-majors with CI. Selected topics in chemical engineering biotechnology, including pharmaceutical engineering, immobilized enzyme technology, food engineering, and fermentation.
ECH 5748 Selected Topics in Biomedical Engineering (1-3) EN ECH
PR: GS in Engineering may be taken by non-engineering students with CI. Selected topics in biomedical engineering, including biomedical engineering, biomedical materials, biodynamics of circulation, separation processes in biomedical systems, and artificial organ systems.
ECH 5820 Product Development (2) EN ECH
PR: Senior or GS in Engineering or CI Introduction to the development of consumer products, including the history of innovation, creativity development, the product development environment, and a detailed examination of several product areas.
ECH 5910 Directed Research in Bioengineering (1-3) EN ECH
PR: CI. Directed research in an area of biomedical engineering or engineering biotechnology.
ECH 5930 Special Topics III (1-4) EN ECH
PR: CI.
ECH 5931 Special Topics IV (1-4) EN ECH
PR: CI.
ECO 1000 Basic Economics SS (3) BA ECN
No credit after completing ECO 2023/ECO 2013. Survey of Economic principles and issues. Scarcity, choice, markets, prices, the monetary system, unemployment, inflation, international trade and finance.
ECO 2013 Economic Principles (Macroeconomics) SS (3) BA ECN
Introduction to the theory of income determination with emphasis on monetary and fiscal policies. Objectives of full employment, price stability, economic growth, balance of payments stability.
ECO 2023 Economic Principles (Microeconomics) SS (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2013. Introduction to the theory of price determination. How an economy decides what to produce, how to produce and how to distribute goods and services.
ECO 2935 Selected Topics In Economics (1-3) BA ECN
PR: CI. Not available for credit to upper-level students admitted to the College of Business. Topics selected by department.
ECO 3100 Managerial Economics (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2023. Application of microeconomic theory to problems in business decision making with a special focus on price determination.
ECO 3101 Intermediate Price Theory (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2023. The price system and allocation of scarce resources between competing uses.
ECO 3203 Intermediate Income & Monetary Analysis (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2013 and ECO 3101 with a grade of “C” or better. Determination of income, employment, prices, and interest rates. Aggregate demand and aggregate supply.
ECO 3622 American Economic History (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2023. Growth and evolution of American economic institutions from Colonial times to the present.
ECO 3703 International Economics MW (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 3101 with a grade of “C” or better. Role of international trade in the U.S. economy. Gains from trade, balance of payments, exchange rate determination, balance of payments stability and international commercial policy.
ECO 4105 Advanced Price Theory (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 3101 with a grade of “B” or better. An advanced survey of special topics in microeconomics: borrowing and saving, decision making under uncertainty, markets for capital and labor, game theory, production and exchange efficiency, social welfare, and efficiency consequences of market and non-market allocation.
ECO 4201 Advanced Macroeconomic Theory (3) BA ECN
An advanced survey of special topics in macroeconomics. Develops and contrasts the neoclassical growth, endogenous growth, real business cycle and new Keynesian models. Relevant empirical studies are presented.
ECO 4303 History Of Economic Thought (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 3101 with a grade of “C” or better. Development of economic thought from Plato to Marshall.
ECO 4323 Radical Political Economy MW (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 1000 or ECO 2013 or CI. The radical (left) and Marxist schools of thought in economics. Application of radical theory to problems of advanced capitalist and socialist societies.
ECO 4401 Introduction to Mathematical Economics (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2013, QMB 3200, and MAC 2233 or MAC 2230 or CI. Mathematical models of optimizing behavior and economic equilibrium.
ECO 4421 Introduction to Econometrics (3) BA ECN
PR: QMB 3200 with a grade of “B” or better. Survey of basic econometric techniques. Regression analysis employed to estimate consumption, investment, demand, cost, and production functions. Examines problems of auto-correlation, heteroscedasticity, multicollinearity, and specification errors.
ECO 4504 Public Finance (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 3101 with a grade of “C” or better. The public sector and its contribution to economic welfare. Government expenditures and revenues. Resource allocation, income distribution, stabilization, and economic growth.
ECO 4713 International Monetary Relations (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 3203 Advanced analysis of international macroeconomic relationships. Foreign exchange market, international monetary system balance of payments.
ECO 4723 International Commercial Policies (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 3101 with a grade of “C” or better. Advanced analysis of international trade theory and commercial policy, international economic integration, multinational enterprise.
ECO 4905 Independent Study (1-3) BA ECN
PR: CI. S/U only. Specialized independent study determined by the student’s needs and interests.
ECO 4914 Independent Research (1-3) BA ECN
PR: CI. Individual study contract with instructor and department chairperson required. The research project will be mutually determined by the student and instructor.
ECO 4935 Selected Topics in Economics (1-3) BA ECN
PR: CI. Topics to be selected by the instructor or instructors on pertinent economic issues.
ECP 2001 Survey of Micro and Macroeconomics (3) BA ECN
A condensed introductory course in microeconomics and macroeconomics, intended for pre-business students. This course and ECO 2023 cannot both be taken for credit.
ECP 3201 The Economics of Women and Work MW (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 1000, ECO 2013 or ECO 2023. Survey of research on women, men and work in the labor market and the household. Focuses on the economic status of women. Includes historical perspective, examination of the family as an economic unit, changing work roles, gender differences in occupation and earnings.
ECP 3203 Labor Economics (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 3101 with a grade of “C” or better. Determinants of wage and employment levels; occupation, industrial and geographical wage differentials, union and public policy effects on labor markets; the economics of discrimination; inflation and unemployment.
ECP 3302 Environmental Economics MW (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2023.
ECP 3413 Economics of Regulation and Antitrust (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2023. Economic analysis of the rationale and performance of government regulation and antitrust policy. Examination of antitrust issues of price fixing, mergers, and monopolization, and issues regulating electric utilities, airlines, trucking, consumer product safety, product quality, and the environment.
ECP 3530 Economics of Health (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 3101 with a grade of “C” or better. Application of economic methods to health care topics. Demand for medical care, public and private health insurance; physician and hospital supply of medical care; government regulations and national healthcare systems.
ECP 3613 Economics of the Urban Environment (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 1000 or ECO 2013 or CI. Economic analysis of cities and urban social problems. Poverty, discrimination, housing, transportation, pollution, crime and fiscal considerations.
ECP 4232 Collective Bargaining and Public Policy (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2023 or CI. Administration of labor management agreements. Impact of the government role in collective bargaining and labor relations.
ECP 4451 Law and Economics (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2023 with a grade of “C” or better. Advanced analysis of the economic impact of tort, criminal, property and contract law as well as in the formation and adjudication of law.
ECP 4505 Economics of Crime (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2323. Application of economic theory to the analyses of criminal behavior, crime prevention, law enforcement, sanctions and corrections.
ECS 3013 Economic Development (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 2013 or CI. Economic development in emerging nations.
ECS 4003 Comparative Economic Systems MW (3) BA ECN
PR: ECO 1000 or ECO 2013 or CI. The major economic systems: traditional, capitalism, democratic socialism, communism and fascism.
EDE 4301 Teaching Methods in the Elementary School (3) ED EDE
PR: EDE 4941 and EDG 4620. Techniques and strategies appropriate to instruction of children in educational settings.
EDE 4905 Independent Study: Elementary Education (1-4) ED EDE
S/U only. Specialized independent study determined by the student’s needs and interests.
EDE 4909 Directed Study: Elementary Education (1-4) ED EDE
PR: Senior standing. To extend competency in teaching field.
EDE 4940 Internship: Elementary Education (10-12) ED EDE
PR: EDE 4941 and EDE 4942; CR: EDE 4936. S/U only. Teacher candidate is required to demonstrate professional competencies during one semester of full day internship in a public or private elementary school.
EDE 4941 Childhood Education Internship Level I (3) ED EDE
PR: Admission to the Elementary Education. CR: RED 4310, EDG 4620. Concurrent enrollment in EDG 4620-Elementary section. S/U only. Students spend six hours per week in a supervised in-school experience and attend weekly seminar.
EDE 4942 Childhood Education Internship Level II (6) ED EDE
PR: EDE 4941, RED 4310, EDG 4620, EDF 3122, LAE 4314, EDE 4301, MAE 4310, SCE 4310, LAE 4414, SSE 4313, EME 2040. S/U only. Students spend 12 hours per week in a supervised internship experience in classroom settings and attend a weekly seminar.
EDF 2005 Introduction to Education and Field Experience (3) ED EDC
Introductory survey course required for admission into the College of Education. A broad overview of the history, sociology and philosophy of education in the United States focuses on education as a field of study and teaching as a profession. Includes lecture and field experience.
EDF 3122 Learning and the Developing Child (3) ED EDF
PR: General psychology and admission to College of Education. Preadolescent child growth and development, learning theory, and behavioral analysis applied to instruction and to the organization and management of classroom.
EDF 3214 Human Development And Learning (3) ED EDF
PR: General psychology and admission to College of Education. Application of respondent and operant learning principles to classroom learning, teaching models for different instructional goals, analysis of teacher behavior, micro-teaching.
EDF 3228 Human Behavior and Environmental Selection 6A MW (3) ED EDF
Learning principles, behavior analysis applied to global environmental and social issues. Requires elementary computer word processing skills.
EDF 3542 Philosophy of Education MW (4) ED EDF
PR: Upper level standing. A study of philosophy of education with an emphasis on aspects that are relevant to an understanding of the issues and problems of American education.
EDF 3604 Social Foundations of Education MW (3) ED EDF
PR: Upper level standing. Social, economic and political context within which schools function and the values which provide direction for our schools.
EDF 4111 Child Growth and Learning (3) ED EDF
An introduction to child developmeent and learning from an educational and psychological perspective. Emphasis is on the application of relevant constructs as they would reflect developmentally appropriate practices in early childhood learning settings.
EDF 4131 Learning And The Developing Adolescent (3) ED EDF
PR: General psychology and admission to College of Education. Adolescent growth and development, learning theory, and behavioral analysis applied to instruction and to the organization and management of the classroom.
EDF 4430 Measurement For Teachers (3) ED EDQ
PR: Upper level standing. Concepts and skills related to designing and developing classroom tests; evaluating tests, instruction, and student progress; and communicating student achievement. Including application of performance assessment techniques and computer applications for measuring and assessing pupil progress.
EDF 4905 Independent Study: Educational Foundations (1-4) ED EDF
PR: DPR. S/U only. Specialized independent study determined by the student’s needs and interests.
EDF 4909 Directed Study: Educational Foundations (1-3) ED EDF
PR: Senior Standing. Offered only as a scheduled class. To extend competency in teaching field.
EDF 5136 Adolescence (4) ED EDF
Study of the educational, intellectual, personality, physical, social and vocational factors in adolescence and their importance for school personnel.
EDF 5285 Programmed Instruction and Teaching Machines (3) ED EDF
Principles for programming in several academic subjects.
EDG 2701 Teaching Diverse Populations and Field Experience (3) ED EDC
Introductory survey course required for admission into the College of Education. Places schools and teaching within the context of the U.S. as a pluralistic society. Topics include: the demographics of diversity; prejudice; elements of culture; American heritage of diversity and its value; and barriers to cultural understanding. Includes lecture and field experience.
EDG 4320 Introduction to Creative Drama (3) FA EDD
This course for classroom teachers introduces the theory and practice of creative drama as it applies to use by elementary, middle school and secondary school teachers. Beginning with a study of dramatic play as it relates to human development, the course includes basic strategies when using pantomime, voice improvisation, theatre games, and role playing and story dramatization.
EDG 4620 Curriculum and Instruction (3) ED EDC
An introduction to the field of curriculum and instruction. Emphasis is placed on principles of curriculum development and use of instructional strategies. Students will develop, implement, and evaluate a variety of lesson plans.
EDG 4909 Directed Studies (1-4) ED EDC
PR: Senior standing. Offered only as a scheduled class. Department permit required. To extend competency in teaching field.
EEC 2000 Introduction to Early Childhood Education (3) ED EDU
An overview of early childhood education with emphasis on its historical development, current theories, and practices.
EEC 4008 Literature in Early Childhood Education 6A LW (3) ED EDU
Jr./Sr. Standing Emphasis is placed on developing knowledge of literature for younger children (0-8 yrs.) and methodologies and strategies for utilizing literature to teach literacy in content areas of the curriculum.
EEC 4203 Programs for Young Children (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education. Early Childhood majors only. Develops students’ understanding of historical and social foundations of early childhood education, establishing professional beliefs regarding teaching young children, and developing an appropriate learning environment.
EEC 4211 Integrated Curriculum: Science and Mathematics (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education, EDF 4111. Early Childhood majors only. Develops an understanding of science and mathematical concepts for the appropriate stages of cognitive development of young children. Emphasis will be placed on how science and mathematics are integrated throughout the curriculum and become valued functional tools.
EEC 4212 Integrated Curriculum: Social Sciences/Humanities & Art (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education, EDF 4111. Early Childhood majors only. Develops an understanding of appropriate curriculum experiences in social science, humanities, and arts for kindergarten and primary grades with an emphasis on integrated experiences, and sociological influences such as culture, ethnicity, language and gender impact understandings, values, and learning.
EEC 4300 Cognitive Experiences for Young Children (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education, EDF 4111. Early Childhood majors only. Emphasizes theoretical and practical aspects of cognitive development for children ages 3 through 6 with focus on planning integrated experiences and content in science, mathematics, and social sciences.
EEC 4303 Creative and Affective Experiences for Young Children (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education. Early Childhood majors only. Develops students’ understandings of young children’s creative expression through art, music, movement, play and drama. Emphasizes how to plan, implement, and evaluate appropriate learning experiences as well as selection of appropriate instructional materials.
EEC 4408 Child, Family & Teacher Relations (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education, EDF 4111. Early Childhood majors only. Focuses on developing an understanding of traditional and non-traditional families, structural and life style variations and parenting in diverse cultures and at-risk families. Implications from these understandings will guide development of a parent involvement plan that includes effective ways to communicate with parents, conference with parents, and plan parent meetings and home visits.
EEC 4706 Language and Emerging Literacy (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education, EDF 4111. Early Childhood majors only. Provides knowledge of language development and emerging literacy for typical and atypical development in children from birth to third grade, including ESOL children.
EEC 4905 Independent Study: Early Childhood Education (1-4) ED EDU
PR: S/U only. Early Childhood majors only. Specialized independent study determined by the student’s needs and interests.
EEC 4909 Directed Study: Early Childhood Education (1-3) ED EDU
PR: Senior standing. To extend knowledge in teaching field.
EEC 4936 Senior Seminar in Elementary Early Childhood Education (2) ED EDU
PR: Senior standing; CR: EEC 4940. Synthesis of teacher candidate’s courses in complete college program.
EEC 4940 Internship: Early Childhood (10) ED EDU
CR: EEC 4936. S/U only. Teacher candidate is required to demonstrate professional competencies during one semester of full-day internship in a public or private elementary school.
EEC 4941 Field Experience I (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education. Early Childhood majors only. Field placement with three and four year olds where teacher candidates have opportunities to apply knowledge and skills in authentic situations and become objective observers of young children’s development. Weekly seminars are conducted in conjunction with the field experience which provide teacher candidates an opportunity for reflection on their understandings.
EEC 4942 Field Experience II (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education, EDF 4111. Early Childhood majors only. Field placement in kindergarten or primary grade where teacher candidates have opportunities to apply knowledge and skills in authentic situations. Emphasis on developing deeper understanding of children’s development and implications of development for program planning for both typical and atypical children.
EEC 4943 Field Experience III (3) ED EDU
PR: Admission to College of Education, EDF 4111. Early Childhood majors only. Field placement in kindergarten or primary grade where teacher candidates have opportunities to apply knowledge and skills in authentic situations. Focus on developing deeper understanding of growth and development and relationship to curriculum planning with an emphasis on self-evaluation of knowledge, skills, and dispositions essential for teaching.
EED 4011 Introduction to Behavior Disorders (3) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011, or equivalent or DPR. Survey of emotional, behavioral and social disorders in children and youth. History of the field, definitions, classifications, theoretical approaches, intervention techniques, classroom management, service delivery models, trends and issues.
EED 4909 Directed Study: Behavior Disorders (1-3) ED EDS
PR: Senior standing. To extend competency in teaching field.
EED 4941 Undergraduate Supervised Practicum in Behavior Disorders (1-6) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011. S/U only. DPR. Supervised field experience in assessment, classroom management, and clinical teaching with children who have emotional and behavioral disabilities.
EEL 3100 Network Analysis and Design (3) EN EGE
PR: EGN 3373. A second course in linear circuit analysis and design. Transient and steady-state responses of passive R-L-C networks to various functions.
EEL 3302 Electronics I (3) EN EGE
PR: EGN 3373. A course in the physical principles of electronic devices with emphasis on semi-conductor electronics. Includes the analysis and design of amplifiers and switching circuits.
EEL 3410 Fields and Waves I (3) EN EGE
PR: MAP 2302, PHY 2049, PHY 2049L. A basic introduction to electromagnetic field theory, including static and dynamic electromagnetic fields.
EEL 4102 Linear Systems Analysis (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 3100. Provides further study in the analysis of linear networks and systems. Includes time and frequency domain points of view. Laplace, Fourier and superposition integrals.
EEL 4163 Computer Aided Design and Analysis (2) EN EGE
PR: EEL 3302, EEL 4705. The emphasis is upon applications and how to use the major CADA programs as effective tools to solve a wide variety of engineering problems. The coverage includes solid state design, systems analysis, digital logic, and transfer function solutions.
EEL 4305 Electronics II (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 3302. Provides further study in electronic circuits. Includes feedback and frequency response techniques in amplifier design.
EEL 4351C Semiconductor Devices (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 3302. An introduction to the fundamentals of semiconductor materials and semiconductor device operation.
EEL 4411 Fields And Waves II (3) EN EGE
PR: MAP 2302, PHY 2049, PHY 2049L. A basic introduction to electromagnetic field theory, including static and dynamic electromagnetic fields.
EEL 4511 Communication Engineering (2) EN EGE
PR: EEL 4512. Analog telephone network; digitalization. Digital transmission and multiplexing. Digital switching; space division switching, time-division switching, space-time switching; analog environment. Broadcasting and recording (audio and video); television systems, cable and satellite TV.
EEL 4512C Introduction to Communication Systems (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 3100. Signals and Fourier transforms in communication systems; measure of information in signals. AM, FM, and PM modulation and demodulation systems. Sampling, quantization and PCM. Data communication; terminals, and modems; repeaters, timing circuits, and interfaces. Local networks.
EEL 4567 Electro-Optics (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 3301L, EEL 3302L, EEL 3410. An introduction to the field of electro-optics, including visible and infra-red sources and detectors, radiometry, optical and electronic components, and fiber optics.
EEL 4657 Linear Control Systems (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 3100. Introduction to analysis and design of linear feedback control systems. Covers block diagram, flow charts. Bode, Nyquist, and root locus techniques.
EEL 4705 Logic Design (3) EN ESB
PR: EGN 3373, CR: EEL 4705L; for CS & E students CR or PR: COP 2002. Binary number systems; truth functions; Boolean algebra; canonical forms; minimization of combinational logic circuits; synchronous logic circuits in computers.
EEL 4705L Logic Laboratory (1) EN ESB
CR: EEL 4705.
EEL 4743L Microprocessor Laboratory (1) EN ESB
CR: EEL 4744. Laboratory for microprocessor use and evaluation.
EEL 4744 Microprocessor Principles and Applications (3) EN ESB
PR: EEL 4705 and EEL 4705L. CR: EEL 4743L. Functional Description. Arithmetic and Logic capabilities. Control and Timing. Interrupts and priority systems. Software design and documentation. Distributed function processing.
EEL 4748 Microprocessor-Based System Design and Application (3) EN ESB
PR: EEL 4744, EEL 4743L. Study of techniques for design of microprocessor-based systems used in various applications. Includes a project on development of an experimental application system.
EEL 4756 Signal and Image Processing (3) EN ESB
Sampling and quantization of signals and images; frequency-domain representations, transforms; filtering, convolution, and correlation; raster scanning and interlacing; color images; fast methods and parallelism; multi-rate processing; information signals.
EEL 4781C Distributed Processing and Computer Networks (3) EN ESB
PR: COP 4600, CDA 4100. Design and analysis of distributed processing systems. Covers communication hardware and software, network operating systems, and reliability enhancement techniques.
EEL 4851C Data Structures (3) EN ESB
PR: COP 2002, COP 2000L. Fundamentals of data organization for purposes of program efficiency, clarity and simplicity will be addressed.
EEL 4852C Data Base Systems (3) EN ESB
PR: EEL 4851C. Fundamentals of data base management systems. CODASYL, network, hierarchical, and relational data base systems are analyzed, and typical applications are presented.
EEL 4905 Independent Study (1-5) EN EGE
PR: CI. S/U only. Specialized independent study determined by the students’ needs and interests.
EEL 4906 Design Project MW (2) EN EGE
PR: Senior standing. Required of all electrical seniors. An individual or team project involving the design of an electrical component system.
EEL 4935 Special Electrical Topics I (1-4) EN EGE
EEL 4936 Special Electrical Topics II (1-4) EN EGE
EEL 4937 Special Electrical Topics III (1-4) EN EGE
EEL 5250 Power System Analysis (3) EN EGE
Analysis technique for AC power systems.
EEL 5344C Digital CMOS/VLSI Design (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 4705 or GS Design, layout, simulation, and test of custom digital CMOS/VLSI chips, using a CMOS cell library and state-of-the-art CAD tools. Digital CMOS static and dynamic gates, flip flops, CMOS array structures commonly used in digital systems. Top down design example of a bit slice processor.
EEL 5356 Integrated Circuit Technology (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 4351 or GS Physics and Chemistry of integrated circuit and discrete device fabrication, materials limitations, processing schemes, failure and yield analysis. A laboratory is integral to the course.
EEL 5357 Analog CMOS/VLSI Design (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 4305 or GS Design of analog circuits for CMOS/VLSI design. Op amps, comparators, D to A and A to D converters. Switched capacitor filters. Analog simulation.
EEL 5382 Physical Basis Of Microelectronics (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 3410 or GS Quantum mechanics with emphasis on electronic properties in atoms, molecules, and crystals; quantum statistics; energy band theory; crystal structures; defect chemistry; semiconductor properties.
EEL 5437 Microwave Engineering (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 4411, EEL 4102, or GS Introduction to passive and active components, devices, and circuits, including transmission lines and wave guides, employed in microwave integrated circuits and systems.
EEL 5462 Antenna Theory (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 4411 or GS Antenna theory beginning with fundamental parameter definitions and continuing with mathematical concepts, elemental antennas and arrays.
EEL 5572C Local and Metropolitan Area Networks (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 6534 or EEL 4512 or GS Basics of data communication exchange of digital information over communication media; Basics of LANs/MANs and its components: media topologies, access methods, etc.; LAN/MAN architectures and protocols-IEEE 802.xLAN Standards; High speed LANs such as FDDI, IEEE 802.6 MAN, etc., Internetworking; LAN/MAN Design and selections.
EEL 5631 Digital Control Systems (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 4657 or GS Sample data and digital control processes
EEL 5754C Microprocessor Based Digital Signal Processing (3) EN EGE
PR: EEL 4705 or CC. Arithmetic systems, processing structures, efficient algorithms. DSP hardware, TI, NEC and other DSP microprocessors; multiprocessing hardware and software. System development. Application to telecommunications and voice processing.
EEL 5771 Introduction to Computer Graphics I (3) EN ESB
PR: CI, majors only An introduction to the evolution of computer graphics including point-plotting, line drawing, two-dimensional transformations and graphics software packages.
EEL 5935 Special Electrical Topics I (1-3) EN EGE
EEL 5936 Special Electrical Topics II (1-3) EN EGE
EEL 5937 Special Electrical Topics III (1-3) EN EGE
EEX 4011 Foundations of Special Education (3) ED EDS
DPR. Characteristics and needs of children who have learning disabilities, emotional disabilities, hearing impairments, mental retardation, physical handicaps, speech impairments, visual limitations, and who are gifted and talented.
EEX 4070 Integrating Exceptional Students in the Regular Classroom (2-3) ED EDS
No credit for department majors. Designed for non-special education majors. Includes basic identification techniques and strategies to promote academic and social integration and interaction of “mainstreamed” exceptional students. Concurrent field experience projects are included.
EEX 4221 Educational Assessment of Exceptional Students (3) ED EDS
PR: EDF 3214 and EEX 4011. Taken concurrently with EED 4941, ELD 4941, or EMR 4941 and EEX 4846. DPR. Introduction to assessment of exceptional students through formal and informal techniques. Emphasis placed on the interpretation of information for educational programming and individualization of instruction.
EEX 4243 Education of the Exceptional Adolescent and Adult (3) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011 or equivalent or DPR. Procedures for implementing educational programs for exceptional adolescents and adults. Topics include service delivery, curriculum, academic remediation, advocacy, utilization of ancillary services, alternative programs, and community resources.
EEX 4604 Behavior Management for Special Needs and at Risk Students (3) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011. Taken concurrently with EED 4941, ELD 4941, or EMR 4941. Techniques to prevent, analyze, and manage challenging and disruptive classroom behavior as well as teaching social skills.
EEX 4742 Narrative Perspectives on Exceptionality: Cultural and Ethical Issues 6A LW (3) ED EDS
DPR. This course is designed to use literature as a way to interpret the lives of individuals with disabilities, their families and those who play an educational role in their lives. The course also addresses cultural and ethnic diversity so as to better analyze the role of ethics and values in decisions made pertaining to individuals with disabilities.
EEX 4846 Clinical Teaching in Special Education (3) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011. Taken concurrently with EED 4941, ELD 4941, or EMR 4941 and EEX 4221. DPR. Effective teaching principles, instructional management procedures, and specialized teaching techniques for exceptional students.
EEX 4905 Independent Study: Exceptional Student Education (1-3) ED EDS
PR: DPR. S/U only. Specialized independent study determined by the student’s needs and interests.
EEX 4909 Directed Study: Exceptional Student Education (1-3) ED EDS
PR: Senior standing. DPR. To extend competency in teaching field.
EEX 4936 Senior Seminar in Exceptional Student Education (2) ED EDS
PR: Senior standing; CR: EEX 4940. Required concurrently with internship. Synthesis of teacher candidate’s courses in complete college program.
EEX 4940 Internship: Exceptional Student Education (1-10) ED EDS
CR: EEX 4936. S/U only. One full semester of internship in an accredited public or private school.
EEX 5705 Seminar in Preschool Handicapped (2) ED EDS
Fall and Spring Semesters. Intended to familiarize the education student with the wide range of needs and services of the preschool children with disabilities and their families and how they coordinate with educational services.
EEX 5752 Working With Families: A Pluralistic Perspective (3) ED EDS
PR: Introductory course in special education, GS. Spring Semester. The impact of the socio/cultural environment on the education of at-risk children and children with disabilities; family systems theory, principles of multi-cultural education, strategies for working effectively with families of school-age children, diverse cultures and family structures represented in school populations today.
EGI 5051 Nature and Needs of the Gifted (3) ED EDS
Fall This survey course examines the characteristics and educational needs of children and youth who are gifted, including those from special populations. Emphasis is on giftedness as defined historically, nationally and locally. The course also explores changing views of intelligence and talent development related to policy and practice in gifted education as well as the processes of identification and programming.
EGI 5325 Theory and Development of Creativity (3) ED EDS
Exploration of the concept of creativity, its factors, measurement, and application to education. Opportunities are given to work with children in a laboratory setting and to prepare materials to be used with small groups of children.
EGN 2031 History of Technology HP (3) EN EGB
Covers the evolution of technology and its influence on society from pre-historic man to the modern day. Topics include: seven technological ages of man, methods of producing power, materials, transportation, communication and calculation, and technology and society.
EGN 2082 History of Electrotechnology HP (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 2049 or EGN 2054. Highlights of the history of electrotechnology and its relation to the development of civilization. The contributions of Democritus, Franklin, Fourier, Maxwell, Edison, von Neumann, etc. in the context of the development of western civilization. The impact of communications, electronics, and computers in the twentieth century.
EGN 2210 Computer Tools for Engineers (3) EN EGB
PR: MAC 2281. Students will be introduced to computer based engineering tools and their application to the solution of engineering problems. The programming language, FORTRAN, will be the most emphasized tool, but coverage will also be given to other engineering/mathematical tools such as equation solving tools and spreadsheets.
EGN 3000 Foundations of Engineering (1) EN EGB
CR: EGN 3000L. Introduction to the profession of engineering. Exposure to the different disciplines of engineering incorporate examples of tools and techniques used in design and presentation.
EGN 3000L Foundations of Engineering Laboratory (2) EN EGB
CR: EGN 3000. Introduction to the profession of engineering. Exposure to the different disciplines of engineering incorporate examples of tools and techniques used in design and presentation. Laboratory excersises will include computer tools, engineering design, and presentation skills.
EGN 3311 Statics (3) EN EGB
PR: PHY 2048. Principles of statics, mechanical equilibrium, forces, moments, plane trusses. Lec.-pro.
EGN 3321 Dynamics (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 3311. Dynamics of discrete particles; kinematics and kinetics for rigid bodies. Lec.
EGN 3331 Mechanics of Materials (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 3311. Stress, strain, Hooke’s Law; torsion, beam, column analysis; combined stresses; inelastic effects, limit design. Lec.
EGN 3331L Mechanics of Materials Laboratory (1) EN EGB
PR: EGN 3311. CR: EGN 3331. Experiments in mechanics of deformable bodies. Lab.
EGN 3343 Thermodynamics I (3) EN EGB
PR: PHY 2049. Axiomatic introduction to thermodynamic concepts of energy, entropy, work and heat. Properties of ideal and real substances. Applications: power production and refrigeration, phase equilibria.
EGN 3353 Basic Fluid Mechanics (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 3311, CR: EGN 3321. ‘Fundamental and experimental concepts in ideal and viscous fluid theory; momentum and energy consideration, introduction to hydraulics, pipe flow. Lecture.
EGN 3365 Materials Engineering I (3) EN EGB
PR: CHM 2046, EGN 3311. Structure and property relationships in engineering materials, i.e., metal, ceramic and polymer systems. Environmental effects are also treated.
EGN 3373 Introduction to Electrical Systems I (3) EN EGB
PR: PHY 2049, PHY 2049L, CR: MAP 2302. A course in linear passive circuits. Physical principles and modes. Transient and steady-state analysis.
EGN 3374 Introduction to Electrical Systems II (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 3373. Continuation of EGN 3373.
EGN 3375 Introduction to Electrical Systems III (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 3373. Continuation of EGN 3373.
EGN 3433 System Dynamics (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 3321, EGN 4450, PHY 2049. Dynamic analysis of electrical, mechanical, hydraulic and thermal systems; LaPlace transforms; numerical method; use of computers in dynamic systems.
EGN 3443 Engineering Statistics I (3) EN EGB
PR: MAC 2282. An introduction to the basic concepts of statistical analysis with special emphasis on engineering applications.
EGN 3613C Engineering Economy I (3) EN EGB
A study in analyzing the economic limitations imposed on engineering activities using basic models which consider the time value of money.
EGN 4366 Materials Engineering II (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 3365. Applications and structure property relationships of commonly used engineering materials. Steel, nonferrous alloys and their welding, heat treatment and processing. Introduction to ceramic and polymeric materials.
EGN 4420 Numerical Methods of Analysis (2) EN EGB
PR: MAP 2302, EGN 2210. Computation methods of analysis for engineering problem solving by use of digital computers, matrix methods, differential equations, curve fitting, integral equations.
EGN 4450 Introduction to Linear Systems (2) EN EGB
PR: MAC 2282. Study and application of matrix algebra, differential equations and calculus of finite differences.
EGN 4831 Technology and Society MW (3) EN EGB
Non-technical survey of engineering activities: utilities, nuclear power, genetics weaponry, space, etc. Students conduct individual in-depth study of environmental/ethical problem.
EGN 4905 Independent Study (1-5) EN EGB
PR: CI. Specialized independent study determined by the students’ needs and interests.
EGN 4930 Special Topics in Engineering (1-3) EN EGB
PR: CI. New technical topics of interest to engineering students.
EGN 5421 Engineering Applications for Vector Analysis (3) EN EGB
Vector methods in electromagnetism and fluid mechanics. Vector operators, line and flux integrals, potential and transport theorems, applications.
EGN 5422 Engineering Applications of Partial Differential Equations (3) EN EGB
Power series solutions for ordinary differential equations, Sturm-Liouville theory, special functions. Vector methods with generalized coordinates. Separation of variables for partial differential equations. Green’s functions. Calculus of variations. Numerical methods.
EGN 5423 Natural Networks and Mathematical Communication (3) EN EGB
Finite fields and coding applications. Probabilities of error detection and correction. Introduction to neural networks. Advanced matrix algorithms: LU and QR factorizations, least-squares, pseudoinverses.
EGN 5424 Engineering Applications of Complex Analysis (3) EN EGB
Analytic functions, conformal mapping, residue theory, Laurent series, transforms. Applications to various problems in engineering and physics.
EGN 5425 Engineering Applications of Advanced Matrix Computations (3) EN EGB
Survey of theory and software for matrix computations: factorization methods, least squares and pseudoinverses, eigenvector algorithms. Special matrices and representations for control system and finite element applications.
EGS 1113 Introduction to Design Graphics (3) EN EGB
The student learns how to graphically represent technical designs using sketches, traditional drawing tools, and AutoCAD. The lab features twenty Pentium II computers running AutoCad R14.
EIA 3192 Technology Education and Society (4) ED EDV
Introduction to programs, facilities and opportunities in teaching Technology Education. Includes historical, current and futuristic implications of technology in society.
EIA 4360 Special Teaching Methods: Technology Education (3) ED EDV
Equips Technology Education instructors with professional competencies for classroom and laboratory settings. Includes the selection of appropriate methods, planning, and delivery of instruction, along with supervision of students in laboratory areas.
EIN 4312C Work Analysis (3) EN EGS
PR: EGN 3613C, EGN 3443; CR: AGC 3074. Operation analysis and workspace design, work measurement, standard data, ergonomics, and labor costing.
EIN 4313C Human Factors (3) EN EGS
Design of man-machine systems, by taking into consideration both human and machine capabilities and limitations.
EIN 4333 Production Control (3) EN EGS
PR: ESI 4312C. Planning and control of production systems. Includes: forecasting and inventory control models, scheduling and sequencing, MRP, CPM/PERT, and resource requirements.
EIN 4364C Facilities Design I (3) EN EGS
PR: EIN 4312C, EIN 4411. Design and modification of industrial production and material handling facilities. Basic analysis techniques, use of computer programs, automated warehousing.
EIN 4365 Facilities Design II MW (3) EN EGS
PR: EIN 4364. CAD/CIEM, complete design of a plant facility. Course to use computers and software geared toward plant design and operation. A team of students is to be responsible for the complete project.
EIN 4411 Manufacturing Processes (3) EN EGS
PR: EGN 3365. The study of basic manufacturing processes and precision assembly. CAD/CAM including NC programming.
EIN 4601L Automation and Robotics (3) EN EGS
PR: EIN 4411. Introduction to the practices and concepts of automation as applied to material handling, inventory storage, material transfer, industrial processes and quality control.
EIN 4933 Special Topics in Industrial Engineering (1-6) EN EGS
Special topics related to economic analysis, optimization, human factors, manufacturing and automation aspect of industrial systems. Repeatable up to 5 credit hours.
EIN 5245 Work Physiology and Biomechanics (3) EN EGS
PR: CC, majors only. Human physiological limitations encountered in design, analysis and evaluation of man-machine systems.
EIN 5322 Principles of Engineering Management (3) EN EGS
Introduction to the fundamentals of planning, organizing and leadership as needed by engineers, scientists, and other professionals considering managerial positions.
EIN 5357 Engineering Value Analysis (3) EN EGS
PR: EIN 5219 or equiv., majors only Statistical models for analyzing engineering alternatives from an economic viewpoint. The use of advanced engineering economy concepts in solving industrial problems.
EIV 4210 Program Management: Industrial-Technical Education (4) ED EDV
Planning, organizing, motivating and controlling of the learning environment in Industrial-Technical Education classroom and laboratories. Program standards for OSHA, program review, record keeping, and budgeting will be examined.
EIV 4360 Special Teaching Methods: Industrial-Technical Education (4) ED EDV
PR: EVT 4635 or CI.
EIV 4360 Special Teaching Methods: Industrial-Technical Education (4) ED EDV
Instructional techniques in industrial-technical education. Vocational Industrial Clubs of America activities may be included.
EIV 5315 Program Management: Diversified Cooperative Training (3) ED EDV
Organization, coordination, and budgeting of adult, cooperative, and special programs.
ELD 4011 Introduction to Specific Learning Disabilities (3) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011 or DPR. Characteristics, needs and abilities of children with SLD. Emphasis is on theories, issues, trends, and philosophy of problems for such children.
ELD 4905 Independent Study: Specific Learning Disabilities (1-3) ED EDS
PR: DPR. S/U only. Specialized independent study determined by student’s needs and interests.
ELD 4909 Directed Study: Specific Learning Disabilities (1-3) ED EDS
PR: Senior standing. To extend competency in teaching field.
ELD 4941 Undergraduate Supervised Practicum in SLD (1-6) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011. S/U only. DPR. Supervised field experiences in assessment, behavior management and clinical teaching with classes for children who have specific learning disabilities.
ELR 3301L Laboratory 1 (1) EN EGE
PR: EGN 3373.
ELR 3302L Laboratory 2 (1) EN EGE
PR: ELR 3301L and EEL 3302, CR: EEL 4305.
ELR 4306L Laboratory 4 (1) EN EGE
PR: ELR 3301L CR: EEL 4411.
EMA 4324 Corrosion of Engineering Materials I (3) EN EGX
PR: EGN 3365L. Principles of electrochemical corrosion and the representation of corrosion processes by polarization diagrams. Origin and prevention of the localized forms of corrosion and approaches to corrosion control.
EMA 5326 Corrosion Control (3) EN EGX
Provide understanding of corrosion fundamentals. Introduce design for corrosion detection, protection, and control. Acquire research project experience.
EME 2040 Introduction to Computers in Education (3) ED EDK
Introduction to microcomputer technology and its function in the classroom to augment the teaching and learning processes. Topics include the critical evaluation of educational software; conceptualizing uses of computers in the classroom in terms of computer-directed instruction, computer-enhanced instruction, and computer-managed instruction; understanding hardware; using and applying commercial courseware, general applications software, word processors, database managers, etc., and disk operating systems.
EME 5403 Microcomputers in Education (3) ED EDK
A survey course designed to introduce practicing teachers to microcomputer technology and its function in the classroom to augment the teaching and learning processes. Objectives include the use and evaluation of educational software, classroom use of computers, instructional computing research, generic applications software (word processors, database managers, etc.), programming, disk operating systems, and microcomputer hardware.
EML 3041 Computational Methods (3) EN EGR
PR: EGN 2210, EGN 4450. Techniques to solve engineering problems using numerical methods and digital computers. Topics include roots of equations, simultaneous linear equations, numerical integration and differentiation, and curve fitting.
EML 3262 Kinematics and Dynamics of Machinery (3) EN EGR
PR: MAC 2282, PHY 2048, EGN 3321. Kinematics of machines and mechanisms; position, velocity, and acceleration analysis of mechanisms; cams; gear trains; inertia forces in mechanisms; flywheels; balancing of rotating masses.
EML 3303 Mechanical Engineering Lab I (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 3500, EML 3701, EML 3041. Engineering laboratory measurements. Use of the library and the writing of technical reports. Experiments in the measurement of temperature, pressure, fluid flow, psychrometrics, concentration, viscosity. Mass-energy balances of simple systems.
EML 3500 Machine Analysis and Design I (3) EN EGR
PR: EGN 3311, EGN 3365. Stress and deflection analysis of machine parts, variable loads, endurance limits, fasteners, bearings, power transmission, code consideration of pressure and vacuum vessels, elements of design.
EML 3701 Fluid Systems (3) EN EGR
PR: EGN 3343 Principles of fluid flow; piping and duct systems; fluid machinery; metering of compressible and incompressible flow; boundary layer theory; dimensional analysis; introduction to aerodynamics.
EML 4031 Visual Basic for Engineers and Scientists (3) EN EGR
PR: EGN 2210. Introduces students to the powerful graphical interface language of Visual Basic. Illustrates the use of the language in engineering and science applications.
EML 4106C Thermal Systems and Economics (3) EN EGR
PR: EGN 3343. Power and refrigeration cycles; fuels and combustion; internal combustion engine cycles; co-generation; nuclear energy; methods of economic analysis.
EML 4142C Heat Transfer I (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 3701, EML 3041. Conduction, convection and radiant heat transfer; thermal properties of materials; role of fluid flow in convective heat transfer; design and selection of heat exchangers.
EML 4220C Vibrations (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 3433 and EML 3262. Natural frequency, damping and resonance in single-degree-of-freedom systems. Vibration isolation and absorption. Lagrange’s equations. Multi-degree of freedom systems. Introduction to vibration of continuous systems and predictive maintenance.
EML 4302 Mechanical Engineering Laboratory II (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 3303, EML 4142C. Continuation of EML 3303 with emphasis on material and energy balances, stress analysis and vibrations. Lec.-lab. The Team-Project-Time Approach.
EML 4312 Mechanical Controls (3) EN EGR
PR: EGN 3433, EML 3041. Introduces the concept of dynamic systems. Modeling of dynamic systems. Laplace Transforms. Transfer Functions. Block Diagrams. Characteristic equation. Time response of first and second order systems. Stability of dynamic systems. Routh stability criterion. Frequency response of dynamic systems. Polar plots and Bode plots. Introduction to state space model.
EML 4414 Heat Power Engineering (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 4106C. The study of large, thermo-electric power conversion for utility systems. Combustion of hydrocarbon fuels, furnace, steam generator and auxiliary equipment design. Topics include control of air emissions, design and performance of combined cycle facilities.
EML 4419C Propulsion I (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 3701, EML 3500 or CI. Introduction to the design of propulsion systems. Basic analysis of internal combustion, jet and rocket engines. Application to ground and air transportation. Advanced propulsion concepts. Special topics for class discussion.
EML 4501 Machine Design (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 3500, EML 3262. Continuation of EML 3500. Antifriction bearings, journal bearings, power transmission, shafting.
EML 4551 Capstone Design MW (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 4501. Comprehensive design or feasibility project requiring application of previously acquired engineering knowledge; use of ANSYS and CAD.
EML 4552 Senior Mechanical Design (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 4551 or CC. Comprehensive design or feasibility study project. In some cases may be a continuation of EML 4551.
EML 4562 Introduction to Composite Materials (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 3500 and EGN 4450. The course introduces manufacturing types and applications of advanced composites. Students study micromechanical and macromechanical behavior of a lamina and analyze and design a laminated structure made of advanced composite materials.
EML 4601 Air Conditioning Design (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 4106, EML 3701. Application of thermodynamics, heat transfer, and fluid flow to sizing of HVAC systems. Heating and cooling calculations, air requirements, equipment sizing. Energy Code requirements. Design project.
EML 4905 Independent Study (1-4) EN EGR
PR: CI. Specialized independent study determined by the student’s needs and interests.
EML 4930 Special Topics in Mechanical Engineering (1-4) EN EGR
PR: CC.
EML 5245 Tribology (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 4501 Introduction to friction, lubrication and wear. Contact of real surfaces, mechanics of friction, surface failures, boundary lubrication fluid properties, thin film lubrication, thick film lubrication, bearing and lubricant selection.
EML 5325 Mechanical Manufacturing Processes (3) EN EGR
PR: CI. Description of mechanical material cutting, forming and fabrication methods, as used in modern industrial manufacturing processes.
EML 5422 Internal Combustion Engines (3) EN EGR
PR: EML 4106C or CI. This course is for the application of thermodynamics, chemistry, dynamics of machinery, electronics and fluid mechanics. Topics covered are: introduction of engines, fuels and combustion, numerical modeling, ignition, fuel systems, balance of reciprocating mechanisms and emission control of exhaust pollutants.
EML 5930 Special Topics III (1-4) EN EGR
PR: CC.
EML 5931 Special Topics IV (1-4) EN EGR
PR: CC.
EMR 4011 Introduction to Mental Retardation (3) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011. DPR. Introduction to the classification, diagnosis, characteristics, and treatment of children with mental retardation.
EMR 4230 Educating the Severely/Profoundly Handicapped (3) ED EDS
PR: EMR 3011 or DPR. Emphasis on educational methods and materials for teaching children with severe/profound handicaps. Practicum/field experience linkage.
EMR 4909 Directed Study: Mental Retardation (1-3) ED EDS
PR: Senior standing. Offered only as a scheduled class. To extend competency in teaching field.
EMR 4941 Undergraduate Supervised Practicum in Mental Retardation (1-6) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011. S/U only. DPR. Supervised field experiences in assessment, behavior management, and clinical teaching with children who have mental retardation.
ENC 1101 Freshman English I 6A EC (3) AS ENG
ENC 1101 and ENC 1102 must be taken in numerical sequence. Instruction and practice in the skills of writing and reading.
ENC 1102 Freshman English II 6A EC (3) AS ENG
PR: ENC 1101. Instruction and practice in the skills of writing and reading.
ENC 1121 Freshman English: Honors 6A EC (3) AS ENG
Reserved for students in the University’s Honors Program. Honors Section of ENC 1101.
ENC 1122 Freshman English II: Honors 6A EC (3) AS ENG
PR: ENC 1121. Reserved for students in the University’s Honors Program. Honors Section of ENC 1102.
ENC 2210 Technical Writing 6A (3) AS ENG
PR: ENC 1101 and ENC 1102 or ENC 1121 and ENC 1122. Effective presentation of technical and semi-technical information.
ENC 3211 Communication for Engineers (3) AS ENG
Focuses on writing concerns of engineers. Deals with the content, organization, format, and style of specific types of engineering documents. Provides opportunity to improve oral presentations.
ENC 3213 Professional Writing 6A (3) AS ENG
PR: ENC 1101 and ENC 1102 or ENC 1121 and ENC 1122. Introduction to the techniques and types of professional writing, including correspondence and reports most often found in business, technical, and scientific communities.
ENC 3310 Expository Writing 6A (3) AS ENG
PR: ENC 1101 and ENC 1102 or ENC 1121 and ENC 1122. A course teaching the techniques for writing effective prose, excluding fiction, in which student essays are extensively criticized, edited, and discussed in individual sessions with the instructor.
ENC 4260 Advanced Technical Writing (3) AS ENG
PR: ENC 2210, or ENC 3310, or CI. Advanced Technical Writing is a course designed to develop writing skills of a high order: technical exposition; technical narration, description, and argumentation; graphics; proposals; progress reports; physical research reports; and feasibility reports.
ENC 4311 Advanced Composition (3) AS ENG
PR: ENC 3310 or CI. Instruction and practice in writing effective, lucid, and compelling prose, with special emphasis on style, logical argumentation, and critical thinking.
ENC 4931 Selected Topics in Professional and Technical Writing (3) AS ENG
PR: ENC 3213, ENC 2210, or ENC 3310 or CI. Focus of the course will be determined by student demand and instructor interest. Topics to be covered may include legal writing, the conventions of business writing, and writing for the social sciences.
ENG 4013 Literary Criticism (3) AS ENG
A study of the works of major literary critics from Aristotle to the present, with emphasis on their meaning, their implied world view, and their significance for our own time and literature.
ENG 4060 History of the English Language (3) AS ENG
The evolution of language from Anglo-Saxon through Middle English to Modern English. Development of the English lexicon. Changes in the pronunciation, syntactic, and semantic systems; discussion of the forms which influenced them.
ENG 4906 Individual Research (1-4) AS ENG
Special permission of chairperson required. Directed study in special projects.
ENG 4907 Directed Reading (3) AS ENG
Readings in special topics.
ENL 3015 British Literature to 1616 (3) AS ENG
A survey of representative prose, poetry, and drama from its beginnings through the Renaissance, including such poems and figures as Beowulf, Chaucer, Malory, More, Hooker, Skelton, Wyatt, Sidney, Spenser, Shakespeare, Donne, and Jonson.
ENL 3230 British Literature 1616-1780 (3) AS ENG
A survey of 17th Century and Neoclassical Literature, including such figures as Donne, Herbert, Crashaw, Vaughan, Marvell, Milton, Pope, Swift, Johnson, Boswell, and Goldsmith.
ENL 3251 British Literature 1780-1900 (3) AS ENG
The poetry and poetics of the Romantic figures, with attention to the continuing importance of romantic thinking in contemporary affairs and letters; a survey of representative figures of the Victorian and Edwardian periods, including poetry, prose, and drama.
ENL 3273 British Literature 1900-1945 (3) AS ENG
Survey of poetry, drama, and fiction of such writers as Eliot, Yeats, Thomas, Conrad, Shaw, Joyce, Lawrence, Huxley, Woolf, Forster, Waugh, Owen, Auden, O’Casey, and others.
ENL 3323 Shakepeare from an Historical Perspective HP (3) AS ENG
Examines the plays of Shakespeare from Romeo and Juliet to Othello as manifestations of the social, political, and intellectual forces of the time. Lectures will be available on audio tapes.
ENL 3331 Early Shakespeare (3) AS ENG
A study of from five to eight of Shakespeare’s comedies, histories, and early tragedies, ending with Hamlet. Special attention to developing the student’s ability to read and interpret the text.
ENL 3332 Late Shakespeare (3) AS ENG
A study of from five to eight of Shakespeare’s problem plays, major tragedies, and late romances. Special attention to developing the student’s ability to read and interpret the text.
ENL 4122 British Novel Through Hardy (3) AS ENG
A study of early and later British novels such as Fielding, Smollett, Sterne, Austen, Scott, Dickens, Eliot, and Hardy, among others.
ENL 4132 British Novel: Conrad to the Present (3) AS ENG
A critical study of British fiction from 1900 to the present, with emphasis on such writers as Conrad, Lawrence, Joyce, Woolf, Huxley, Orwell, Burgess, Murdoch, Golding, and others.
ENL 4171 History of British Drama to 1912 (3) AS ENG
A study of the history of British Drama from its liturgical origins to the beginning of the twentieth century, exclusive of Shakespeare. Included are the mystery and morality plays, and representative works by Marlowe, Jonson, Middleton, Dryden, Congreve, Sheridan, and Wilde, and others.
ENL 4303 Selected Authors (3) AS ENG
The study of two or three major figures in British Literature. The course may include such writers as Fielding and Austen, Keats and Yeats, Joyce and Woolf. Specific topics will vary. May be taken twice for credit with different topics.
ENL 4311 Chaucer (3) AS ENG
An intensive study of The Canterbury Tales and major critical concerns.
ENL 4338 Advanced Studies in Shakespeare (3) AS ENG
PR: ENL 3331 or ENL 3332, or CI. Intensive study of selected plays of Shakespeare, with special attention to significant critical issues and to the Elizabethan and Jacobean cultural setting.
ENL 4341 Milton (3) AS ENG
Study of the poetry and major prose of John Milton, with special emphasis on Paradise Lost.
ENS 1483 English for Foreign Students I (3) AS MLL
A special course for students learning English as a second language. Intensive study and drill in American English pronunciation and listening comprehension.
ENS 1484 English for Foreign Students II (3) AS MLL
PR: ENS 1483 or CI. A continuation of ENS 1483. Emphasis on reading and composition.
ENV 3001 Environmental Engineering (3) EN EGX
CR: ENG 3353. An introduction to various aspects of environmental problems faced by today’s society. Topics covered are: air pollution, water pollution, noise pollution, solid waste management, ionizing radiation, disease transmission, and food protection.
ENV 4004L Environmental Engineering Laboratory (1) EN EGX
PR: ENV 4400 Laboratory experience in the measuring of environmental parameters.
ENV 4101 Air Pollution Control (3) EN EGX
PR: EGN 3353. Behavior and effects of atmospheric contaminants and the principles of making measurements in the air environment. Basic concepts of meteorology and control technology are discussed. Regulatory aspects and air pollution standards are covered.
ENV 4351 Solid Waste Engineering (2) EN EGX
Introduction to the principles of integrated municipal solid waste management; waste minimization, recycle and disposal options. Design of landfill disposal systems.
ENV 4400 Chemical Aspects of Environmental Engineering (3) EN EGX
PR: One year general chemistry. Course is restricted to students pursuing the environmental engineering option in Civil Engineering and Chemical Engineering. Environmental quality and treatment parameters; sampling and sample preservation techniques; selected measurement techniques; interpretation and analysis of data; emphasis on water chemistry principles.
ENV 4417 Water Quality and Treatment (3) EN EGX
PR: EGN 3353 An introduction to municipal water supply and waste water treatment. Topics include water requirements and waste volumes, water quality, physical and chemical treatment processes, and advanced wastewater treatment processes.
ENV 4432 Water Systems Design (2) EN EGX
PR: EGN 3353. A design oriented course which utilizes the theory obtained in the Unit Operations course to design both industrial and domestic water treatment and water transport systems. It emphasizes the design procedures normally used in engineering practice.
ENV 4502 Environmental Unit Operations (3) EN EGX
PR: ENV 4400, EGN 3353. CR: ENV 3001. The theory and the design of unit operations normally used in the practice of environmental engineering, such as agitation and mixing of liquids, filtration, leaching, gas absorption, sedimentation and clarification, drying, and evaporation.
ENV 4503 Environmental Unit Processes (3) EN EGX
PR: ECH 3023, EGN 3353, ENV 3001. The theory and design of unit processes normally used in environmental engineering such as coagulation of colloidal materials, water stabilization, water softening and neutralization, ion exchange, adsorption and oxidation processes for removal of iron and magnesium.
ENV 4891 Capstone Environmental Design MW (3) EN EGX
PR: ENV 3001, ENV 4004, ENV 4417, ENV 4552. A capstone environmental design experience for seniors in Civil and Environmental Engineering. A design oriented course to design both industrial and domestic water treatment and water transport systems and wastewater and collection systems. The course emphasizes the design procedure normally used in engineering practice.
ENV 5105 Air Resource Management (3) EN EGX
PR: CI. Air pollution source impacts on ambient air quality, modeling, regulatory approaches, source strategic controls and surveillance.
ENV 5345 Solid And Hazardous Waste Control (3) EN EGX
PR: CI Introduction to solid and hazardous waste management; regulatory concepts, waste types and quantities, and waste collection. Disposal techniques, facility siting, volume reduction, landfill design, incineration and heat recovery, contaminant generation and transport, and remedial action.
ENV 5614 Environmental Risk Analysis (3) EN EGX
PR: CI Study of comprehensive application of risk analysis techniques for environmental control and protection purposes.
ENY 3004 Introduction to Entomology (3) AS BIO
PR: BSC 2010 and BSC 2011. An introduction to general aspects of insect morphology, development, and classification. The identification of local forms will be emphasized. Lec.-lab.
ENY 5505 Aquatic Entomology (3) AS BIO
PR: ENY 3004 or CI. Taxonomy, development, and ecology of aquatic insects with emphasis on local forms. Lec.-lab.
EPH 5051 Advanced Theories in Motor and Physical Disabilities (3) ED EDS
PR: EEX 4011 or DPR. Biological and functional aspects of motor and physical health disabilities, including dysfunctions in central nervous system covering motor, sensory, language and psychological disorders.
EPH 5321 Educational Strategies for Physically and Multihandicapped Students (3) ED EDS
PR: EPH 5051. Educational management of students with cerebral palsy, motor disabilities and multihandicapped conditions including rehabilitation and other community services.
ESI 4161C Computers in Industrial Engineering (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 2210. Use of micro and mini computer systems for industrial engineering applications. Review of available software packages. Use of computers for CAD/CAM System.
ESI 4221 Industrial Statistics and Quality Control (3) EN EGS
PR: EGN 3443, EIN 4411. Application of statistical techniques to the control of industrial processes. Control charts, acceptance sampling, design of experiments, analysis of variance and regression.
ESI 4244 Design Of Experiments (3) EN EGS
PR: EGN 3443. Activity forecasting models and control. Design and use of inventory control models, both designs applicable to engineering analyses. Analysis of variance and regression.
ESI 4312 Deterministic O. R. (3) EN EGS
PR: EGN 4450. An introduction to operations research techniques with particular emphasis on deterministic models. Linear programming, dynamic programming, goal programming, integer programming, and PERT/CPM networks are considered.
ESI 4313 Probabilistic O. R. (3) EN EGB
PR: EGN 3443. Probabilistic models in Operations Research. Discrete and continuous time processes, queuing models, inventory models, simulation models, Markovian decision process and decision analysis.
ESI 4523 Industrial Systems Simulation (3) EN EGS
PR: ESI 4313. A study of the development and analysis of computer simulation models: Monte Carlo, time-slice, and next-event. Introduction to special purpose simulation languages.
ESI 4905 Independent Study (1-5) EN EGS
PR: CI. S/U only. Specialized independent study determined by the student’s needs and interests.
ESI 4911 Senior Project (2) EN EGS
PR: EIN 4364, CR: EIN 4333, ESI 4523. Analysis and design of systems in a directed project format. Individual or group work consisting of project proposal, project activities, and final report. Student projects are directed by faculty, with chairman’s approval.
ESI 5219 Statistical Methods For Engineering Managers (3) EN EGS
Not open to students who have had EGN 3443. Study of statistical methods applied to engineering management problems involving estimation and prediction under conditions of uncertainty.
ESI 5236 Reliability Engineering (3) EN EGS
PR: ESI 5219 or equiv., majors only PR: EGN 3443 or equivalent. Fundamental concepts of reliability. Estimation of reliability of systems and components. Measures of availability, maintainability and reliability.
ESI 5306 Operations Research For Engineering Management (3) EN EGS
Not open to students who have had ESI 4315. ESI 5219 or equiv., majors only Linear programming, non-linear programming, queuing, inventory, network analysis.
ESI 5470 Manufacturing Systems Analysis (3) EN EGS
PR: CC, majors only The study of systems of manufacturing entities such as machine tools, robots, and materials handlers. Emphasis is on mathematical description of integrated systems and system optimization.
ESI 5522 Computer Simulation (3) EN EGS
PR: ESI 4521 or equiv., majors only Design of discrete and continuous simulation models. Model validation and verification. Statistical analysis of simulation model output.
ETG 4931 Special Topics in Technology I (1-5) EN ESB
PR: CC. No credit for Engineering Majors
ETG 4932 Special Topics in Technology II (1-5) EN ESB
PR: CC. No credit for Engineering Majors
ETI 4666 Principles of Industrial Operations II (3) EN ESB
PR: CC. No credit for Engineering Majors Application of techniques developed to the operation of an industrial firm through special projects.
EUH 2011 Ancient History I HP (3) AS HTY
An introductory survey of ancient history. EUH 2011 treats the ancient Near East and Greece from the origins of civilization to the full development of the Hellenistic kingdoms prior to conflict with Rome.
EUH 2012 Ancient History II HP (3) AS HTY
An introductory survey of ancient history. EUH 2012 deals with Rome through the Regal, Republican, and Imperial periods, from the beginnings of civilization in Italy to the division of the Roman Empire, A.D. 395.
EUH 2021 Medieval History I HP (3) AS HTY
A thematic survey of the Middle Ages. EUH 2021 deals with the nascent, Christian civilization of European, circa 300-1050 A.D.
EUH 2022 Medieval History II HP (3) AS HTY
A thematic survey of the Middle Ages. EUH 2022 treats the mature medieval civilization of Europe, circa 1050-1500.
EUH 2030 Modern European History I HP (3) AS HTY
A thematic survey of Europe in the modern age. EUH 2030 treats the period from the Renaissance to the French Revolution.
EUH 2031 Modern European History II HP (3) AS HTY
A thematic survey of Europe in the modern age. EUH 2031, from the French Revolution to the present.
EUH 3142 Renaissance and Reformation (4) AS HTY
A history of Europe from the Renaissance to the Thirty Years’ War (1400-1618). The cultural, social, and economic characteristics will provide the framework for artistic, philosophical, religious, and political developments.
EUH 3181 Medieval Culture (4) AS HTY
A survey of thought, culture, and art in the Middle Ages. Medieval attitudes as manifested in literature, art, philosophy, education, and religion; with emphasis upon Medieval man’s changing perception of himself and his world.
EUH 3185 Viking History (4) AS HTY
The role of the Vikings in the shaping of Western history. A comprehensive survey of their institutions, outlook and daily life. Viking expansion into Europe and North America.
EUH 3188 Medieval Society (4) AS HTY
A study of the daily life and attitudes of the medieval nobleman, peasant, townsmen, and the agrarian-urban economy and society which affected their lives.
EUH 3189 Medieval Politics (4) AS HTY
An inquiry into the nature, distribution, and use of political power during the Middle Ages, in such institutions as feudalism, monarchy, cities, and the church.
EUH 3202 History of 17th and 18th Century Europe (4) AS HTY
A history of Europe from the beginning of the Thirty Years’ War to the outbreak of the French Revolution. Political and intellectual developments will be assessed in the light of society and the economy.
EUH 3205 History of Nineteenth Century Europe (4) AS HTY
A comparative study of economic, political, social, and intellectual developments in nineteenth century Europe.
EUH 3206 History of Twentieth Century Europe (4) AS HTY
A comparative study of economic, political, social, and intellectual developments in twentieth century Europe.
EUH 3401 Classical Greece (4) AS HTY
A study of ancient Greece focusing on the brilliant period following the Persian Wars, but embracing as well the formative Bronze, Middle and Archaic ages, and the decline culminating in the conquest of Greece by Philip II of Macedon in 338 B.C.
EUH 3402 Age of Alexander (4) AS HTY
A study focusing on the career of Alexander the Great and on the Greek and Macedonian conquest of Imperial Persia. Also treated are the great hellenistic kingdoms prior to Rome’s conquest of the eastern Mediterranean.
EUH 3412 Roman Republic (4) AS HTY
A study of the Roman Republic from 509 B.C. to the assassination of Julius Caesar in 44 B. C., with a prelude treating Rome’s early development under royal rule. Political growth and change provide the framework for the treatment.
EUH 3413 Roman Empire (4) AS HTY
A study of Imperial Roman from the assassination of Julius Caesar in 44 B.C. to the death of the emperor Constantine in A.D. 337. Emphasized is Rome’s government of a vast Mediterranean empire including much of the near East and Europe.
EUH 3461 German History to 1870 (4) AS HTY
A political, social, and cultural approach to the history of the Germanys from 1500 through 1870, with emphasis on the Protestant Reformation, the rise of Brandenburg-Prussian, and the unification under Bismarck.
EUH 3462 German History 1870 to the Present (4) AS HTY
A political, social, and cultural approach to the history of the German Empire from 1870 through the 1970’s. The nation’s two attempts to try for world power status are highlighted, as well as the Weimar Republic, prototype of the embattled democracy.
EUH 3501 British History to 1688 (4) AS HTY
A study of major developments in British history from the 15th century to 1688.
EUH 3502 British History 1688 to Present (4) AS HTY
A study of the major themes of British history since the Glorious Revolution, including social, political, and economic developments leading to the creation of the modern demographic welfare state.
EUH 3574 History of Imperial Russia, 1689-1917 (4) AS HTY
A survey of social, political, economic, and cultural development in the Russian Empire from Peter the Great to Nicholas II. Topics include the expansion and modernization of the Empire, the culture of the Imperial court, peasant rebellions, social and legal reforms, the role of the West, and the collapse of the Romanov dynasty.
EUH 3576 History of the Soviet Union, 1917-1991 (4) AS HTY
A study of Soviet society under communism from the Revolution to the collapse of the USSR. Topics include the origins and development of revolutionary socialism, the Bolshevik seizure of power, Stalinism and the Great Terror, popular dissent and resistance, the treatment and experience of ethnic minorities, Gorbachev and the dissolution of the Soviet Union.
EUS 3000 Europe SS (3) AS INT
Area study courses are multi-disciplinary in nature and deal with one or more countries of a region. Each course combines some measure of political, economic, historical, religious, geographic, anthropological, and sociological analysis in dealing with salient features and current problems.
EUS 3022 Russia SS HP AF (3) AS INT
Area study courses are multi-disciplinary in nature and deal with one or more countries of a region. Each course combines some measure of political, economic, historical, religious, geographic, anthropological, and sociological analysis in dealing with salient features and current problems.
EVR 2001 Introduction to Environmental Science (3) AS ESP
CR: EVR 2001L. An introductory lecture course linking the human and physical/biological world. The course will develop an understanding of population and resource interactions.
EVR 2001L Environmental Science Lab (1) AS ESP
CR: EVR 2001. A laboratory course linking the human and physical/biological world. The lab will develop an understanding of population and resource interactions and complement the lecture course. Field trips.
EVR 2861 Introduction to Environmental Policy (3) AS ESP
An introduction to environmental policy using class lectures, student projects, and independent readings. Emphasis will be placed on understanding basic policy mechanisms and major policy actions relating to environmental issues at the local, national and international level.
EVR 4027 Wetland Environments MW (3) AS ESP
PR: PCB 3043 or CI. Study of the general properties and ecology of wetlands, examination of the distribution and functions of wetlands, and consideration of wetland conservation and policies.
EVR 4900 Directed Readings (1-6) AS ESP
To provide advanced students with interdisciplinary research experience in areas of specific interest.
EVR 4905 Independent Study (1-6) AS ESP
To provide advanced students with the opportunity for independent study in areas of specific interest.
EVR 4910 Environmental Science and Policy Project (3) AS ESP
Open to senior majors only. S/U only. Environmental science project consisting of research in a field related to environmental science/environmental policy. Supervised by a faculty member.
EVR 4921 Environmental Science and Policy Seminar (1) AS ESP
Restricted to senior majors. S/U only. A topical reading and discussion seminar focusing on the interdisciplinary nature of environmental science and environmental policy.
EVR 4930 Selected Topics (1-4) AS ESP
Each topic is a course under the direction of a faculty member with the content depending on the interests of the students and faculty involved. All areas of Environmental Science, Policy, Ethics and Law included.
EVR 4940 Environmental Science Internship (3) AS ESP
Open to senior majors only. S/U only. The purpose of this course is to promote the student’s understanding and application of environmental science and policy within a practical organizational context. Contract and report required.
EVT 4065 History and Principles of Vocational Education (4) ED EDV
An overview of current policies and principles in vocational education including their historical, sociological, and philosophical bases. Open to majors and non-majors.
EVT 4084C Professional Development in Industrial Technical Education (1-3) ED EDV
Designed for the ITE teacher in forming plans of professional development. Competencies include the development of a personal education philosophy; attributes in creating harmonious school community relationships; and desirable staff and teacher associations.
EVT 4165 Curriculum Construction: Industrial-Technical Education (4) ED EDV
Design, development, implementation and evaluation of effective curricular materials in industrial, technical and health related occupations; includes individualized and self-paced materials. Open to majors and non-majors.
EVT 4263 Organization And Administration Of Student Vocational Organizations (1-4) ED EDV
Includes the organization and administration of the local student vocational organization in industrial, health occupations, business and distributive education.
EVT 4365 Basic Teaching Methods in Vocational Education (4) ED EDV
Examines the role of the vocational instructor in the teaching learning process; looks at factors that promote and inhibit learning. Reviews a wide variety of instructional approaches, techniques and methods; includes selection of techniques for situations.
EVT 4367 Assessing Student Skill in Industrial Technical Education (4) ED EDV
Techniques for assessing student’s mastery of skills in industrial/technical education. Focuses on specific competencies including developing and administering performance tests, monitoring student process, and others. Open to majors and non-majors.
EVT 4562 Vocational Education for Special Needs Students (4) ED EDV
Focuses on modifying the vocational education curriculum, laboratory, shop, student outcomes, learning activities, tests, media, etc. to accommodate the unique learning needs of minority, handicapped, disadvantaged, non-traditional and other special needs students.
EVT 4651 Equity in Schools and the Workplace 6A MW (3) ED EDV
Issues related to gender equity in schools and the workplace. Includes legal, ethical, psychological, sociological, and economic factors; males and females in traditional and non-traditional occupations.
EVT 4905 Independent Study: Industrial-Technical Education (1-4) ED EDV
S/U only. Specialized independent study determined by the student’s needs and interests.
EVT 4909 Directed Study: Industrial-Technical Education (1-3) ED EDV
To extend competency in teaching field.
EVT 4936 Senior Seminar in Industrial-Technical Education (2) ED EDV
PR: Senior standing; CR: EVT 4940. Synthesis of teacher candidate’s courses in complete college program.
EVT 4940 Internship: Industrial-Technical Education (1-12) ED EDV
CR: EVT 4936. S/U only. One full semester of internship in a public or private school. In special programs where the intern experience is distributed over two or more semesters, students will be registered for credit which accumulates from 9-12 semester hours.
EVT 4946 Supervised Field Experience: Industrial-Technical Education (1-6) ED EDV
S/U only. Planned supervised functions in the area of specialization and coordinated with selected schools, government, offices, social agencies, businesses and industries on site.
EVT 5369 Preparation and Development for Teaching (4) ED EDV
The development of selected instructional materials, use of new educational media, performance evaluation instruments, and counseling techniques.
EVT 5664 School Community Development (4) ED EDV
Identifying, assessing, and analyzing, individual, institutional and community needs for the purpose of cooperative program planning, community involvement, and public support.
EXP 4104 Sensory Processes (3) AS PSY
PR: PSY 3213 with a grade of C or better or CI. Available to both majors and non-majors. Psychophysical and neurophysiological data and theory underlying sensory processes. Visual, auditory, chemical, and somatosensory systems, with particular emphasis on visual processes.
EXP 4204C Perception (3) AS PSY
PR: PSY 3213 with a grade of C or better or CI. Topics include sensory and physiological bases of perception and how people process relevant information in their environments.
EXP 4304 Motivation (3) AS PSY
PR: PSY 3213 with a grade of C or better or CI. A survey of motivational processes and mechanisms from physiological and psychological viewpoints.
EXP 4404 Psychology of Learning (3) AS PSY
PR: PSY 3213 with a grade of C or better or CI. Survey of methods, empirical findings, and theoretical interpretations in conditioning and instrumental learning.
EXP 4523C Cognitive Psychology (3) AS PSY
PR: PSY 3213 with a grade of C or better or CI. Survey of methods, empirical findings, and theoretical interpretations of human learning, information processing, verbal learning, and judgment and decision-making.
EXP 4640 Psychology of Language (3) AS PSY
Historical survey of relations between psychology and linguistics leading to the emergence of psycholinguistics as a field of study. Current status of theory and research in the field.
Please send questions or comments to:
Karen M. Hall - webCat@ugs.usf.edu
Effective Date: Semester I, 2000
http://www.ugs.usf.edu/catalogs/0001/cdE.htm