All Courses(A-Z)
Course Code
ME 487
Credit
4.0 - 4.0
Course Name
MEMS-NEMS Theory&Fabrication
Introduction
Physical and chemical theory, design, and hands-on fabrication of micro- and nano-electromechanical systems (MEMS and NEMS); cleanroom fabrication theory, including general cleanroom safety, lithography, additive and subtractive processes, bulk and surface micromachining, deep reactive ion etching (DRIE), lithographic Galvanoformung Abformung (LIGA), packaging, scaling, actuators, and micro-nanofluids; fabrication of two take-home devices, such as piezoresistive sensors and microfluidic logic chips, that demonstrate advanced fabrication processing.
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
ACE 161
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Microcomputer Applications
Introduction
Instruction and practice in solving data-related problems with microcomputers and general purpose software packages. Weekly participation is required in a laboratory discussion and in 1-2 hours (unscheduled) on microcomputer projects.
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
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
UNWL 316
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Modern Chinese Literature
Introduction
<p>Modern Chinese Literature</p>
Course Code
ECE 417
Credit
4.0 - 4.0
Course Name
Multimedia Signal Processing
Introduction
Characteristics of speech and image signals; important analysis and synthesis tools for multimedia signal processing including subspace methods, Bayesian networks, hidden Markov models, and factor graphs; applications to biometrics (person identification), human-computer interaction (face and gesture recognition and synthesis), and audio-visual databases (indexing and retrieval). Emphasis on a set of MATLAB machine problems providing hands-on experience. 4 undergraduate hours. 4 graduate hours. Prerequisite: ECE 310 and ECE 313.
Course Code
MUS 130
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Music Then and Now
Introduction
Provides non-music majors with basic listening skills, the ability to discuss music intelligently, and an acquaintance with many types of music. Prerequisite: For non-music majors only.
Course Code
CLCV 115
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Mythology of Greece and Rome
Introduction
Studies the major myths of Greece and Rome and their impact upon later art, music, and literature. Shares two hours of lecture with CLCV 111; additional hour of lecture-discussion for a closer analysis of topics. Credit is not given for both CLCV 115 and CLCV 111. In the Fall and Spring semesters, students must register for one discussion and one lecture section.