All Courses(A-Z)
Course Code
ME 371
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Mechanical Design II
Introduction
Design and analysis of machinery for load-bearing and power transmission. Consideration of material failure modes, including yielding, fracture, and fatigue. Design and selection of machine elements: threaded fasteners, springs, rolling-element bearings, fluid film lubrication, gears and friction drives. Prerequisite: ME 330 OR CEE 300; ME 370.
Course Code
ME 290
Credit
0.0 - 0.0
Course Name
Mechanical Engineering Seminar
Introduction
Lectures by faculty and invited authorities, concerning the ethics and practices of mechanical engineering/engineering mechanics, as well as its relationship to other fields of engineering, to economics, and to society.
Course Code
ME 485
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
MEMS Devices & Systems
Introduction
Introduction to principles, fabrication techniques, and applications of microelectromechanical systems (MEMS). In-depth analysis of sensors, actuator principles, and integrated microfabrication techniques for MEMS. Comprehensive investigation of state-of-the-art MEMS devices and systems. Same as ME 485. 3 undergraduate hours. 3 graduate hours.
Course Code
LAW1001
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Mental Education and Foundation of Law
Introduction
<p>This course is an ideological and political theory course that every college student should take, aiming at improving the ideological, moral, psychological and legal quality of college students.This course for college students' social adaptation, growth and development of body and mind, and is widely concern as the breakthrough point, mainly carries on the thought to serve the people as the core, collectivism as the principle of the socialist outlook on life, values, ethics, legal education, guide and help students establish a good ideal, sentiment, moral character and legal l
Course Code
ECON 102
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Microeconomic Principles
Introduction
<p>Introduction to the functions of individual decision-makers, both consumers and producers, within the larger economic system. Primary emphasis on the nature and functions of product markets, the theory of the firm under varying conditions of competition and monopoly, and the role of government in prompting efficiency in the economy. Credit is not given for ECON 102 and ACE 100. This course satisfies the General Education Criteria for: Social &amp; Beh Sci - Soc Sci</p>
Course Code
ME 455
Credit
3.0 - 4.0
Course Name
Micromanufacturing Process & A
Introduction
Scaling laws in miniaturization, Micro-machine tools design and characterization, Micromanufacturing process modeling, simulation and automation, Micro-metrology and Micro-assembly systems. 3 undergraduate hours. 4 graduate hours. Prerequisite: ME 270 or equivalent or consent of instructor.
Course Code
AFRO 260
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Modern African American Literature and Culture
Introduction
Historical and critical study of African American literature in its social and cultural context between 1915 and 1980. This course satisfies the General Education Criteria for: Cultural Studies - US Minority
Course Code
HIST2001
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Modern Chinese History
Introduction
<p>The course mainly teaches the history that the Chinese people resist the foreign invaders, fights for the racial independence, overthow the reactionary governance and carry out the liberation of people, helps the students to understand the history of the nation, the state of the nation ,appreciate deeply how history and people choose Maxist, choose Communist Party of China ,choose socialist road.
Course Code
CS 447
Credit
3.0 - 4.0
Course Name
Natural Language Processing
Introduction
Part-of-speech tagging, parsing, semantic analysis and machine translation. Relevant linguistics concepts from morphology (word formation) and lexical semantics (the meaning of words) to syntax (sentence structure) and compositional semantics (the meaning of sentences). 3 undergraduate hours. 3 or 4 graduate hours. Credit is not given for both CS 447 and LING 406. Prerequisite: CS 374.
Course Code
LA 242
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Nature and American Culture
Introduction
Appreciation and critique of cultural meanings associated with American natural landscapes. Traditional perspectives including colonial American, romantic, and science-based conservation are characterized, as well as revisionist themes aligned with gender, cultural pluralism, and societal meanings of parks and protected areas. Implications of diversity in cultural meanings toward nature are developed and provide the basis for assessing tenets of contemporary environmental policy and supporting concepts associated with community-based conservation.