All Courses(A-Z)
Course Code
PHYS 211
Credit
4.0 - 4.0
Course Name
University Physics: Mechanics
Introduction
<p>Newton's Laws, work and energy, static properties and fluids, oscillations, transverse waves, systems of particles, and rotations. A calculus-based approach for majors in engineering, mathematics, physics and chemistry. Credit is not given for both PHYS 211 and PHYS 101. Prerequisite: Credit or concurrent registration in MATH 231. For students in engineering, mathematics, physics and chemistry. Exams are given in the evening (during fall and spring semesters). Register for a lecture (A) section, a discussion (D) section and a laboratory (L) section.
Course Code
ARTS 423D09
Credit
2.0 - 2.0
Course Name
Urban economic development in China
Introduction
"Urban economics" is not only a applied economics based on theory of economics, but also be a multi-disciplinary, multi-level integration science.
Course Code
CWL 204
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
US Border Literatures and Cult
Introduction
Exploration of the cultures, experiences, and conditions of people living on and around the borders of the United States. The syllabus will place particular emphasis on the US-Mexico borderlands, a space of interaction, exchange, and confrontation between diverse communities that traverse national, racial, and linguistic borders. We will examine this dynamic space through a varied array of cultural texts, including literature, film, journalism, and scholarship.
Course Code
HIST 171
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
US History to 1877
Introduction
U.S. history survey beginning with the diverse peoples who have populated North America since before the age of contact with Europeans and extending forward through the advent of European colonialism, the movement for independence, the foundation of the republic, the Civil War, and Reconstruction, ending in 1877. The course provides an introduction to historical interpretation, with particular attention to racialized and other forms of social, political, and economic inequality and struggles for freedom and democracy.
Course Code
CS 498VR
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Virtual Reality
Introduction
Subject offerings of new and developing areas of knowledge in computer science intended to augment the existing curriculum. See Class Schedule or departmental course information for topics and prerequisites. 1 to 4 undergraduate hours. 1 to 4 graduate hours. May be repeated in the same or separate terms if topics vary.
Course Code
CS 498VR3
Credit
1.0 - 4.0
Course Name
Virtual Reality
Introduction
Subject offerings of new and developing areas of knowledge in computer science intended to augment the existing curriculum. See Class Schedule or departmental course information for topics and prerequisites.
Course Code
CEE 350
Credit
3.0 - 3.0
Course Name
Water Resources Engineering
Introduction
<p>Quantitative aspects of water in the earth's environment and its engineering implications, including design and analysis of systems directly concerned with use and control of water; quantitative introduction to hydrology, hydraulic engineering, and water resources planning. Prerequisite: CEE 202; credit or concurrent registration in CEE 201.</p>
Course Code
ME 481
Credit
3.0 - 4.0
Course Name
Whole-Body Musculoskel Biomech
Introduction
Exploration of the human musculoskeletal system with an emphasis on the whole-body or organism level; modeling and analysis techniques for examining human movement, such as rigid-body modeling techniques, forward and inverse dynamics, and Lagrangian mechanics; examination of current topics, such as orthopedic biomechanics, prosthetics and orthotics, postural control, and locomotion; use of computerized motion-capture equipment and software to examine, simulate, and analyze human movement.
Course Code
CS 498WN3
Credit
1.0 - 4.0
Course Name
Wireless IoT Lab
Introduction
Subject offerings of new and developing areas of knowledge in computer science intended to augment the existing curriculum. See Class Schedule or departmental course information for topics and prerequisites.
Course Code
ARTS 423C03
Credit
1.0 - 1.0
Course Name
Women, Media, and Chinese Society
Introduction
The media plays a major role in "constructing" gender, and “popular” views of what appropriate gendering is shape how we communicate with each other.