Apr 29, 2024  
2016-2017 General Catalog 
    
2016-2017 General Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

**COURSE SEARCH**


The following is a listing of all courses of instruction offered by departments at LSU. This listing was up-to-date and as correct as possible at the time of publication of this catalog.

Since this catalog was prepared well in advance of its effective date, some courses may have been added, others may have been dropped, and/or changes in content may have been made.

 

Child and Family Studies

  
  • CFS 2050 Family Dynamics (3)


    A systems approach to examining family processes and development throughout the life span.
  
  • CFS 2065 Management of Family Systems and Services (3)


    A systems perspective of contemporary families and their processes including environmental influences, elements of family management and management of school and community resources and services.
  
  • CFS 3055 Development of Young Children in Context (4)


    Also offered as EDCI 3055 . Prereq.: BIOL 1001 . Credit will not be given for both this course and EDCI 3055 . 3 hrs. lecture; 2 hrs. field observations. Development of children from prenatal to age eight in the family and other developmental contexts; field observations with infants and toddlers, observations and practical experience in the School of Human Ecology’s Preschool Laboratory and in other early childhood settings.
  
  • CFS 3056 Young Children’s Cognitive and Linguistic Development (3)


    Also offered as EDCI 3056 . Prereq.: CFS 3055 /EDCI 3055 . Credit will not be given for both this course and EDCI 3056 . An introductory survey of current theory and research on young children’s cognitive and linguistic development; special attention is given to the development of oral language, reading skills and mathematical concepts in young children; emphasis on implications for the early childhood education classroom.
  
  • CFS 3065 Adult-Child Relationships (3)


    Prereq.: CFS 2050  and CFS 3055 .
    Parent-child and other adult-child interactions and relationships; emphasis on the development and interactive nature of adult-child relationships including the influence of adult-child relationships on child outcomes and adult behavior.
  
  • CFS 3067 Field Experience in Child and Family Studies (3)


    Prereq.: CFS 2050  or CFS 2065 . For majors only. 6 hrs. field experience per week. Supervised professional experience designed to integrate academic learning with practice.
  
  • CFS 3090 Professional Seminar in Child and Family Studies (2)


    Prereq.: credit or registration in CFS 3067 . For majors only. Pre-internship seminar.
  
  • CFS 4051 The Adolescent and the Family (3)


    Prereq.: CFS 3055  or equivalent. Growth, development and guidance of the adolescent in the home, family and community.
  
  • CFS 4052 Families: Policy and Law (3)


    Prereq.: POLI 2051  or POLI 2070  or HIST 3071  or equivalent. Marriage and family as legal institutions; history and development of family law principles; overview of the public policy process; emphasis on family policy issues.
  
  • CFS 4064 Family Stress Management (3)


    Prereq.: CFS 2065  or consent of instructor. Strategies used by families to manage stress; current family stress management theory and research.
  
  • CFS 4065 Family Life Education (3)


    Prereq.: Credit or concurrent enrollment in CFS 3065 . Overview of family life education history, philosophy and topics; planning, implementation and evaluation of family life education programs in diverse settings.
  
  • CFS 4067 Internship in Child and Family Studies (8)


    Prereq.: CFS 3090  and 3 cr. hrs. in CFS 3067 . For majors only, senior standing. Application must be made at the school one semester prior to proposed enrollment. 2 hrs. lecture; 12 hrs. practicum. Supervised professional observation and experience in child and family studies.
  
  • CFS 7051 The Contemporary Family (3)


    Also offered as EDCI 7051 . Credit will not be given for this course and EDCI 7051 . Effects of change on family integration; adaptive responses in family lifestyles, roles and relationships to political, social and technological change.
  
  • CFS 7052 Topics and Issues in Family and Consumer Sciences (3)


    Also offered as EDCI 7052 . Credit will not be given for this course and EDCI 7052 . May be taken for a max. of 6 sem. hrs. of credit when topics vary. Lectures and research on topics not covered in other family or consumer science courses.
  
  • CFS 7055 Human Development (3)


    Prereq.: consent of instructor. Also offered as EDCI 7055 . Credit will not be given for both this course and EDCI 7055 . May be taken for a max. of 6 hrs. of credit when topics vary. Dynamics of human development and practical implications.
  
  • CFS 7056 Theories of Child Development (3)


    Also offered as EDCI 7056 . Credit will not be given for both this course and EDCI 7056 . Research and theory in child development; relation to the major domains in the child’s ecology–child development, the family, services and the environment.
  
  • CFS 7057 Theories in Family Science (3)


    Also offered as EDCI 7057 . Credit will not be given for both this course and EDCI 7057 . Historical and contemporary theories and conceptual frameworks in family science.

Chinese

  
  • CHIN 1101 Beginning Mandarin Chinese (4)


    This is a General Education course. Persons with prior knowledge of Mandarin may not take this course for credit. Native speakers of Chinese will not receive credit for this course. Basic lexicon and structure of Chinese; development of speaking and listening skills.
  
  • CHIN 1102 Beginning Mandarin Chinese (4)


    This is a General Education course. Native speakers of Chinese will not receive credit for this course. Basic lexicon and structure; emphasis on communicative language use.
  
  • CHIN 2001 Intermediate Mandarin Chinese (4)


    This is a General Education course. Prereq.: CHIN 1102 . Native speakers of Chinese will not receive credit for this course. Continuation of the study of basic lexicon and structures of Chinese; emphasis on further development of speaking, writing and reading skills.
  
  • CHIN 2002 Intermediate Mandarin Chinese (4)


    This is a General Education course. Prereq.: CHIN 2001 . Native speakers of Chinese will not receive credit for this course. Continuation of the study of basic lexicon and structures of Chinese; emphasis on further development of speaking, writing and reading skills.
  
  • CHIN 2020 Chinese for Travelers (3)


    Credit not applicable to a minor in Chinese. Does not count toward satisfying the foreign language requirement for undergraduates. Basic communication patterns, practical everyday vocabulary, with exercises in comprehension and conversation.
  
  • CHIN 2070 Chinese Cinema (3)


    This is a General Education course. Chinese cinema from 1896 to the present; emphasis on the New Chinese cinema since 1980s; screening and analysis of representative films; knowledge of Chinese not required.
  
  • CHIN 3101 Advanced Chinese (3)


    Prereq.: CHIN 2002  or equivalent. Introduction of authentic materials of increasing complexity on a variety of topics; emphasis on the use of relatively sophisticated structures of vocabulary in complex communication.
  
  • CHIN 3102 Advanced Chinese (3)


    Prereq.: CHIN 3101  or equivalent. Introduction of authentic materials of increasing complexity on a variety of topics; emphasis on the use of relatively sophisticated structures vocabulary in complex communication.
  
  • CHIN 3801 Traditional East Asian Literature (3)


    Also offered as JAPN 3801 . Taught in English; knowledge of East Asian languages not required. Introduction to the genres, themes and representative works of traditional Chinese and Japanese literature; emphasis on critical reading.
  
  • CHIN 3802 Modern East Asian Literature (3)


    Also offered as JAPN 3802 . Taught in English; knowledge of East Asian languages not required. Introduction to the genres, themes and representative works of modern Chinese and Japanese literature; emphasis on critical reading.
  
  • CHIN 4915 Independent Work (1-3)


    May be taken for a max. of 6 semester hours of credit when topics vary. Permission of department required. Directed readings in classical Chinese or Chinese literature. 

Classical Studies

  
  • CLST 2070 Ancient World in the Cinema (3)


    An examination of how the cinema has interpreted the history and myths of Greece and Rome.
  
  • CLST 2080 Women in Antiquity (3)


    Knowledge of Greek or Latin not required. The role of women in Greek and Roman society; readings from historical, legal, medical and religious documents.
  
  • CLST 2090 Greek and Roman Mythology (3)


    Taught in English; knowledge of the Greek and Latin languages not required. Survey of the principal myths of the Greeks and Romans.
  
  • CLST 2092 Greek and Latin Word Study (3)


    No previous knowledge of Greek or Latin required; credit not applicable toward a major in foreign languages. Etymology of common and scientific words derived from Greek and Latin; emphasis on medical terminology.
  
  • CLST 2101 Ancient Greek Civilization (3)


    This is a General Education course. Knowledge of Greek and Latin languages not required. Survey of literature, philosophy, art and culture of ancient Greece from its beginnings to the death of Alexander the Great.
  
  • CLST 2102 Ancient Roman Civilization (3)


    This is a General Education course. Knowledge of Greek and Latin languages not required. A survey of the literature, philosophy, art and culture of ancient Rome from its beginnings to the death of Marcus Aurelius.
  
  • CLST 3020 Classical Epic in Translation (3)


    Knowledge of Greek and Latin languages not required. Growth and development of the Greek and Latin epic; basic themes, the nature of a hero and relevance to modern reader.
  
  • CLST 3032 Greek and Roman Tragedy in English Translation (3)


    Taught in English; knowledge of Greek and Latin languages not required. Drama of Greece and Rome; origins, major examples and relevance; plays of Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides and Seneca.
  
  • CLST 3040 Greek and Roman Comedy in English Translation (3)


    Knowledge of Greek or Latin languages not required. Masters of stage comedy from the ancient world, with special attention to Aristophanes, Menander, Plautus and Terence; origins and growth of comedy as an art form; problems in staging; social nature of comedy in the ancient world.
  
  • CLST 3050 Special Topics in Classical Studies (3)


    May be repeated for a max. of 6 sem. hrs. of credit when topics vary. Taught in English, knowledge of Greek and Latin languages not required.
  
  • CLST 3090 Comparative Mythology (3)


    Also offered as REL 3090 . Introduction to myths from around the world with comparisons to Greek and Roman mythology.
  
  • CLST 4999 Senior Seminar (3)


    Prereq.: four semesters of Greek or Latin or permission of instructor. An examination of the influence of the Classical world on Western culture. Focus on literature, history, politics, art and architecture.

Construction Management

A grade of “C” or better is required in all CM courses.
Registration in any CM course above CM 2101  is restricted to students admitted to a senior college with a declared CM major or minor.

  
  • CM 1011 Introduction to Construction Management (3)


    A survey of the construction industry to include an orientation to essential elements of professional practice and development in construction management.
  
  • CM 1020 Engineering Graphics for Mechanical Engineering (2)


    Credit will not be given for both this course and CM 1030 . Not open to construction management majors. 4 hrs. lab. Conception, visualization and communication of creative design concepts; introduction to engineering drafting and USA Standards Institute standards; freehand sketching; three-dimensional forms used in solution of engineering problems; use of solid modeling software in design and design communication.
  
  • CM 1030 Honors Engineering Graphics (2)


    Same as CM 1020 , with special honors emphasis for qualified students. Credit will not be given for both this course and CM 1020 .
    6 hrs. lab.
  
  • CM 1102 Construction Plan Reading (3)


    2 hrs. lecture; 2 hrs. lab. Principles of graphic communication applied to reading construction plans with emphasis on residential, commercial, industrial, and heavy highway plans.
  
  • CM 2100 Construction Materials and Methods I (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 2101 . Intended for post-baccalaureate leveling for non-CM majors. Principal materials and methods used in building construction, emphasizing common construction systems such as light wood frames, masonry bearing walls, steel frames, and reinforced concrete as well as project planning, work methods, materials, equipment, and sustainability. 
  
  • CM 2101 Construction Materials and Methods I (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 2100 . Prereq.: CM 1011  and CM 1102 . Principal materials and methods used in building construction, emphasizing common construction systems such as light wood frames, masonry bearing walls, steel frames, and reinforced concrete as well as project planning, work methods, materials, equipment, and sustainability.
  
  • CM 2102 Construction Equipment (3)


    Prereq.: CM 2101 . Overview of construction equipment, including economy, selection, and productivity of common construction equipment for commercial, industrial, and heavy civil construction.
  
  • CM 2103 Construction Materials and Methods II (3)


    Prereq.: CM 1102 . Basic fundamentals of materials and methods used in the industrial and highway construction sectors.
  
  • CM 2105 Construction Surveying (3)


    Prereq.: MATH 1550  and CM 1011 . 2 hrs. lecture; 2 hrs. lab. Principles of construction surveying, fundamental measuring procedures, error analysis, leveling, traverse measurements, horizontal curves, vertical curves, and earthwork calculations.
  
  • CM 2215 Construction Safety (3)


    Construction safety relating to accident causation; contractual obligations; project management and coordination.
  
  • CM 2500 Structural Principles and Practices (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 2501 . Intended for post-baccalaureate leveling for non-CM majors. Statics and strengths of materials; design of ordinary timber, steel, and reinforced concrete for construction applications.
  
  • CM 2501 Structural Principles and Practices (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 2500 . Prereq.: MATH 1550  or equivalent, or ARCH 1002  or ARCH 1102 ; and PHYS 2001  or PHYS 2110 .  Statics and strengths of materials; design of ordinary timber, steel, and reinforced concrete for construction applications.
  
  • CM 3110 Construction Estimating (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 3111 . Intended for post-baccalaureate leveling for non-CM majors. Fundamentals of estimating including document review, quantity survey, material, equipment, and labor pricing, and bid package preparation for construction projects.
  
  • CM 3111 Construction Estimating (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 3110 . Prereq.: CM 2102 . 2 hrs. lecture; 2 hrs. lab. Fundamentals of estimating including document review, quantity survey, material, equipment and labor pricing and bid package preparation for construction projects.
  
  • CM 3145 Commercial Estimating (3)


    Prereq.: CM 3111 . 2 hrs. lecture; 2 hrs. lab. Principles of estimating including quantity surveys, pricing analysis, and bid package preparation for commercial projects.
  
  • CM 3165 Highway Construction (3)


    Prereq.: CM 2103 , CM 2105 , and CM 3111 . Basic fundamentals of highway construction including earthmoving, drainage, road paving, bridge and retaining walls, interpretation of plans and specifications, materials, equipment and estimating.
  
  • CM 3200 Mechanical and Electrical Systems (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 3201 . Intended for post-baccalaureate leveling for non-CM majors. For residential and commercial buildings; design and construction of building MEP systems; emphasis on basic terminology, equipment and installation procedures, management of the complete MEP process, code compliance, and quality control issues.
  
  • CM 3201 Mechanical and Electrical Systems (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 3200 . Prereq.: PHYS 2002 . For residential and commercial buildings, design and construction of building MEP systems; emphasis on basic terminology, equipment, and installation procedures; management of the complete MEP process, code compliance and quality control issues.
  
  • CM 3235 Residential Development (3)


    Prereq.: CM 3111 . Introduction to the principles and procedures of residential development. Land development, market research, and residential company start-up practices are explored; focusing on a multi-team based residential project.
  
  • CM 3236 Residential Design Codes and Specifications (3)


    Prereq.: majors only. 2 hrs. lecture; 2 hrs. lab. A study of residential design theory, techniques, and application as it relates to the International Residential Code for one and two family dwellings.
  
  • CM 3355 Maintenance and Turnarounds (3)


    Prereq.: CM 2103 . Principles of industrial maintenance and turnarounds including facility types, process equipment, work order systems, safety, preventive maintenance programs, roles, planning, and facility shutdown concepts.
  
  • CM 3356 Industrial Construction Estimating (3)


    Prereq.: CM 2103  and CM 3111 . 2 hrs. lecture; 2 hrs. lab. Principles of estimating including quantity surveys, pricing analysis, and bid package preparation for industrial construction.
  
  • CM 3502 Construction and Civil Materials (3)


    Prereq.: CM 2501  and CM 2103 . Fundamentals involved in design, evaluation, testing, and construction of asphalt, concrete, aggregates, steel, and wood.
  
  • CM 3503 Soils in Construction (3)


    Prereq.: CM 2105  and CM 3502 . In depth coverage of engineering behaviors of soil, soil testing, and characterization, pore water pressure, stresses in soil, consolidation, excavation support, shear strength of soil, soil investigation and exploration; compaction, and retaining walls, and construction of shallow and deep foundations.
  
  • CM 3504 Applied Structural Design (3)


    Prereq.: CM 2501  ; CM 3503  or ARCH 3001  or ARCH 3101 . Structural design of ordinary timber, steel, and reinforced concrete buildings and other structures in accordance with appropriate design code specifications; emphasis on contemporary design methodologies and provisions to achieve safe and serviceable resistance to vertical and lateral load effects.
  
  • CM 4100 Construction Scheduling and Cost Control (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 4101 . Intended for post-baccalaureate leveling for non-CM majors. Fundamentals of planning and scheduling including network-based schedules, resource scheduling, probabilistic scheduling, and computer applications. Project control emphasis on goals, flow of information, time and cost control, and change management.
  
  • CM 4101 Construction Scheduling and Cost Control (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 4100 . Prereq.: CM 3111 . 2 hrs. lecture; 2 hrs. lab. Fundamentals of planning and scheduling including network-based schedules, resource scheduling, probabilistic scheduling, and computer applications. Project control emphasis on goals, flow of information, time and cost control, and change management.
  
  • CM 4110 Construction Productivity (3)


    Prereq.: CM 4101 . Productivity measurement and improvement; project organization, stakeholders roles, quantifying labor and equipment productivity.
  
  • CM 4202 Construction Enterprise (3)


    Prereq.: CM 3201  or ARCH 3008  or consent of instructor.
    Senior standing; only for graduating seniors in their last semester of coursework.
    A comprehensive study of construction management as it relates to a single construction enterprise.
  
  • CM 4206 Special Topics in Construction Management (3)


    May be taken for a max. of 6 sem. hrs. when topics vary. Advanced topics, current issues or recent developments in the construction industry.
  
  • CM 4207 Independent Study (3)


    Prereq.: consent of a faculty member. May be taken for a max. of 6 sem. hrs. of credit when topics vary. Research on a construction topic as chosen by the student under direct supervision of a chosen faculty member.
  
  • CM 4208 Internship in the Construction Industry (3)


    Prereq.: consent of instructor. Pass/fail grading.
    A minimum of 8 weeks of full-time employment (320 hrs. min.) or a minimum of 16 weeks of part-time employment (320 hrs. min.) by a construction company participating in the CM Internship Program. Selected job positions/descriptions in the construction industry.
  
  • CM 4210 Construction Contracting (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 4211 . Intended for post-baccalaureate leveling for non-CM majors. Principles and theory of construction company ownership and organization, the estimate and bid process, construction contracts, bonds, insurance, business methods and plans, management, administration, labor law and relations, safety, and avoidance of claims.
  
  • CM 4211 Construction Contracting (3)


    Credit will not be given for this course and CM 4210 . Prereq.: junior standing or higher. Principles and theory of construction company ownership and organization, the estimate and bid process, construction contracts, bonds, and insurance, business methods and plans, management, and administration, labor law and relations, safety, and avoidance of claims.
  
  • CM 4221 Construction Project Management (3)


    Prereq.: CM 4101  and CM 4211 . Field management of a project from inception to completion, including personnel needed, business aspects, estimating and bidding aspects, communication, record keeping, monitoring and control of project, risk and claims management, safety, and close out.
  
  • CM 4302 Sustainable Construction (3)


    Prereq.: EVEG 4154  or CM 3502 .
    Credit will not be given for this course and ID 4772 . Green building technologies as it applies to residential, commercial and heavy highway construction. Design and construction of high performance structures. Economical and ecological benefits of green buildings. U.S. green LEED, NAHB green guidelines and Green roads.
  
  • CM 4303 Life Cycle Assessment (3)


    Prereq.: EVEG 4154  or CM 3502 .
    Computational structure and data sources for SETAC LCA, input-output LCA and hybrid LCA as tools selects a superior alternative on the basis of pollution prevention and resource conservation.
  
  • CM 4355 Driven Pile Construction (3)


    Prereq.: senior standing and Construction Management major; or consent of instructor. Materials, construction techniques, and testing procedures used in the driven pile construction industry. Topics include: review of geotechnical parameters and testing methods, crane and hammer equipment selection, common construction practices, pile drivability, pile load testing, and dynamic pile testing.
  
  • CM 4357 Industrial Project Controls (3)


    Prereq.: CM 3356  and CM 4101 . Fundamentals of information management required for effective project control on an industrial construction project; data requirements, data collection, and data processing involved in measuring, evaluating, calculating, and reporting job performance from inception of project through closeout.
  
  • CM 4358 Industrial Electrical Installations (3)


    Prereq.: CM 3201  or ARCH 3008 .  Fundamentals of electrical and instrumentation concepts, systems, plans, and installations relevant to industrial facilities and applications.
  
  • CM 7010 Research Methods in Construction Management (3)


    Prereq.: Graduate standing or permission of instructor. Identification and formation of construction management research problems, design of a research process, research information resources, numerous research methods, data collection and analysis methods, and presentation and dissemination of research results and findings.
  
  • CM 7030 Project Delivery (3)



    Advanced concepts of project delivery, including project delivery systems, associated contractual methodologies, roles and responsibility of parties, feasibility analysis, project documentation, effective project execution, risk management and mitigation, and innovative construction practices.
  
  • CM 7110 Advanced Construction Productivity (3)


    Prereq.: CM 4110  or consent of instructor. A comprehensive systems approach to construction productivity management and advanced improvement methods such as work sampling, crew balance methods, process flow charts, improved project organization, roles of the individual stakeholders, quantifying labor, equipment, and job site productivity, change orders, overmanning, stacking of trades, and other contemporary issues in construction productivity.
  
  • CM 7111 Advanced Construction Scheduling (3)


    Advanced techniques in schedule development and implementation for effective project management during the planning and construction phases of a project, including monitoring, updating, and controlling the project schedule and computer software applications.
  
  • CM 7112 Construction Simulation (3)


    Prereq.: consent of instructor. Decision-making using simulation in the planning and scheduling phases in the construction industry and using simulation languages to model construction operations.
  
  • CM 7150 Decision Making Tools in Construction Management (3)


    Reviewing decision-making techniques that can be used by construction managers to assist in making decisions under uncertainty; decision-making techniques include financial and decision theory techniques along with sensitivity analysis; examples drawn from the construction industry as well as engineering.
  
  • CM 7206 Special Topics in Construction Management (3)


    Prereq.: consent of instructor. May be taken for a max. of 9 sem. hrs. when topics vary. Graduate level advanced topics, current issues or recent developments in the construction industry.
  
  • CM 7207 Independent Study in Construction Management (3)


    Prereq.: consent of instructor. May be taken for a max. of 6 sem. hrs. of credit. Independent study in specialized areas of construction management. Research on a construction topic as chosen by the student under direct supervision of a chosen graduate faculty member.
  
  • CM 7211 Construction Dispute Resolution (3)


    Recognizing the origins of construction disputes, ways to avoid disputes through quality control, communications, and negotiation, and the alternate dispute resolution methods available.
  
  • CM 7213 Soils in Construction (3)


    Prereq.: consent of instructor. An in-depth understanding of geotechnical principles as it applies to soil construction activities.
  
  • CM 7214 Concrete Materials in Construction (3)


    Prereq.: graduate standing or permission of instructor. Portland cement concrete materials as it applies to the construction of pavements and structures. Overview of mix proportioning process; fresh and hardened characteristics of concrete and durability parameters; importance for longevity.
  
  • CM 7220 Building Information Modeling for Construction Management (3)


    Concepts related to the implementation of BIM in construction projects from the perspective of the general contractor; topics include applications of BIM for visualization, marketing, quantity take-off, scheduling, coordination, and facilities management.
  
  • CM 7230 Lean Construction (3)


    Production management-based approach to improve the Architecture/Engineering/Construction (AEC) process and product; lean process foundations, management, measurement, tools/techniques, and practices.
  
  • CM 7250 Natural Hazard Resistant Construction (3)


    Materials, construction techniques, and code requirements used in the construction industry to make buildings resistant to natural hazards, including wind, flood, hurricanes, and other hazards; emphasis on construction practices for residential buildings that are sustainable, long-term solutions to our hazard-filled environment.
  
  • CM 7302 Advanced Sustainable Construction (3)


    Prereq.: consent of instructor. Continuation of CM 4302 . Sustainable construction. Emphasis on Green technologies as it applies to construction projects. LEED, NAHB, Green guidelines, Green roads, Green Lites, etc.
  
  • CM 7303 Environmental Life Cycle Assessment (3)


    Prereq.: CM 4303 , EVEG 4154 , or consent of instructor. Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) as a science-based technique to guide policy and decision-making that enhances sustainability. Computational structure and data sources for SETAC LCA; Input-output LCA and Hybrid LCA as tools to select a superior alternative on the basis of pollution prevention and resource conservation.
  
  • CM 8000 Thesis Research (1-12 per sem.)


    “S/U” grading.

Communication Studies

  
  • CMST 1061 Fundamentals of Communication (3)


    [LCCN: CCOM 1013, 2013, 2113, 2213, 2313, Fundamentals of Communication, Public Speaking, Argumentation and Debate, Interpersonal Communication, Business and Professional Communication] This is a General Education course. The practice of rhetoric, performance studies and communication theory; extensive practical and performance applications of communication skills in addition to lectures and readings.
  
  
  • CMST 2010 Interpersonal Communication (3)


    This is a General Education course. Theories and research in human communication; one-to-one interactions.
 

Page: 1 <- 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16Forward 10 -> 52