1
T=Approved Transfer Module course. BoK (Breadth of Knowledge) Coding H=University Honors course.
DC: Diversity & Culture. EC: English composition. FA: Fine Arts. HP: Historical Perspectives. HU: Humanities. LT: Literature. NS: Natural Sciences. QR: Quantitative Reasoning.
SE: Social & Ethical Issues. SS: Social Sciences. Those classes which can be repeated as a BoK requirement are marked with an "r;" those which only partially fulfill a requirement are marked with a "p."
Transfer Module
Courses
The Transfer Module consists of 54 credit hours of introductory courses in English Composition,
Mathematics, Arts/Humanities, Social and Behavioral Sciences and Natural and Physical Sciences.
Students should follow the directions below in selecting courses for the Transfer Module.
To assure the most efficient transfer of academic credit, students should consult with an academic
adviser to select the courses most appropriate for General Education and/or possible major
requirements.
(32) COLLEGE OF APPLIED SCIENCE
Economics
T 32ECON286. Survey of Economics. 3 ug.cr. Study of the production, distribution, and
consumption of goods and services. Relations between the economy, society and government.
BoK:SS.
T 32ECON386. Economic Analysis. 3 ug.cr. Asset valuation, depreciation and depletion,
investment and operating costs, taxes, inflation, production economics, break-even analysis, value
analysis, economic service life. Relations between economy and society. Prereq.: 32ECON286.
BoK:SS.
Mathematics
T 32MATH179. Algebra and Trigonometry II. 3-4 ug.cr. Trigonometric identities, solving trig
equations, complex numbers, the fundamentals theorem of algebra, oblique triangles, vectors,
systems of equations and inequalities, matrices and determinants, sequences, series, binomial
expansion. Prereq.: 32MATH178.
T 32MATH244. Calculus I. 4 ug.cr. Limits, continuity, the derivative. Optimization methods, related
rates, curve sketching, the indefinite and definite integral, numerical integration. Applications,
Prereq.: 32MATH179. BoK:QR.
T 32MATH245. Calculus II. 4 ug.cr. Applications of integration. Differentiation and integration of
exponential, logarithmic, and trigonometric functions, techniques of integration. Prereq.: 32MATH244.
BoK:QR.
Physics
T 32PHYS101. Physics for Technology I. 3 ug.cr. Vectors, kinematics, statics, Newton’s laws,
gravity, work, energy, momentum, collisions. Prereq.: 32MATH178. BoK:QR.
T 32PHYS102. Physics for Technology II. 3 ug.cr. Rotation, elasticity, vibration, waves, fluids,
heat and thermodynamics. Prereq.: 32PHYS101, 32PHYS111. BoK:QR.
T 32PHYS103. Physics for Technology III. 3-4 ug.cr. Electricity and magnetism, optics. Prereq.:
32PHYS102, 32PHYS112. BoK:QR.
T 32PHYS111. Physics for Technology I Lab. 1 ug.cr. Laboratory instructions to Physics for
Technology I (32PHYS101) Coreq.: 32PHYS101.
T 32PHYS112. Physics for Technology II Lab. 1 ug.cr. Laboratory course to accompany
32PHYS102. Coreq.: 32PHYS102.
T 32PHYS113. Physics for Technology III. 1 ug.cr. Laboratory course to accompany 32PHYS103.
Coreq.: 32PHYS103.
Psychology
T 32PSYC171. General Psychology. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to psychology. Topics include
learning, motivation, perception, and personality. Practical application of principles of psychology
supplement text. BoK:SS.
(15) MCMICKEN COLLEGE OF ARTS AND
SCIENCES
African American Studies
T 15AFAM171. Introduction to the Black Experience. 3 ug.cr. A survey and examination of the
perceptions, images, realities of, and myths about, African-American life and culture. BoK:SS,DC.
T 15AFAM234. Sociology of the Black Community. 3 ug.cr. Introduction to issues affecting
African-American communities including institutional discrimination and contrasting views of Black
culture. BoK:SS.
T 15AFAM235. Sociology of the Black Community. 3 ug.cr. Survey of Black cultural institutions
including family, religion, music, and dance. BoK:SS.
T 15AFAM236. Sociology of the Black Community. 3 ug.cr. Survey of race, poverty, and the
urban underclass. Special attention to Cincinnati Black communities. BoK:SS.
T 15AFAM245. African-American Drama. 3 ug.cr. Survey of Black drama and the role of Blacks
in the theater from post-Civil War through the Depression years. BoK:FA,LT.
T 15AFAM246. African-American Drama. 3 ug.cr. Survey of Black drama and the role of Blacks
in theater and film from the late 1930s up to the present. BoK:FA,LT.
Anthropology
T 15ANTH101. Cultural Anthropology. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to the study of culture and its
aspects, emphasizing the evolution of cultural systems. Sequence fulfills 9 hrs. Social and
Behavioral Science requirement. BoK:SS,DC.
T 15ANTH102. Cultural Anthropology. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to the study of culture and its
aspects, emphasizing the evolution of cultural systems. The second offering in a three-part course
sequence. Prereq.: 15ANTH101. BoK:SS,DC.
T 15ANTH103. Cultural Anthropology. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to the study of culture and its
aspects, emphasizing the evolution of cultural systems. The third offering in a three-part course
sequence. BoK:SS,DC.
T 15ANTH276. World Prehistory. 3 ug.cr. Survey of selected prehistoric cultural sequences in the
Old World until the time of the Romans and in the New World before European contact. BoK:HP,SS.
Biology
T 15BIOL101. Biology. 3 ug.cr. The sequences Biology 101, 102,103 taken concurrently with Biol.
111, 112, 113, fulfills the natural Science requirement in Arts and Sciences as well as the beginning
course required of major and preprofessional students. Topics covered in Biol. 101 include: geologic
time scale; origin of life; atoms and molecules; cell structure, biochemistry, physiology and division;
plant tissues and origins; plant nutrition; nitrogen cycle. Prereq.: 15BIOL111. BoK:NS.
T 15BIOL102. Biology. 3 ug.cr. Continuation of a sequence designed for biology majors and
preprofessional students. Topics covered include: nuclear and cell division, Mendelian and
molecular genetics, the gene, DNA, population biology, and plant diversity. Prereq.: 15BIOL102;
Coreq.: 15BIOL113. BoK:NS.
T 15BIOL103. Biology. 3 ug.cr. Continuation of sequence designed for Biology majors and
preprofessional students. Topics covered include: animal diversity; animal develop; nerves;
muscle; circulation; respiration; homeostasis; ecology. Prereq.: 15BIOL102; Coreq.: 15BIOL113.
BoK:NS.
T 15BIOL104. Life on Earth: Evolution, Diversity, and Ecology. 3 ug.cr. This quarter covers
organismal biology. Including, the evolution of life on earth, the classification of contemporary life,
and the fundamentals of ecology. For non-science majors. BoK:NS.
T 15BIOL105. How Life Reproduces: Genetics. 3 ug.cr. This quarter will cover the basic principles
of genetics including how genetic information is stored, reproduced, inherited, expressed and
mutated. The relevance of these basic genetic principles to current social issues such as human
genetic diseases, genetic cloning, biotechnology, drug development and cancer will be discussed.
For non-science majors. BoK:NS.
T 15BIOL106. How Life Works: From Cells to Organisms. 3 ug.cr. This quarter will focus on cell
structure from bacteria through multicellular/organisms, how they function and produce or use
energy. We will discuss organization of complex organisms, and how these organisms interact with
their environment. For non-science majors. BoK:NS.
T 15BIOL460. Botany. 4 ug.cr. Introductory botany. A survey of the major concepts in the plant
sciences. Molecular, cellular, anatomical, morphological, individual- level, taxonomical, popula-
tional, and evolutionary topics will be examined. The major ways in which plants and humans
interact will also be reviewed. Prereq.: 15BIOL102, 15BIOL112 or perm. of instr. BoK:NS.
Chemistry
T 15CHEM101. First-Year Chemistry. 4 ug.cr. A first college course for science and engineering
students. 3 lectures and 1 recitation per week. Prereq.: High school chemistry or 15CHEM104.
Coreq.: 15CHEM111,12,13 if add’l work in chem BoK:NS,QR.
T 15CHEM102. First-Year Chemistry. 4 ug.cr. A first college course for science and engineering
students. 3 lectures and 1 recitation per week. A second offering in a three-part course sequence.
Prereq.: 15CHEM101. BoK:NS,QR.
T 15CHEM103. First-Year Chemistry. 4 ug.cr. A first college course for science and engineering
students. 3 lectures and 1 recitation per week. The third offering in a three-part course sequence.
Prereq.: 15CHEM102. BoK:NS,QR.
T 15CHEM104. General Chemistry I. 3 ug.cr. A general overview of the science of chemistry for
non-majors and students lacking a high school chemistry course. Two lectures and one recitation
a week. BoK:NS.
T 15CHEM105. General Chemistry II. 3 ug.cr. A general overview of the science of chemistry for
nonmajors and students lacking a high school chemistry course. Two lectures and one recitation
a week. The second offering in a three-part sequence course. Coreq.: 15CHEM114,15,16 if any
chemistry courses other than Gen. Chem. are planned. Prereq.: 15CHEM104. BoK:NS.
T 15CHEM106. General Chemistry III. 3 ug.cr. A general overview of the science of chemistry for
nonmajors and students lacking a high school chemistry course. Two lectures and one recitation
a week. The third offering of a three-part sequence course. Prereq.: 15CHEM105. Coreq.:
15CHEM114,15,16 if any chemistry courses other than Gen. Chem. are planned.. BoK:NS.
T 15CHEM111. First-Year Chemistry Laboratory. 1 ug.cr. Experimental work including qualita-
tive analysis, supplementary to Chem. 101,2,3. One laboratory period per week. Prereq.: 15CHEM101.
T 15CHEM112. First-Year Chemistry Laboratory. 1 ug.cr. Experimental work including qualita-
tive analysis, supplementary to Chem. 101,2,3. One Laboratory period per week. The second
offering of a three- part course sequence. Prereq.: 15CHEM111. Coreq.: 15CHEM101,2,3.
T 15CHEM113. First-Year Chemistry Laboratory. 1 ug.cr. Experimental work including qualita-
tive analysis, supplementary to Chem. 101,2,3. One laboratory period per week. The third offering
of a three- part course sequence. Prereq.: 15CHEM112. Coreq.: 15CHEM101,2,3.
T 15CHEM114. General Chemistry Laboratory I. 1 ug.cr. Experimental work supplementary to
Chem. 104-5-6. One laboratory period per week. (Requirement of many programs.) Prereq.:
15CHEM104.
T 15CHEM115. General Chemistry Laboratory II. 1 ug.cr. Experimental work supplementary to
Chem. 104,5,6. One laboratory period per week. (Requirement of many programs) The second
offering of a three- part course sequence. Prereq.: 15CHEM114 Prereq.: 15CHEM114.
Transfer Module
2
T=Approved Transfer Module course. BoK (Breadth of Knowledge) Coding H=University Honors course.
DC: Diversity & Culture. EC: English composition. FA: Fine Arts. HP: Historical Perspectives. HU: Humanities. LT: Literature. NS: Natural Sciences. QR: Quantitative Reasoning.
SE: Social & Ethical Issues. SS: Social Sciences. Those classes which can be repeated as a BoK requirement are marked with an "r;" those which only partially fulfill a requirement are marked with a "p."
Transfer Module
T 15CHEM116. General Chemistry Laboratory III. 1 ug.cr. Experimental work supplementary to
Chem. 104,5,6. One laboratory period per week. (Requirement of many programs.) The third
offering of a three-part course sequence. Prereq.: 15CHEM115.
Classics
T 15CLAS110. Introduction to Classical Civilization. 3 ug.cr. The cultures of Greece and Rome,
interpreted through their history, literature and art forms. BoK:HU.
T 15CLAS111. Introduction to Classical Civilization II. 3 ug.cr. The cultures of Greece and
Rome, interpreted through their history, literature and art forms. The second offering in a three-part
course sequence. BoK:HU.
T 15CLAS112. Introduction to Classical Civilization III. 3 ug.cr. The cultures of Greece and
Rome, interpreted through their history, literature and art forms. The third offering in a three-part
course sequence. BoK:HU.
T 15CLAS221. The Art and Archaeology of the Ancient World. 3 ug.cr. Egypt, Mesopotamia,
Greece and Rome. BoK:HP.
T 15CLAS222. The Art and Archaeology of the Ancient World. 3 ug.cr. Egypt, Mesopotamia,
Greece and Rome. The second offering in a three-part course sequence. BoK:HP.
T 15CLAS223. The Art and Archaeology of the Ancient World. 3 ug.cr. Egypt, Mesopotamia,
Greece and Rome. The third offering in a three-part course sequence. BoK:HP.
Computer Science
T 15CS112. Introduction to Computers and Programming II. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to
spreadsheets and databases for non-computer science majors. Design and development of
effective spreadsheets. Discussion of proper usage of functions, macro programming and report
generation. Introduction to interactive commands of a database system. Prereq.: 15CS111 plus
high school algebra.
T 15CS113. Introduction to Computers and Programming III. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to general
programming concepts for non-computer science majors. Discussion of top down problem solving
techniques. Introduction to programming in a database environment. Design and manipulation of
tables, proper usage of functions and report generation. Prereq.: 15CS112.
T 15CS225. Computer Science I. 4 ug.cr. Computer Science I Prereq.: 1 yr High school prgmmng.
T 15CS226. Computer Science II. 3 ug.cr. Continuation of 15CS225. Prereq.: 15CS225.
Economics
T 15ECON101. Introduction to Economics. 3 ug.cr. Economic principles basic to behavior of
individuals, firms, markets; pricing for resource allocation and decision making. Offered each
quarter. BoK:SS.
T 15ECON102. Introduction to Economics. 3 ug.cr. Economic analysis of national income, money
and banking, fiscal and monetary policy. Economics in a political decision making context. Offered
each quarter. BoK:SS.
T 15ECON103. Introduction to Economics. 3 ug.cr. Economic issues in a political environment;
international trade, labor, income distribution, welfare, growth, alternative economic systems.
Prereq.: Econ. 101-2. BoK:SS,SE.
English
T 15ENGL207. American Writers. 3 ug.cr. Selected works in American literature from the colonial
period to 1865. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL208. American Writers. 3 ug.cr. Selected works in American literature from 1865 to
1915. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL209. American Writers. 3 ug.cr. Selected works in American literature from 1865 to
1915. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL221. World Literature. 3 ug.cr. A comparative study of ancient and modern classics of
the western world as well as Third World literature. Each term will focus on a particular literary genre:
tragedy, comedy, epic, and romance. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL222. World Literature. 3 ug.cr. A comparative study of ancient and modern classics of
the western world as well as Third World literature. Each term will focus on a particular literary genre:
tragedy, comedy, epic and romance. The second offering in a three-part course sequence. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL223. World Literature. 3 ug.cr. A comparative study of ancient and modern classics of
the western world as well as Third World literature. Each term will focus on a particular literary genre:
tragedy, comedy, epic, and romance. The third offering in a three-part course sequence. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL231. Major British Writers. 3 ug.cr. Selected works in British literature from
Beowulf
to
1600. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL232. Major British Writers. 3 ug.cr. Selected works in British literature from 1600 to
1800. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL233. Major British Writers. 3 ug.cr. Selected works in British literature from 1800 to the
present. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL234. Contemporary World Literature: Drama. 3 ug.cr. Problems of identity, illusion and
reality. Naturalism, existential drama. Theater of the Absurd, and new theater movements. Offered
alt. yrs. Prereq.: 15ENGL103. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL235. Contemporary World Literature: The Novel. 3 ug.cr. Major international writers’
reappraisal of the human predicament; alienation and social values; new dimensions in use of time;
psychology and language. Prereq.: 15ENGL103. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL236. Contemporary World Literature: The Short Story. 3 ug.cr. European and Asian
short masterpieces expressing the anxieties and hopes of modern man; exploration of new literary
techniques. Offered alt. yrs. Prereq.: 15ENGL103. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL240. Literature of the New Testament. 3 ug.cr. The interpretation of Jesus and his
message by his followers in light of the social, political, economic, and religious forces of the times.
BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL241. Literature of the New Testament. 3 ug.cr. See 15ENGL240. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL251. Outrageous Writings by Women. 3 ug.cr. Women writers are attracted to certain
literary forms scorned by conventional academic critics — Brown,
Rubyfruit Jungle
; Wittig,
Les
Guerillérs
; Didion,
Play It As It Lays
; LeGuin,
The Dispossessed
; poetry by Judy Grahn; journals by
May Sarton, Anais Nin. Offered alt. yrs. Prereq.: 15ENGL103. BoK:LT,DC.
T 15ENGL256. Mothers and Daughters in Literature. 3 ug.cr. Women base a large part of their
self image upon how they view their mothers. Symbols of motherhood powerfully affect culture.
Concepts mothers have of their daughters will be explored. Offered every third yr. Prereq.:
15ENGL103. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL257. Our Lives: Twentieth-Century Women’s Autobiographies. 3 ug.cr. Through five
novels and a collection of diaries, this course will study the lives and achievements of well-known
20th century women from their teen years through old age. Offered alt. yrs. Prereq.: 15ENGL103.
BoK:LT,DC.
T 15ENGL259. Voices and Visions. 3 ug.cr. American Poetry: Voices/Visions Survey of modern
American poetry, explores the lives and works of thirteen of America’s greatest poets: Whitman,
Dickinson, Frost, Moore, Crane, Stevens, Hughes, Eliot, Pound, Lowell, Bishop, Plath and Williams.
Offered alt. yrs. Prereq.: 15ENGL103. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL265. The Theme of Love in Literature. 3 ug.cr. Comic, tragic, romantic, and grotesque:
a study of the ties that bind both lovers and families from Shakespeare’s
Romeo and Juliet
to Fay
Waldon’s
She-Devil
. Prereq.: 15ENGL103. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL309. Early American Fiction. 3 ug.cr. Selections from the works of Brown, Cooper, Poe,
Hawthorne, Melville and others. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL310. American Fiction: 1860-1910. 3 ug.cr. The early realists and naturalists; selections
from Twain, James, Crane, and others. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL312. American Fiction: 1910-1950. 3 ug.cr. The major novelists of the early twentieth
century. Hemingway, Faulkner, Fitzgerald, Wright, and others. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGL320. Contemporary American Fiction. 3 ug.cr. Representative fictions since 1950:
realistic, absurdist, experimental. Writers include O’Connor, Ellison, Heller, Barth, Pynchon,
Vonnegut and others. BoK:LT.
English - British Literature
T 15ENGB250. Shakespeare’s Plays. 3 ug.cr. A survey of Shakespeare’s major plays for the non-
major. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGB251. Twentieth Century Fiction. 3 ug.cr. Major works of our time. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGB254. Women’s Literature. 3 ug.cr. How does gender intersect with other categories of
identity like race, ethnicity, class, nationality, and sexual identity? We will examine the intersections
— how they are represented in literature, and the conditions they create for writers — in novels,
poems, plays, essays, short stories, and films by a wide range of women writers. BoK:LT,DC.
T 15ENGB259. Myth and Literature. 3 ug.cr. An examination of myth as it provides the
fundamental building blocks for literature. Both the ancient myths and their modern incarnations will
be studied. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGB307. Shakespeare. 1-3 ug.cr. The comedies, histories, and early tragedies to 1600.
BoK:LT.
T 15ENGB308. Shakespeare. 3 ug.cr. The major tragedies, “problem” comedies, and romances.
BoK:LT.
T 15ENGB314. History of the Novel. 3 ug.cr. Birth of the novel in satire, sentiment, and realism;
Defoe, Fielding, Austen, and others. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGB315. History of the Novel. 3 ug.cr. Growth of the novel in social criticism and
psychological depth; Bronte, Dickens, Eliot, Hardy, and others. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGB316. History of the Novel. 3 ug.cr. New directions for the novel in the 20th century;
Conrad, Joyce, Lawrence, Woolf, and others. BoK:LT.
English - Comparative Literature
T 15ENGC371. Modern Fiction I: Late Nineteenth Century. 3 ug.cr. The novels of such
Continental, British, and American novelists as Flaubert, Dostoevsky, Melville, Tolstoy and James.
BoK:LT.
T 15ENGC372. Modern Fiction II: Early Twentieth Century. 3 ug.cr. The novels of such
Continental, British, and American writers as Mann, Kafka, Faulkner, and Joyce. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGC373. Modern Fiction III: Mid-Twentieth Century. 3 ug.cr. Continental, British, and
American novelists such as Solzhenitsyn, Camus, Borges, Robbe-Grillet, Fowles, and Hemingway.
BoK:LT.
T 15ENGC376. Literature of the Old Testament. 3 ug.cr. The rich literary traditions of the Old
Testament studied against the background of ancient Near Eastern myth, ritual, and law. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGC377. Literature of the Old Testament. 3 ug.cr. The rich literary traditions of the Old
Testament studied against the background of ancient Near Eastern myth, ritual, and law. The
second offering in a three-part course sequence. BoK:LT.
T 15ENGC378. Literature of the Old Testament. 3 ug.cr. The rich literary traditions of the Old
Testament studied against the background of ancient Near Eastern myth, ritual, and law. The third
offering in a three-part course sequence. BoK:LT.
3
T=Approved Transfer Module course. BoK (Breadth of Knowledge) Coding H=University Honors course.
DC: Diversity & Culture. EC: English composition. FA: Fine Arts. HP: Historical Perspectives. HU: Humanities. LT: Literature. NS: Natural Sciences. QR: Quantitative Reasoning.
SE: Social & Ethical Issues. SS: Social Sciences. Those classes which can be repeated as a BoK requirement are marked with an "r;" those which only partially fulfill a requirement are marked with a "p."
Geography
T 15GEOG101. Introduction to Physical Geography. 3 ug.cr. For majors and non-majors; fulfills
the Natural Science requirement when taken with Geog. 111, 112, 113, or with an elementary course
in another science. Weather and climate: Elements of meteorology including temperature, precipi-
tation, pressure cells, and air masses. Global climatic patterns, controls, and mechanisms of climate
change examined. BoK:NS,SE.
T 15GEOG102. Introduction to Physical Geography. 3 ug.cr. See 15GEOG101. Landforms:
Processes of formation and their significance, studied through maps and diagrams. BoK:NS,SE.
T 15GEOG103. Introduction to Physical Geography. 3 ug.cr. See 15GEOG101. The environ-
ment: soil forming processes and plant geography, man’s impact on the biosphere. BoK:NS,SE.
T 15GEOG104. Introduction to Human Geography. 3 ug.cr. Uses population distribution to
demonstrate how geography as a social science defines and answers questions. A General
Education Course. BoK:SS,DC.
T 15GEOG105. Introduction to Human Geography. 3 ug.cr. Introduction to geographic models
used to describe, explain, and interpret political and cultural diversity. A General Education Course.
BoK:SS,DC.
T 15GEOG111. Introduction to Physical Geography Laboratory. 2 ug.cr. Fulfills the Natural
Science requirement when taken with Geog. 101, 102, 103. Practical analysis of weather and
climate using meteorological data and charts; to supplement the lecture course Geog. 101. One lab.,
one recitation per week. Coreq.: Geog. 101. General Education Course.
T 15GEOG112. Introduction to Physical Geography Laboratory. 2 ug.cr. Fulfills the Natural
Science requirement when taken with Geog. 101, 102, 103. Practical analysis of weather and
climate using meteorological data and charts; to supplement the lecture course Geog. 101. One lab.,
one recitation per wk. The second offering in a three-part course sequence. COREQ.: GEOG. 101.
A General Education Course.
T 15GEOG113. Introduction to Physical Geography Laboratory. 2 ug.cr. Practical analysis of
environmental problems, including field work and laboratory analyses, to supplement the lecture
course Geog. 103. The third offering in a three-part course sequence. A General Education Course.
Geology
T 15GEOL101. Introduction to Geology. 3 ug.cr. A survey of geological processes and materials,
and the development of life as seen through the fossil record. Emphasis is placed on the earth as
an evolving, dynamic body from the atomic scale to its place in the solar system. Geologic hazards
and environmental problems are discussed. BoK:NS.
T 15GEOL102. Introduction to Geology. 3 ug.cr. This course is a continuation of Geology 101 and
emphasizes concepts in physical geology at the introductory level. The major emphasis is on
geologic concepts and processes related to: glaciology and the nature of ice ages; wind erosion and
deposition; oceanography; earthquakes and seismology; continental drift and plate tectonics;
economic geology; and planetary geology. Prereq.: 15GEOL101. BoK:NS.
T 15GEOL103. Introduction to Geology. 3 ug.cr. This course is a continuation of Geology 102 and
emphasizes concepts in historical geology at the introductory level. Particular attention is given to:
the nature and measurement of geologic time; geologic evidence of the earth’s early history; the
nature of the fossil record; and the geological history of North America from the Precambrian to the
recent. The historical development of ideas about earth history are also discussed. Prereq.:
15GEOL102. BoK:NS.
T 15GEOL111. Geology Laboratory. 3 ug.cr. Laboratory and field work with maps, rocks, minerals
and fossils. BoK:NS.
T 15GEOL112. Geology Laboratory. 3 ug.cr. Laboratory and field work with maps, rocks, minerals
and fossils. This is the second offering of a three-course sequence. BoK:NS.
T 15GEOL113. Geology Laboratory. 3 ug.cr. Laboratory and field work with maps, rocks, minerals
and fossils. This is the third offering of a three-course sequence. BoK:NS.
T 15GEOL161. Oceanography-Planet Earth. 3 ug.cr. The evolution of planet earth, its oceans and
atmosphere; marine organisms and their environments; the ocean as a record of past and future
climate. BoK:NS.
T 15GEOL162. Evolution of Life: Planet Earth. 3 ug.cr. Examination of patterns and processes
in the history and life on Earth, and the way in which scientists make these determinations.
BoK:HP,NS.
T 15GEOL163. Planet Earth: Reefs. 3 ug.cr. Introduction to geology and biology of coral reefs and
their ecology and distribution through space and time, and human impact on this unique and
endangered marine environment. BoK:NS.
German Studies
T 15GRMN171. Survey of German Culture I. 3 ug.cr. In English. The origin of German institutions,
social structures, philosophical and religious thought through the Baroque. BoK:HU,DC.
T 15GRMN172. Survey of German Culture II. 3 ug.cr. In English. German contributions to Western
civilization from the Age of Enlightenment to 1918. BoK:HU,DC.
T 15GRMN173. Survey of German Culture III. 3 ug.cr. In English. A cultural view of Germany from
World War I to the present. BoK:HU,DC.
T 15GRMN276. Jewish Culture in Contemporary Germany. 3 ug.cr. This course focuses on
Jewish culture in today’s Germany. BoK:HU,DC.
T 15GRMN304. The German-Speaking World Today. 3 ug.cr. (Modern Topics.) Germany,
Austria, and Switzerland: their geography, social structure, political institutions, economics, and
cultural achievements. Lectures and discussions in English and German. BoK:HU,DC.
T 15GRMN305. The German-Speaking World Today. 3 ug.cr. (Modern Topics.) Germany,
Austria, and Switzerland: their geography, social structure, political institutions, economics, and
cultural achievements. Lectures and discussions in English and German. The second offering in a
three-part course sequence. BoK:HU,DC.
T 15GRMN306. The German-Speaking World Today. 3 ug.cr. (Modern Topics.) Germany,
Austria, and Switzerland: their geography, social structure, political institutions, economics, and
cultural achievements. Lectures and discussions in English and German. The third offering in a
three-part course sequence. BoK:HU,DC.
history
T 15HIST104. Medieval and Renaissance. 3 ug.cr. History of Europe and the Mediterranean world
from 300 to 1500. BoK:HP.
T 15HIST105. Medieval and Renaissance. 3 ug.cr. History of Europe and the Mediterranean world
from 300 to 1500. BoK:HP.
T 15HIST106. Medieval and Renaissance. 3 ug.cr. History of Europe and the Mediterranean world
from 300 to 1500. BoK:HP.
T 15HIST110. American History to 1820. 3 ug.cr. A survey of American history from colonial times
to 1820. BoK:HP.
T 15HIST111. American History 1820-1920. 3 ug.cr. A survey of American history from 1820 to
1920. BoK:HP.
T 15HIST112. American History Since 1920. 3 ug.cr. A survey of American history from 1920 to
the present. BoK:HP.
T 15HIST130. World History I: Worlds Forming. 3 ug.cr. A survey of world history from the
development of separate civilizations to the modern age of interdependence. BoK:HP,DC.
T 15HIST131. World History II: Worlds Connecting. 3 ug.cr. The Medieval period. BoK:HP,DC.
T 15HIST132. World History III: Worlds Interacting. 3 ug.cr. The Modern period. BoK:HP,DC.
T 15HIST151. History of Western Civilization. 3 ug.cr. A survey of Western civilization - prehistoric
times to the contemporary world; a broad view of institutions, ideas and problems developing in
Western societies. A three-part sequence. BoK:HP.
T 15HIST152. History of Western Civilization. 3 ug.cr. A survey of Western civilization - prehistoric
times to the contemporary world; a broad view of institutions, ideas and problems developing in
Western societies. A three-part sequence. BoK:HP.
T 15HIST153. History of Western Civilization. 3 ug.cr. A survey of Western civilization - prehistoric
times to the contemporary world; a broad view of institutions, ideas and problems developing in
Western societies. A three-part sequence. BoK:HP.
T 15HIST224. Latin American History. 3 ug.cr. Clash between pre-Columbian Indian civilizations
(Maya, Aztec, Inca) and the Spanish, and the resulting societies of conquest and of empire. Themes
include: Indian conversion and exploitation, demographic disaster, colonial government, pirates
and gold, racial mixture. BoK:HP,DC.
T 15HIST225. Latin American History. 3 ug.cr. Latin America’s search for political and economic
independence. Themes include: Bourbon reform, independence movements, rise of caudillos,
economic development (export crops), society (elite, women, Indians, poor). BoK:HP,DC.
T 15HIST226. Latin American History. 3 ug.cr. Latin American responses to 20th century. Themes
include: Mexican Revolution, Argentine Peronism, Cuban Revolution, Chilean socialism, Central
America, militarism, multinationals. BoK:HP,DC.
Judaic Studies
T 15JUDC127. History of Jewish Civilization. 3 ug.cr. Jewish civilization as interpreted through
Jewish historical, religious, literary, and cultural developments, Biblical to rabbinic period. Fulfils
A&S history requirement. BoK:HP,DC.
T 15JUDC128. History of Jewish Civilization. 3 ug.cr. Jewish civilization as interpreted through
Jewish historical, religious, literary, and cultural developments. Medieval period. BoK:HP,DC.
T 15JUDC129. History of Jewish Civilization. 3 ug.cr. Jewish civilization as interpreted through
Jewish historical, religious, literary and cultural developments 1750 to the present. BoK:HP,DC.
T 15JUDC135. Introduction to Judaism. 3 ug.cr. Introduction to basic concepts, beliefs and
practices of Judaism as expressed through its classic literature. BoK:HU,DC.
Mathematics
T 15MATH148. Elementary Probability and Statistics. 3 ug.cr. Chapters 8-11. Understanding
Inference: Sampling distributions, probability, sample proportions and means, binomial distribution,
confidence intervals, inference for means, comparing two means, inference for population spread.
Prereq.: 15MATH147. BoK:QR.
T 15MATH149. Elementary Probability and Statistics. 3 ug.cr. Chapters 12-15. Topics In
Inference: Inference for proportions, two-sample inference, two-way tables and Chi Square, one-
way analysis of variance (ANOVA), inference for regression. Prereq.: 15MATH148. BoK:QR.
T 15MATH225. Finite Math and Calculus I. 3 ug.cr. Equations, inequalities, functions, matrices,
systems of linear equations and linear inequalities, sets, counting, probability. Prereq.: A score of
530 or better on the Math Placement Test is recommended. BoK:QR.
T 15MATH226. Finite Math and Calculus II. 3 ug.cr. Functions, graphs, limits, continuity, differenti-
ation, curve sketching, optimization. Properties of exponential and logarithmic functions. Prereq.:
15MATH225; a score of 530 or better on the Math Placement Test is recommended. BoK:QR.
T 15MATH227. Finite Math and Calculus III. 3 ug.cr. Exponential and logarithmic functions,
antidifferentiation, the definite integral, area, functions of two variables, partial derivatives, maxima
and minima, Lagrange multipliers. Prereq.: 15MATH226. BoK:QR.
T 15MATH261. Calculus and Analytic Geometry I. 5 ug.cr. 5 cr. Course covers functions, limits
and continuity, derivatives, applications of the derivative, the integral. BoK:QR.
T 15MATH262. Calculus and Analytic Geometry II. 5 ug.cr. Course covers the integral, inverse
functions, techniques of integration, applications of the integral. Prereq.: 15MATH261. BoK:QR.
Transfer Module
4
T=Approved Transfer Module course. BoK (Breadth of Knowledge) Coding H=University Honors course.
DC: Diversity & Culture. EC: English composition. FA: Fine Arts. HP: Historical Perspectives. HU: Humanities. LT: Literature. NS: Natural Sciences. QR: Quantitative Reasoning.
SE: Social & Ethical Issues. SS: Social Sciences. Those classes which can be repeated as a BoK requirement are marked with an "r;" those which only partially fulfill a requirement are marked with a "p."
Transfer Module
T 15MATH263. Calculus and Analytic Geometry III. 5 ug.cr. Course covers sequences and
series, conic sections, vectors, lines and planes, vector-valued functions. Prereq.: 15MATH262.
BoK:QR.
Philosophy
T 15PHIL101. Moral and Political Ideas. 3 ug.cr. BoK:HU,SE.
T 15PHIL102. Moral and Political Ideas. 3 ug.cr. Selected ethical, political, and social theories from
the Renaissance to the 19th century. BoK:HU,SE.
T 15PHIL103. Moral and Political Ideas. 3 ug.cr. Selected ethical, political and social theories in
20th century thought. BoK:HU,SE.
T 15PHIL104. Introduction to Philosophy: Belief and Knowledge. 3 ug.cr. Introductory read-
ings, surveying classical problems in the theory of knowledge. BoK:HU,SE.
T 15PHIL105. Introduction to Philosophy: Mind and Will. 3 ug.cr. Introductory readings
surveying classical problems in metaphysics. BoK:HU.
T 15PHIL106. Introduction to Philosophy: Ethics. 3 ug.cr. Introductory readings surveying
classical problems in ethics and values. BoK:HU,SE.
T 15PHIL111. Contemporary Moral Issues. 3 ug.cr. Philosophical and ethical issues underlying
major controversies of the day: rights, freedom and punishment; sex, euthanasia, abortion;
business ethics. Offered alt. yrs. BoK:HU,SE.
T 15PHIL121. Critical Thinking. 3 ug.cr. Introduction to the techniques of clear and careful
reasoning. BoK:HU.
T 15PHIL123. Introduction to Logic. 3 ug.cr. Deductive reasoning. Sec. I-II. Symbolizing
arguments in formal logic. Proof techniques, validity, consistency. BoK:HU,QR.
T 15PHIL220. African Philosophy. 3 ug.cr. A survey course on the question of “What is African
philosophy?” The metaphysics and ethics of African philosophical traditions like animism and Islam.
T 15PHIL222. Ancient Philosophy. 3 ug.cr. Search for one reality. Parmenides, Plato, and
Aristotle. BoK:HU.
T 15PHIL235. Pre-Scientific Thought. 3 ug.cr. Earliest beginnings of scientific thought. Pre-
Socratic Greeks. Thales through Plato. Offered every third yr. BoK:HU.
T 15PHIL245. Introduction to Environmental Ethics. 3 ug.cr. The philosophical bases for
reasonable arguments establishing that at least some aspects of nature should be preserved in the
raw and wild state. BoK:HU,SE.
T 15PHIL246. Environmental Ethics H. 3 ug.cr. An honors section of 15PHIL245. The philosophi-
cal bases for reasonable arguments establishing
T 15PHIL245. Introduction to Environmental Ethics. 3 ug.cr. The philosophical bases for
reasonable arguments establishing that at least some aspects of nature should be preserved in the
raw and wild state. BoK:HU,SE.
T 15PHIL246. Environmental Ethics H. 3 ug.cr. An honors section of 15PHIL245. The philosophi-
cal bases for reasonable arguments establishing that at least some aspects of nature should be
preserved in the raw and wild state. BoK:HU,SE.
T 15PHIL324. Ethics and Animals: Human Obligations toward Other Species. 3 ug.cr. An
introduction to the moral problems raised by our killing, eating and experimenting on non-human
animals. Course emphasis will be on learning how to address an emotionally explosive normative
issue in a rational and coherent way, drawing on the main traditions in moral philosophy from ancient
to modern. BoK:HU,SE.
Physics
T 15PHYS101. College Physics. 1-5 ug.cr. A survey of physics without calculus. Three lecture
hours and one-hour recitation per week. Proficiency in algebra and trigonometry required. Coreq.:
15PHYS111. This course does not satisfy the engineering or pre-engineering requirement.
BoK:NS,QR.
T 15PHYS102. College Physics. 1-5 ug.cr. A survey of physics without calculus. Three lecture
hours and one-hour recitation per week. Proficiency in algebra and trigonometry required. The
second offering in a three-part course sequence. Coreq.: 15PHYS112. This course does not satisfy
the engineering or pre-engineering requirement. BoK:NS,QR.
T 15PHYS103. College Physics. 1-5 ug.cr. A survey of physics without calculus. Three lecture
hours and one-hour recitation per week. Proficiency in algebra and trigonometry required. The third
offering in a three-part course sequence. Coreq.: 15PHYS113. This course does not satisfy the
engineering or pre-engineering requirement. BoK:NS,QR.
T 15PHYS104. Introductory Physics I. 3 ug.cr. Lectures on fundamentals of physics, supple-
mented by demonstrations. Proficiency in elementary algebra is required. BoK:NS.
T 15PHYS105. Introductory Physics II. 3 ug.cr. Lectures on fundamentals of physics, supple-
mented by demonstrations. Proficiency in elementary algebra is required. The second offering in
a three-part course sequence. Prereq.: 15PHYS104. BoK:NS.
T 15PHYS106. Introductory Physics III. 3 ug.cr. Lectures on fundamentals of physics, supple-
mented by demonstrations. Proficiency in elementary algebra is required. The third offering in a
three-course sequence. Prereq.: 15PHYS105. BoK:NS.
T 15PHYS111. College Physics Lab. 1 ug.cr. A 2-1/2 hour laboratory each week to accompany
college physics.
T 15PHYS112. College Physics Lab. 1 ug.cr. A 2-1/2 hour laboratory each week to accompany
college physics. The second offering in a three- part course sequence.
T 15PHYS113. College Physics Lab. 1 ug.cr. A 2-1/2 hour laboratory each week to accompany
college physics. The third offering in a three- part course sequence.
T 15PHYS120. Astronomy and the Natural Universe. 3 ug.cr. The sky; comparative planetology;
comets and other interplanetary debris; the formation and evolution of the solar system. BoK:NS.
T 15PHYS121. Astronomy and the Natural Universe. 3 ug.cr. The structure and evolution of stars;
the Milky Way Galaxy; other galaxies; quasars; cosmology. BoK:NS.
T 15PHYS122. Astronomy and the Natural Universe. 3 ug.cr. Selected topics in astronomy:
search for life in the universe, paradigm shifts in astronomy, the history of astronomy, etc. Topics
may vary from year to year. BoK:NS.
T 15PHYS125. Astronomy Lab. 2 ug.cr. Meets one morning or evening per week. Selected
experiments in astronomy: use of telescopes, astrophotography, solar observations, computers in
astronomy.
T 15PHYS126. Astronomy Lab. 2 ug.cr. Meets one morning or evening per week. Selected
experiments in astronomy: use of telescopes, astrophotography, solar observations, computers in
astronomy.
T 15PHYS127. Astronomy Lab. 2 ug.cr. Meets one morning or evening per week. Selected
experiments in astronomy: use of telescopes, astrophotography, solar observations, computers in
astronomy.
T 15PHYS133. Physics of Sound and Music. 3 ug.cr. A description of acoustical phenomena: the
reception of sound (the ear), the environment of music (from acoustics), and the production of
musical sounds (musical instruments). BoK:NS.
T 15PHYS134. Physics of Light and Color. 3 ug.cr. A study of the basic principles of light with
emphasis on the color spectrum, interference phenomena, color reproduction, lasers, holography,
color perception, color and the consumer and the artist. BoK:NS.
T 15PHYS201. General Physics I. 4 ug.cr. A survey of physics, using calculus, recommended for
science and mathematics students. Coreq.: 15PHYS211. Prereq. or Coreq.: 15MATH261.
BoK:NS,QR.
T 15PHYS202. General Physics II. 4 ug.cr. A survey of physics, using calculus, recommended for
science and mathematics students. The second offering in a three-part course sequence. Coreq.:
15PHYS212. Prereq. or Coreq.: 15MATH262. BoK:NS,QR.
T 15PHYS203. General Physics III. 4 ug.cr. A survey of physics, using calculus, recommended for
science and mathematics students. The third offering in a three-part course sequence. Coreq.:
15PHYS213. Prereq. or Coreq.: 15MATH263. BoK:NS,QR.
T 15PHYS211. General Physics Laboratory I. 1 ug.cr. A three-hour laboratory each week
accompanying General Physics.
T 15PHYS212. General Physics Laboratory II. 1 ug.cr. A three-hour laboratory each week
accompanying General Physics.
T 15PHYS213. General Physics Laboratory III. 1 ug.cr. A three-hour laboratory each week
accompanying General Physics.
Psychology
T 15PSYC101. Introduction to Psychology. 3 ug.cr. The major concepts of psychology as a
behavioral science. 101 or 121, 102, 103 may be taken in any sequence. 101, 121, 102, 103 or equiv.
intro. sequence are prerequisites for all 200-level psychology courses. BoK:SS.
T 15PSYC102. Introduction to Psychology. 3 ug.cr. The major concepts of psychology as a
behavioral science continued. See 15PSYC101. BoK:SS.
T 15PSYC103. Introduction to Psychology. 3 ug.cr. The major concepts of psychology as a
behavioral science continued. See 15PSYC101. BoK:SS.
T 15PSYC220. Principles of Psychology: A Survey. 3 ug.cr. Basic aims, methods, and topics as
the bases of human behavior, intelligence and creativity, learning and remembering, personality
and motivation, abnormal and social psychology. This is a survey course for non-Psychology
majors. This course is intended for those students who plan to complete only one Psychology course
or courses that only require 15PSYC175 as a prerequisite. BoK:SS.
T 15PSYC288. Psychology of Adjustment. 3 ug.cr. Mechanisms by which people adjust to
themselves and their environments. Current and traditional approaches to understanding personal
adjustment and maladjustment. Techniques used to measure coping ability and treatments.
Prereq.: 15PSYC101 or 175. BoK:SS.
T 15PSYC289. Psychology of Adjustment. 3 ug.cr. Continuation of 15PSYC247. Prereq.:
15PSYC247. BoK:SS.
T 15PSYC353. Introduction to Humanistic Psychology. 3 ug.cr. Discussion and experiential
learning of new conceptions of man in society, presented as alternatives to behavioristic and
Freudian psychology. Offered alt. yrs. Prereq.: 15PSYC101. BoK:SS.
Sociology
T 15SOC141. Introduction to Sociology. 3 ug.cr. Basic principles and perspectives for analysis
of the social character of human activities, particularly in modern society. (Prereq. to all other Soc.
courses.) Duplicate of Sociology 140. BoK:SS.
T 15SOC142. Societies in Change. 3 ug.cr. Analysis of structural changes in societies as human
populations adapt to their environments, with an emphasis on population, urbanization, and social
change. Prereq.: 15SOC141. BoK:SS.
T 15SOC143. Contemporary Social Issues. 3 ug.cr. Discussion of selected social issues and
problems of current concern in society. Prereq.: 15SOC141. BoK:SS,SE.
T 15SOC144. Barriers to Equality. 3 ug.cr. An examination of age, sex, and race as major
influences on the structure of interaction in society and on access to social opportunity. Prereq.:
15SOC141. BoK:SS,DC.
T 15SOC145. Understanding Social Behavior. 3 ug.cr. An analysis of social bases of individual
behavior, including the influence of formal and informal groups and other social phenomena.
Prereq.: 15SOC141. BoK:SS.
T 15SOC275. Sociology of the Family. 3 ug.cr. The changing nature of the domestic institutions
in the United States; marital adjustment, child rearing and family and marriage tensions. BoK:SS.
5
T=Approved Transfer Module course. BoK (Breadth of Knowledge) Coding H=University Honors course.
DC: Diversity & Culture. EC: English composition. FA: Fine Arts. HP: Historical Perspectives. HU: Humanities. LT: Literature. NS: Natural Sciences. QR: Quantitative Reasoning.
SE: Social & Ethical Issues. SS: Social Sciences. Those classes which can be repeated as a BoK requirement are marked with an "r;" those which only partially fulfill a requirement are marked with a "p."
T 15SOC276. Changing Roles for Men and Women. 3 ug.cr. Social causes and consequences
of change in traditional sex roles, with emphasis upon problems of contemporary women and
transition in American family structure. BoK:SS.
T 15SOC288. Race and Race Relations. 3 ug.cr. A sociological introspection of recent racial
movements in the U.S. Special attention given to individual race relations problems. Prereq.:
15SOC175 or 176. BoK:SS,DC.
Women's Studies
T 15WMST298. Outrageous Writings by Women. 3 ug.cr. Women writers are attracted to certain
literary forms scorned by conventional academic critics — Brown,
Rubyfruit Jungle
; Wittig,
Les
Guerilliers
; Didion,
Play It As It Lays
; LeGuin,
The Dispossessed
; poetry by Judy Grahn; journals
by May Sarton, Anais Nin. Offered alt. yrs. Prereq.: 15ENGL103. BoK:LT,DC.
T 15WMST313. Changing Roles for Men and Women. 3 ug.cr. Social causes and consequences
of change in traditional sex roles, with emphasis upon problems of contemporary women and
transition in American family structure. BoK:SS.
T 15WMST318. Women in American History: 1607-1820. 3 ug.cr. Historical analysis of the roles
of native, African and European women in early American society. It will examine women’s
experiences in the 17th and 18th Centuries and the impact of the American Revolution on women’s
lives. Prereq.: 15ENGL103 or perm. of instr. BoK:HP,DC.
T 15WMST319. Women in American History: 1820-1920. 3 ug.cr. Historical analysis of the role
of the Nineteenth Century Woman and gain of the vote for women. Prereq.: 15ENGL103 or perm.
of instr. BoK:HP,DC.
T 15WMST330. Black Women Writers. 3 ug.cr. A study of the fiction of selected Black women
writers from Zora Neale Hurston to Toni Morrison. Special emphasis on developing concepts of
Black womanhood. Prereq.: 15ENGL103. BoK:LT,DC.
(16) COLLEGE-CONSERVATORY OF
MUSIC
Music History and Literature
T 16HILT111. Music History and Literature I. 2 ug.cr. Music in Western Civilization traced from
antiquity to 1750; emphasis on composers’ styles in relation to the cultural background of the various
eras. BoK:FA-p,HP-p.
T 16HILT112. Music History and Literature I. 2 ug.cr. Music in Western Civilization traced from
antiquity to 1750; emphasis on composers’ styles in relation to the cultural background of the various
eras. BoK:FA-p,HP-p.
T 16HILT113. Music History and Literature I. 2 ug.cr. Music in Western Civilization traced from
antiquity to 1750; emphasis on composers’ styles in relation to the cultural background of the various
ears. BoK:FA-p,HP-p.
T 16HILT211. Music History and Literature II. 2 ug.cr. Music in Western Civilization traced from
1750 to the present, a continuation of Music History and Literature 16HILT113. BoK:FA-p,HP-p.
T 16HILT212. Music History and Literature II. 2 ug.cr. Music in Western Civilization traced from
1750 to the present, a continuation of Music History and Literature 16HILT113. BoK:FA-p,HP-p.
T 16HILT213. Music History and Literature II. 2 ug.cr. Music in Western Civilization traced from
1750 to the present, a continuation of Music History and Literature 16HILT113. BoK:FA-p,HP-p.
(23) COLLEGE OF DESIGN,
ARCHITECTURE, ART, AND PLANNING
Architecture and Interior Design
T 23SAID217. Architecture through the Ages. 3 ug.cr. The history of Western and Near Eastern
architecture from prehistoric times through antiquity; the architecture of non-Western cultures in
Asia and Africa. BoK:FA,HP.
T 23SAID218. Architecture through the Ages. 3 ug.cr. The history of architecture from the early
Christian and Byzantine through the Medieval and Renaissance periods. BoK:FA,HP.
T 23SAID219. Architecture through the Ages. 3 ug.cr. The history of architecture from the
Baroque through the 18th and 19th centuries to the present, including the Modernism and Post-
Modernism. BoK:FA,HP.
T 23SAID327. American Architecture I: Colonialism and Early Republican. 3 ug.cr. The
architecture and town-planning of the Prehistoric (Native American/Indian), Colonial, and Early
Republican eras to about 1820; British Colonial developments including vernacular Late Medieval
and Georgian influences on builder architects; concluding with careers of gentlemen architects
Thomas Jefferson, Charles Bulfinch, and B. H. Latrobe. Weekend field trips will be available.
BoK:FA,HP.
T 23SAID328. American Architecture II: Victorian and Early Modern. 3 ug.cr. “Victorian”
American architecture, structural technology and urban development from the War of 1812 to World
War I; 19th century historical eclecticism, Greek and Gothic Revivals of the antebellum period; their
later variants in the Gilded Age after the Civil War; turn-of-the-century American Renaissance, and
the origins of modernism in works of Richardson, Sullivan and Frank Lloyd Wright. Field trips will
be available. BoK:FA,HP.
T 23SAID329. American Architecture III: Modern, Traditional, and Post-Modern. 3 ug.cr. The
continuity of traditional historicist styles presented in contrast to the American Arts and Crafts
Movement and the impact of the International Style (Bauhaus) and its Art Deco counterpart between
the world wars; American modern architecture, technology, and urbanism after World War II in the
context of the recent reaction known as Post-Modernism, an attempt to integrate the traditional and
modern attitudes. Field trips will be available. BoK:FA,HP.
Art Appreciation
T 23ARTA286. American Art: 1776-1900. 3 ug.cr. Painting, sculpture, and architecture in the
United States from the Revolution to 1890. BoK:FA,HP.
T 23ARTA287. American Art: 1900-1945. 3 ug.cr. From Ashcan School through abstract
expressionism. BoK:FA,HP.
T 23ARTA288. Contemporary Art. 3 ug.cr. Study of art forms which have emerged since 1945.
BoK:FA.
T 23ARTA289. Symbolist Movement in Art. 3 ug.cr. Themes and theories of Symbolism.
Emphasis on leading turn-of-the-century artists such as Gaugin, Hodler, Munch, Ensor, Redon,
Moreau, Klimt, and others. BoK:FA.
Art History
T 23ARTH111. History of Art I: Ancient-Early Medieval. 3 ug.cr. Survey of art and architecture
in the ancient world and medieval Europe until about A.D. 1100. BoK:DC-p,HP.
T 23ARTH112. History of Art II: Romanesque-Renaissance. 3 ug.cr. Survey of European art and
architecture from about 1100 to 1600. BoK:DC-p,HP.
T 23ARTH113. History of Art III: Seventeenth-Twentieth Centuries. 3 ug.cr. Survey of European
and American art and architecture from 1600 to the present. BoK:DC-p,HP.
T 23ARTH191. Modern Painting and Sculpture. 3 ug.cr. Survey of the major artists and
monuments from Post-Impressionism to the present, including works by Picasso, Matisse,
Kandindsky, Moore, Pollock, De Kooning. BoK:HP.
T 23ARTH192. Modern Architecture. 3 ug.cr. Survey of major architects and architecture from late
19th century to present, including Frank Lloyd Wright, Le Corbusier, Mies van der Rohe, Louis Kahn,
and Post-Modernism. BoK:HP.
(18) COLLEGE OF EDUCATION, CRIMINAL
JUSTICE, AND HUMAN SERVICES
Health Promotion and Education
T 18HPE284. Philosophy of Sports. 3 ug.cr. An examination of sports with respect to definition,
meaning. An examination of the conceptual framework of sports, i.e., the competition, winning, hero,
violence and its relationship to the values of the community. Why are sports important? BoK:HU.
T 18SPED273. Perspectives on Individuals with Disabilities. 3 ug.cr. This course will focus on
infants, children, youth and adults with various individual differences or variations. A study of the
dynamic relationship and effect of a disability on the individual, family, educational system,
community and society. Prereq.: 18SPED175,30PSYC101. BoK:SS,SE.
(28) RAYMOND WALTERS COLLEGE
Art History
T 28ARTH111. History of Art I: Ancient — Romanesque. 3 ug.cr. Survey of art and architecture
in the ancient world and in medieval Europe until 1200 A.D. Prereq.: Qualification for Fresh. Engl.
BoK:FA,HP.
T 28ARTH112. History of Art II: Gothic — Renaissance. 3 ug.cr. Survey of European art and
architecture from the Gothic period to 1600. Prereq.: Qualification for Fresh. Engl. BoK:FA,HP.
T 28ARTH113. History of Art III: 17th-20th Centuries. 3 ug.cr. Survey of the evolution of European
art and architecture from 1600 to present. Prereq.: Qualification for Fresh. Engl. BoK:FA,HP.
T 28ARTH273. Modern European Art. 3 ug.cr. The great painters of the 19th century, including
David, Delacroix, Ingres, Courbet, Manet, Monet, Renoir, Degas, Gauguin, and Van Gogh. Prereq.:
28ARTH112 or 113 or perm. of instr. BoK:FA,HP.
T 28ARTH276. Age of Rembrandt and Rubens. 3 ug.cr. The great artists of the 17th century in
Europe: Bernini, Velazquez, Rubens, Van Dyck, Rembrandt, Vermeer, Ter Borch, Dutch genre
painting, and art during the reigns of Louis XIV and Charles II. Prereq.: 28ARTH112 or 113 or perm.
of instr. BoK:FA,HP.
Biology
T 28BIOL101. Biology I. 5 ug.cr. First-year lecture and laboratory course in the biological sciences
for science majors and transfer students, emphasizing application of the scientific method to
understanding biology and the structure and activities of cells. Prereq.: One year of each of high
school biology and chemistry with a “C” or better. BoK:NS.
T 28BIOL102. Biology II. 5 ug.cr. Continuation of Biology I emphasizing cell reproduction,
inheritance, evolution and population genetics. Prereq.: 28BIOL101. BoK:NS.
T 28BIOL103. Biology III. 5 ug.cr. Continuation of Biology II emphasizing plant and animal
anatomy, function and diversity, and ecology of populations and communities. Prereq.: 28BIOL102.
BoK:NS.
T 28BIOL104. Introduction to Biology I. 3 ug.cr. Basic concepts of biological science and their
relation to mankind: ecology, genetics, human structure and function, ethology, and evolution.
Primarily for the non-science major.
T 28BIOL105. Introduction to Biology II. 3 ug.cr. See 28BIOL104.
Transfer Module
6
T=Approved Transfer Module course. BoK (Breadth of Knowledge) Coding H=University Honors course.
DC: Diversity & Culture. EC: English composition. FA: Fine Arts. HP: Historical Perspectives. HU: Humanities. LT: Literature. NS: Natural Sciences. QR: Quantitative Reasoning.
SE: Social & Ethical Issues. SS: Social Sciences. Those classes which can be repeated as a BoK requirement are marked with an "r;" those which only partially fulfill a requirement are marked with a "p."
T 28BIOL106. Introduction to Biology III. 3 ug.cr. See 28BIOL104.
Chemistry
T 28CHEM101. First Year Chemistry I. 4 ug.cr. Threes hours of lecture and 1.5 hours recitation
per week. Introduction to modern Chemistry for science majors with an emphasis on problem
solving. Study of nomenclature, stoichiometry, gas laws and thermochemistry. Coreq.: 28CHEM111.
Prereq.: C or better in H.S. Chem.; qualification for 28ENGL101 and 28MATH173. BoK:NS,QR.
T 28CHEM102. First Year Chemistry II. 4 ug.cr. Three hours of lecture and 1.5 hours recitation per
week. Study of electronic structure, bonding and the states of matter. Prereq.: 28CHEM101. Coreq.:
28CHEM112. BoK:NS,QR.
T 28CHEM103. First Year Chemistry III. 4 ug.cr. Three hours of lecture and 1.5 hours of recitation
per week. Study of kinetics, equilibria, thermodynamics and electrochemistry. Prereq.: 28CHEM102.
Coreq.: 28CHEM113. BoK:NS,QR.
T 28CHEM104. General Chemistry I. 5 ug.cr. Three hours lecture, 1 hour recitation, and 2 hours
lab per week covering introductory principles, practices, and applications of inorganic chemistry for
non-science majors. Prereq.: Qualification for 28ENGL101 and HS Coll Prep Math or 28MATH132,
either with "C" or better. BoK:NS.
T 28CHEM105. General Chemistry II. 5 ug.cr. Three hours lecture, 1 hour recitation, and 2 hours
lab per week covering introductory principles, practices and applications of organic chemistry for
non-science majors. Prereq.: 28CHEM104. BoK:NS.
T 28CHEM106. General Chemistry III. 5 ug.cr. Three hours lecture, 1 hour recitation, and 2 hours
lab per week covering introductory principles, practices, and applications of biochemistry for non-
science majors. Prereq.: 28CHEM105. BoK:NS.
T 28CHEM111. First Year Chemistry Laboratory I. 1 ug.cr. Three hours per week. Laboratory to
accompany 28CHEM101. Coreq.: 28CHEM101.
T 28CHEM112. First Year Chemistry Laboratory II. 1 ug.cr. Three hours per week. Laboratory
to accompany 28CHEM102. Coreq.: 28CHEM102.
T 28CHEM113. First Year Chemistry Laboratory III. 1 ug.cr. Three hours per week. Laboratory
to accompany 28CHEM103. Coreq.: 28CHEM103.
Economics
T 28ECON101. Principles of Economics I. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to our economic system.
Supply and demand analysis. Price determination under market structures characterized by varying
degrees of competition. BoK:SS.
T 28ECON102. Principles of Economics II. 3 ug.cr. Basic concepts and theory of macroeconom-
ics. Neo-Keynesian and monetary approaches to aggregate demand. Stabilization policy. Prereq.:
28ECON101. BoK:SS.
T 28ECON103. Principles of Economics III. 3 ug.cr. Theory of income distribution, the major
income shares and related policy issues. The public sector — resource and income allocation.
International economics. Prereq.: 28ECON102. BoK:SS.
T 28ENGL207. American Writers I. 3 ug.cr. Selected works in American literature from the Colonial
period to 1865. BoK:LT.
T 28ENGL208. American Writers II. 3 ug.cr. Selected works in American literature from 1865 to
1930. BoK:LT.
T 28ENGL281. Twentieth-Century Short Story. 3 ug.cr. Twentieth-century thought and expres-
sion in the short story. Composition. Prereq.: 28ENGL101,2,3. BoK:LT.
T 28ENGL283. Twentieth-Century Novel. 3 ug.cr. Twentieth-century thought and expression in
the novel. Composition. Prereq.: 28ENGL101,2,3. BoK:LT.
T 28ENGL285. Twentieth-Century Drama. 3 ug.cr. Twentieth-century thought and expression in
the drama. Composition. Prereq.: 28ENGL101,2,3. BoK:LT
Geography
T 28GEOG123. World Regional Geography: The Americas. 3 ug.cr. Geographic perspectives
on the problems facing North, Central, and South America, stressing population trends, debt
management, resource use, cultural heritage, and environmental barriers. Prereq.: Must qualify for
28ENGL101 or perm. of instr. BoK:DC,SS.
T 28GEOG124. World Regional Geography: Europe. 3 ug.cr. Geographic perspectives on the
problems facing North, Central, and South America, stressing population trends, debt management,
resource use, cultural heritage, and environmental barriers. Prereq.: Must qualify for 28ENGL101
or perm. of instr. BoK:DC,SS.
History
T 28HIST110. American History I: American History to 1820. 3 ug.cr. Survey of the United States
from the age of discovery and colonization to 1820. Economic, social and political developments are
stressed. Prereq.: Qualification for 28ENGL101 or perm. of instr. BoK:HP.
T 28HIST111. American History II: 1820-1920. 3 ug.cr. Surveys United States history from 1820
through World War I. Prereq.: 28HIST110. BoK:HP.
T 28HIST112. American History III: 1920 to the Present. 3 ug.cr. Continues the survey of United
States history from World War I, the Roaring Twenties, the Great Depression, the Cold War, through
our recent past. Prereq.: 28HIST111. BoK:HP.
T 28HIST113. Foundations of Western Civilization I. 3 ug.cr. The political, social, economic, and
cultural foundations of our society from the Greeks through the Middle Ages. Prereq.: Qualification
for 28ENGL101 or perm. of instr. BoK:HP.
T 28HIST114. Foundations of Western Civilization II. 3 ug.cr. The political, social, economic, and
cultural foundations of our society from the Greeks through the Middle Ages. Prereq.: Qualification
for 28ENGL101 or perm. of instr. BoK:HP.
T 28HIST115. Foundations of Western Civilization III. 3 ug.cr. The political, social, economic, and
cultural foundations of our society from the Greeks through the Middle Ages. Prereq.: Qualification
for 28ENGL101 or perm. of instr. BoK:HP.
T 28HIST201. East Asian History I. 3 ug.cr. History of China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam from 500
B.C. to the present, emphasizing East Asian cultural heritage, the process of modernization, and
recent political developments. BoK:HP,DC.
T 28HIST202. East Asian History II. 3 ug.cr. History of China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam from 500
B.C. to the present, emphasizing East Asian cultural heritage, the process of modernization, and
recent political developments. BoK:HP,DC.
T 28HIST203. East Asian History III. 3 ug.cr. History of China, Japan, Korea, and Vietnam from
500 B.C. to the present, emphasizing East Asian cultural heritage, the process of modernization,
and recent political developments. BoK:HP,DC.
T 28HIST215. History of Modern Europe I. 3 ug.cr. A survey of European history from the
Renaissance through the present day. Prereq.: Qualification for 28ENGL101 or perm. of instr.
BoK:HP.
T 28HIST216. History of Modern Europe II. 3 ug.cr. A survey of European history from the
Renaissance through the present day. Prereq.: Qualification for 28ENGL101 or perm. of instr.
BoK:HP.
T 28HIST217. History of Modern Europe III. 3 ug.cr. A survey of European history from the
Renaissance through the present day. Prereq.: Qualification for 28ENGL101 or perm. of instr.
BoK:HP.
Mathematics
T 28MATH173. College Algebra I. 3 ug.cr. Real number system, exponents, polynomials, rational
expressions, equations, formulas, inequalities, graphs of functions, variation. Prereq.: C in
28MATH134 or equiv. BoK:QR.
T 28MATH174. College Algebra II. 3 ug.cr. Polynomial functions and their graphs, rational
functions, conic sections, exponential and logarithmic functions, systems of equations and
inequalities. Prereq.: 28MATH173 or equiv. BoK:QR.
T 28MATH225. Finite Mathematics and Calculus I. 3 ug.cr. Equations, Inequalities, Functions,
Matrices, Systems of Linear Equations and Linear Inequalities, Simplex Method, Sets, Counting,
Probability. Prereq.: 28MATH174 or equiv. BoK:QR.
T 28MATH226. Finite Mathematics and Calculus II. 3 ug.cr. Numerical, algebraic and graphical
approaches to topics in applied calculus including: functions, graphs and curve sketching, limits,
continuity, the derivative, differentiation techniques, optimization. Prereq.: 28MATH174 or equiv.
BoK:QR.
T 28MATH227. Finite Mathematics and Calculus III. 3 ug.cr. Numerical, algebraic and graphical
approaches to topics in applied calculus including: the definite integral, area, antiderivatives,
integrating techniques, numeric approximation, functions of two variables, partial derivatives,
maxima and minima, lagrange multipliers, differential equations. Prereq.: 28MATH226 or equiv.
BoK:QR.
T 28MATH261. Calculus and Analytic Geometry I. 5 ug.cr. Functions, limits and continuity;
derivatives; applications of the derivative; the integral. Prereq.: Four years college preparatory
mathematics, including Trigonometry or 28MATH181. BoK:QR.
T 28MATH262. Calculus and Analytic Geometry II. 5 ug.cr. The integral and applications of the
integral: exponential and logarithmic functions, inverse function; techniques of integration; polar
coordinates and conic sections. Prereq.: 28MATH261. BoK:QR.
T 28MATH263. Calculus and Analytic Geometry III. 5 ug.cr. Taylor’s formula, improper integrals,
sequences and series; vectors, lines, planes, vector-valued functions. Prereq.: 28MATH262.
BoK:QR.
Philosophy
T 28PHIL111. Introduction to Philosophy I. 3 ug.cr. A philosophic examination of ethical, political,
and other basic human questions. Prereq.: Must qualify for English Comp I. BoK:HU.
T 28PHIL112. Introduction to Philosophy II. 3 ug.cr. A philosophic examination of ethical, political,
and other basic human questions. Prereq.: Must qualify for English Comp I. BoK:HU.
Physics
T 28PHYS101. College Physics I. 4 ug.cr. A survey of physics. Four one-hour lectures each week.
Prereq.: Grade of C or better in 28MATH181 or equiv. Coreq.: 28PHYS111. BoK:NS,QR.
T 28PHYS102. College Physics II. 4 ug.cr. A survey of physics. Four one-hour lectures each week.
Prereq.: 28PHYS101. Coreq.: 28PHYS112. BoK:NS,QR.
T 28PHYS103. College Physics III. 4 ug.cr. A survey of physics. Four one-hour lectures each week.
Prereq.: 28PHYS102. Coreq.: 28PHYS113. BoK:NS,QR.
T 28PHYS104. Introduction to Physics I. 3-4 ug.cr. Lectures on fundamental problems in physics
supplemented by demonstrations and problems. Prereq.: 28MATH134 or equiv. BoK:NS.
T 28PHYS105. Introduction to Physics II. 3-4 ug.cr. Lectures on fundamental problems in physics
supplemented by demonstrations and problems. Prereq.: 28PHYS104. BoK:NS.
T 28PHYS106. Introduction to Physics III. 3-4 ug.cr. Lectures on fundamental problems in physics
supplemented by demonstrations and problems. Prereq.: 28PHYS105. BoK:NS.
T 28PHYS111. College Physics Laboratory I. 1 ug.cr. A two-hour laboratory each week
accompanying College Physics. Coreq.: 28PHYS101.
T 28PHYS112. College Physics Laboratory II. 1 ug.cr. A two-hour laboratory each week
accompanying College Physics. Coreq.: 28PHYS102.
T 28PHYS113. College Physics Laboratory III. 1 ug.cr. A two-hour laboratory each week
accompanying College Physics. Coreq.: 28PHYS103.
Transfer Module
7
T=Approved Transfer Module course. BoK (Breadth of Knowledge) Coding H=University Honors course.
DC: Diversity & Culture. EC: English composition. FA: Fine Arts. HP: Historical Perspectives. HU: Humanities. LT: Literature. NS: Natural Sciences. QR: Quantitative Reasoning.
SE: Social & Ethical Issues. SS: Social Sciences. Those classes which can be repeated as a BoK requirement are marked with an "r;" those which only partially fulfill a requirement are marked with a "p."
T 28PHYS201. General Physics I. 4 ug.cr. A survey of physics, using calculus, recommended for
science and mathematics students. Coreq.: 28MATH261, 28PHYS211. BoK:NS,QR.
T 28PHYS202. General Physics II. 4 ug.cr. A survey of physics, using calculus, recommended for
science and mathematics students. Prereq.: 28PHYS201. Coreq.: 28MATH262, 28PHYS212.
BoK:NS,QR.
T 28PHYS203. General Physics III. 4 ug.cr. A survey of physics, using calculus, recommended for
science and mathematics students. Prereq: 28PHYS202. Coreq.: 28MATH263, 28PHYS213.
BoK:NS,QR.
T 28PHYS211. General Physics Laboratory I. 1 ug.cr. Laboratory experiences to accompany the
general physics course. Coreq.: 28PHYS201.
T 28PHYS212. General Physics Laboratory II. 1 ug.cr. Laboratory experiences to accompany the
general physics course. Coreq.: 28PHYS202.
T 28PHYS213. General Physics Laboratory III. 1 ug.cr. Laboratory experiences to accompany the
general physics course. Coreq.: 28PHYS203.
Political Science
T 28POL101. American Government: The American Dream vs The Present Public Situation
I. 3 ug.cr. Critical re-examination of American government — who benefits, who loses. Compares
historical ideals of American democracy against present policies and their outcome. Asks what is
responsible citizenship amidst present political challenges and problems. Prereq.: Qualification for
28ENGL101 or perm. of instr. BoK:SS.
T 28POL102. American Government: The American Dream vs The Present Public Situation
II. 3 ug.cr. Critical re-examination of American government — who benefits, who loses. Compares
historical ideals of American democracy against present policies and their outcome. Asks what is
responsible citizenship amidst present political challenges and problems. Prereq.: Qualification for
28ENGL101 or perm. of instr. BoK:SS.
T 28POL103. American Government: The American Dream vs The Present Public Situation.
3 ug.cr. Critical re-examination of American government — who benefits, who loses. Compares
historical ideals of American democracy against present policies and their outcome. Asks what is
responsible citizenship amidst present political challenges and problems. Prereq.: Qualification for
28ENGL101 or perm. of instr. BoK:SS.
Psychology
T 28PSYC101. Introduction to Psychology I. 3 ug.cr. This is the first quarter of a three-quarter
course sequence covering most of the basic aspects of psychology as applied to everyday life.
Topics include: a history of psychology, research methods, how the brain and biology affect
behavior, sensation and perception, intelligence, cognition (language and creativity), memory.
BoK:SS.
T 28PSYC102. Introduction to Psychology II. 3 ug.cr. This is the second quarter of a three-quarter
course sequence covering most of the basic aspects of psychology as applied to everyday life.
Topics include: life-span development, conditioning and learning, personality, psychological
disorders and therapies. Prereq.: 28PSYC101. BoK:SS.
T 28PSYC103. Introduction to Psychology III. 3 ug.cr. This is the third quarter of a three-quarter
course sequence covering most of the basic aspects of psychology as applied to everyday life.
Topics include: states of consciousness, motivation and emotion, social behavior, health/stress and
coping, applied psychology, and industrial/organizational psychology, gender and sexuality.
Prereq.: 28PSYC101. BoK:SS.
T 28PSYC205. Human Development I: Childhood. 3 ug.cr. Growth and development of the child
from conception to adolescence. BoK:SS,DC.
T 28PSYC206. Human Development II: Adolescence. 3 ug.cr. Physical, psychological, and social
development of the adolescent. Inheritance, learning, emotion, identity, and personality from
adolescence to early adulthood. BoK:SS,DC.
T 28PSYC207. Human Development III: Adulthood and Aging. 3 ug.cr. Physical, sociological,
psychological, and intellectual changes which occur from young adulthood until death. BoK:SS,DC.
T 28PSYC241. Social Psychology. 3 ug.cr. Analysis of factors affecting human social interaction,
including aggression, developing relationships, determining the causes of behavior, sex differ-
ences, and ways of influencing others. Prereq.: 28PSYC101 or perm. of instr. BoK:SS.
T 28PSYC247. Psychology of Adjustment. 3 ug.cr. A survey of principles and findings as they
apply to the development and maintenance of healthy, mature attitudes and behavior patterns.
Prereq.: 28PSYC101 or perm. of instr. BoK:SS.
T 28PSYC281. Organizational Behavior I: Interpersonal Relations. 3 ug.cr. First of course
sequence on human behavior in organizations. Focus is on individual interaction with others in the
work world. Topics include self concept, personal communication, interaction patterns, and stress.
BoK:SS.
T 28PSYC282. Organizational Behavior II: Organizational and Group Processes. 3 ug.cr. An
exploration of the organizational bases of group behavior, including organization development and
change, organizational communications, decision-making, and conflict management. Prereq.:
28PSYC281. BoK:SS.
T 28PSYC341. Psychology of Personality. 3 ug.cr. The important personality theories, person-
ality development, methods of studying personality, and personality dynamics. Prereq.: 28PSYC102
or perm. of instr. BoK:SS.
Sociology
T 28SOC141. Introduction to Sociology I. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to the sociological principles
and perspectives for the analysis of the social character of human activities, particularly in
contemporary society. BoK:SS,DC.
T 28SOC142. Introduction to Sociology II. 3 ug.cr. An examination of social structure, with
emphasis on the organization of major social institutions, the relationship of humans to their
environments, and social change. Prereq.: 28SOC141. BoK:SS,DC.
T 28SOC143. Contemporary Social Issues. 3 ug.cr. Discussion of selected social issues and
problems of current concern within society. Prereq.: 28SOC141. BoK:SS,SE.
T 28SOC285. Sociology of the Family. 3 ug.cr. Analysis of contemporary patterns of marriage and
family life, including examination of courtship, marriage and marital adjustment, childrearing,
divorce, and alternatives to traditional family roles. Prereq.: 28SOC141 or perm. of instr. BoK:SS,SE.
(17) UNIVERSITY COLLEGE
Art History
T 17ARTH231. History of Art I. 3 ug.cr. Artistic achievements of the Ancient World, with emphasis
on Egyptian, Near Eastern, Greek and Roman civilizations. Formal, expressive, and technical
aspects of art and the historical content are explored. (15,000 B.C. - 4th c. A.D.) BoK:FA,HP.
T 17ARTH232. History of Art II. 3 ug.cr. Art and architecture of the Early Christian, Byzantine,
Medieval and Renaissance periods. BoK:FA,HP.
T 17ARTH233. History of Art III. 3 ug.cr. Evolution of art and architecture from the Counter
Reformation to the present, with emphasis on the Baroque, Neo-Classicism, Romanticism,
Realism, Impressionism, Post Impressionism and leading 20th century movements. (17th century-
present). BoK:FA,HP.
Economics
T 17ECON101. Principles of Economics I. 3 ug.cr. Introduction to our economic system; supply
and demand; pricing under competitive and noncompetitive market structures. BoK:SS.
T 17ECON102. Principles of Economics II. 3 ug.cr. Introduction to national product and national
income, and to monetary and fiscal policies for stability and growth. Prereq.: 17ECON101. BoK:SS.
T 17ECON103. Principles of Economics III. 3 ug.cr. The application of economic principles of
current economic issues and problems; labor in economics, international economics, and compara-
tive economic systems. Prereq.: 17ECON102. BoK:SS,SE.
T 17ECON275. Microeconomic Theory. 4 ug.cr. The study of the economic behavior of individual
units including consumers, firms and resource owners. Topics covered are: consumer choice and
demand, the firm and production, pricing and output in the competitive model, monopoly, oligopoly,
and monopolistic competition, and the pricing and employment of resources with perfect and
imperfect competition. Prereq.: 17MATH226 and 17ECON102. BoK:SS,QR.
English
T 17ENGL101. English Composition I. 3 ug.cr. The first quarter of a three-quarter writing
sequence designed to make students proficient users of standard English. Upon completion of the
sequence, students should have the ability to listen, speak, read and write critically and indepen-
dently, avoiding errors in basic grammar, punctuation and spelling. Emphasis in 101 is on the essay
with critical reading of short selections. Writing assignments will require unity, coherence and
adequate development. Prereq.: Passing score on College placement exam or successful comple-
tion of 17ENGL099. BoK:EC-p.
T 17ENGL102. English Composition II. 3 ug.cr. Emphasis on the essay with critical reading of
professional essays and short literary selections. The portfolio system of assessment continues.
Prereq.: 17ENGL101. BoK:EC-p.
T 17ENGL103. English Composition III. 3 ug.cr. Emphasis on writing persuasive essays.
Instruction in analysis of longer reading selections. To be awarded credit for 103, student’s portfolios
must be evaluated by the Language Arts Department as being illustrative of college-level work.
Prereq.: 17ENGL102. BoK:EC-p.
T 17ENGL241. Literature of the United States I. 3 ug.cr. Using a multi-ethnic approach, this
course examines some of the most interesting social, political, philosophical, and artistic literature
of the pre-Civil War United States. Most of the issues addressed in this literature continue to be
fundamental concerns in the contemporary United States. Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv. BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL242. Literature of the United States II. 3 ug.cr. This course examines a wide variety of
post-Civil War literature, exploring some of the many voices and genres that make up the
multicultural American literary mosaic. Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv. BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL271. Themes in American Literature: Lifestyles. 3 ug.cr. Nonconformists, the Individual
vs. Society. An examination of various literary works that deal with social outsiders, individualists,
and rebels who resist society’s expectations, conformity, or group acceptability. Prereq.: 17ENGL103
or equiv. BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL272. Themes in American Literature: Money, Work, and the American Dream. 3
ug.cr. American authors’ attitudes toward money and work and their relation to the American dream.
Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv. BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL273. Themes in American Literature: Aggression, Violence and War. 3 ug.cr. An
examination of various literary works that deal with individual and/or group reaction to the emotional
and psychological aspects of aggression, violence, and war. Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv.
BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL274. Themes in American Literature: Gender Roles. 3 ug.cr. American authors’
treatments of the theme of male-female gender stereotyping. Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv.
BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL275. Ethnic Literatures of the United States. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to the literature
of selected ethnic groups (Black, Native American, Appalachian, Chinese, Jewish, Latino, etc.).
Students will study ethnic cultures and literary forms. Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv. BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL276. Women’s Voices in American Literature. 3 ug.cr. A study of women writers’
commentary on the American Experience from the colonial period to the present. Prereq.:
17ENGL103 or equiv. BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL279. The Female in American Literature. 3 ug.cr. A study of contemporary male and
female American authors with respect to their treatment of the female as a character. Prereq.:
17ENGL103 or equiv. BoK:LT.
Transfer Module
8
T=Approved Transfer Module course. BoK (Breadth of Knowledge) Coding H=University Honors course.
DC: Diversity & Culture. EC: English composition. FA: Fine Arts. HP: Historical Perspectives. HU: Humanities. LT: Literature. NS: Natural Sciences. QR: Quantitative Reasoning.
SE: Social & Ethical Issues. SS: Social Sciences. Those classes which can be repeated as a BoK requirement are marked with an "r;" those which only partially fulfill a requirement are marked with a "p."
T 17ENGL281. Contemporary Short Story. 3 ug.cr. Twentieth century thought and expression in
the short story. Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv. BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL282. Themes in American Literature: The Family Unit, Stress or Success. 3 ug.cr.
An examination of various literary works that focus on family unit interactions as the arena for
exploring the struggles, successes, and failures of the American experience. Prereq.: 17ENGL103
or equiv. BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL283. Contemporary Novel. 3 ug.cr. The approach of twentieth century novelists to
problems of the present day. Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv. BoK:LT.
17ENGL284. Censorship in Literature and the Arts. 3 ug.cr. Censored literature and other works
of art examined in light of arguments for and against censorship. Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv.
BoK:LT.
T 17ENGL285. Contemporary Drama. 3 ug.cr. Twentieth century thought and expression in
drama. Prereq.: 17ENGL103 or equiv. BoK:LT.
History
T 17HIST101. History of World Civilization I. 3 ug.cr. A study of world civilizations in the Near East,
Mediterrean, Europe, Asia, Africa and Messamerica from prehistory to the 14th century. BoK:HP,DC.
T 17HIST102. History of World Civilization II. 3 ug.cr. The world from 1400 A.D. to 1776. Early
modern global economy to the age of Atlantic revolution. BoK:HP,DC.
T 17HIST103. History of World Civilization III. 3 ug.cr. The modern world from 1776 A.D. to
present, including Industrial Revolution, age of empire, nationalism, world wars, decolonization,
post superpower wars to present. BoK:HP,DC.
T 17HIST110. American History I: 1607 to 1840. 3 ug.cr. A comprehensive study of life in N.
America from prehistory through Colonial and early Federal periods. Addresses political, economic,
social and intellectual development of nineteenth century society. BoK:HP.
T 17HIST111. American History II: 1840 to 1914. 3 ug.cr. A comprehensive study of American
development from Abolitionism through the Civil War, industrial expansion, Indian clearance,
immigration, and the Gilded Age to the Spanish American War. BoK:HP.
T 17HIST112. American History III: 1914 to the Present. 3 ug.cr. A comprehensive study of the
growth of the American state and peoples from 1898 through world wars, depressions, domestic
insurrection, economic expansions, and post super-power wars to the present. BoK:HP.
Mathematics
T 17MATH173. College Algebra I. 3 ug.cr. Equations, inequalities, Cartesian coordinate system,
graphs of polynomial functions. Prereq.: 17MATH134 or equiv. BoK:QR.
T 17MATH174. College Algebra II. 3 ug.cr. Rational functions, conic sections, exponential and
logarithmic function, systems of equations and inequalities. Prereq.: 17MATH173. BoK:QR.
T 17MATH225. Finite Mathematics and Calculus I. 3 ug.cr. Operations with matrices, determi-
nants. Linear programming. Probability. Prereq.: 17MATH174. BoK:QR.
T 17MATH226. Finite Mathematics and Calculus II. 3 ug.cr. Limits, continuity, derivatives and
techniques for differentiation. Optimization using derivatives. Graphical techniques. Prereq.:
17MATH225. BoK:QR.
T 17MATH227. Finite Mathematics and Calculus III. 3 ug.cr. Derivatives of logarithmic and
exponential functions. Definite and indefinite integrals. Partial derivatives, application of functions
of several variables, solutions to first order differential equations. Prereq.: 17MATH226. BoK:Q
Philosophy
T 17PHIL101. Early Philosophy of Nature. 3 ug.cr. Survey of ancient world views, our place in
nature, and how we acquire knowledge. BoK:HU.
T 17PHIL102. Philosophy of the Scientific Revolution. 3 ug.cr. Development of the modern
worldview. The impact of Copernicus, Galileo, Newton and others on our understanding of nature
and society. BoK:HU.
T 17PHIL103. Humanity and Technology. 3 ug.cr. The impact of scientific knowledge and
changing technology of our understanding of nature, culture, and the individual. BoK:HU.
T 17PHIL105. Introduction to Formal Logic. 3 ug.cr. An introduction to deductive logic methods
and their applications. BoK:HU,QR.
T 17PHIL172. Practical Logic. 3 ug.cr. Identification analysis and evaluation of arguments. Skills
of critical thinking and written communication will be developed. BoK:HU.
T 17PHIL182. Contemporary Moral Issues. 3 ug.cr. Philosophical and ethical issues underlying
major controversies of the day: rights, freedom and punishment; sex, euthanasia, abortion, and
others. BoK:HU,SE.
Political Science
T 17POL201. American Government and Politics I. 3 ug.cr. After study of the constitutional and
cultural basis of the American governmental system, emphasis will be on the public’s involvement
in the political system — political parties, interest groups, public opinion, voting, campaigns,
elections. BoK:SS.
T 17POL202. American Government and Politics II. 3 ug.cr. A study of the Presidency, Congress,
the judiciary, the bureaucracy and their policy-making roles. BoK:SS.
T 17POL203. American Government and Politics III. 3 ug.cr. A study of the U.S. government
dealing with other nations and dealing, internally, with state government, as well as state
governments’ relations with their own citizens. BoK:SS.
Psychology
T 17PSYC151. Introduction to Psychology I Paired. 3 ug.cr. The beginning course in psychology
which covers History, Research, Biological topics, Sensation and perception, Memory , Intelligence,
Cognition and Language. Coreq.: 17ORNT151. BoK:SS.
T 17PSYC205. Child Development. 3 ug.cr. Physical, psychological and social development.
Inheritance, learning, emotion, and personality from infancy to adolescence are analyzed. Prereq.:
17PSYC142 or 17PSYC152. BoK:SS.
T 17PSYC206. Adolescent Development. 3 ug.cr. Physical, psychological, and social develop-
ment of the adolescent. Inheritance, learning, emotions, identity, and personality from adolescence
to early adulthood. Prereq.: 17PSYC142 or 17PSYC152. BoK:SS.
T 17PSYC208. Gerontology. 3 ug.cr. A survey of topics in gerontology: Biology of aging,
physiology, psychology, sociology, and philosophy. Prereq.: 17PSYC142 or 17PSYC152.
BoK:SS,SE.
Sociology
T 17SOC141. Introduction to Sociology I. 3 ug.cr. A general survey of the basic concepts and
theoretical perspectives underlying social organization. BoK:SS.
T 17SOC142. Introduction to Sociology II. 3 ug.cr. An examination of social institutions and the
processes of sociocultural changes in contemporary society. Prereq.: 17SOC141. BoK:SS.
T 17SOC271. Racial & Ethnic Groups in the U.S.. 3 ug.cr. An analysis of the theoretical framework
of intergroup relations followed by a sociological examination of the various racial and ethnic groups
which make up the American population. Prereq.: 17SOC141. BoK:SS,DC.
T 17SOC274. Sociology of Conformity and Deviance. 3 ug.cr. An examination of the causes,
patterns, and problems related to social conformity and deviance. Prereq.: 17SOC141.
BoK:SS.
T 17SOC325. Deviance. 3 ug.cr. Sociological perspectives on deviance and control, including
examination of social causes and social reactions to deviance. Prereq.: 17SOC141. BoK:SS.
T 17SOC373. Race in Modern Society. 3 ug.cr. An analysis of the theoretical framework of
intergroup relations followed by a sociological examination of the various racial and ethnic
groups which make up the American population. Prereq.: 17SOC141. BoK:SS,DC.
Transfer Module