Apr 23, 2024  
2007-2009 Catalog 
    
2007-2009 Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Courses


Click here  to view the course decriptions

 
  
  • GEOL 4206 - Structural Geology and Tectonics

    Credits: 4
    Study of the principles and causes of deformation of the Earth’s lithosphere. Recognition and analysis of primary and secondary structural features and their bearing on theories concerned with the origin and development of major landscape features, continents, and ocean basins.Prereq: GEOL 2204, 3205, and PHYS 22013 lecture hours 2 lab hours $
  
  • GEOL 4207 - Field Methods

    Credits: 4
    Designed to introduce students to the theory, techniques, and equipment of geologic mapping. Students complete a series of field projects that are based on themes in environmental and economic geology.Prereq: GEOL 4206 or instructor permission.2 lecture hours 5 lab hours $
  
  • GEOL 4311 - Hydrology

    Credits: 4
    Study of the occurrence, distribution, movement, and chemistry of water at and near the Earth’s surface. Characterization of aquifer materials and methods for determining groundwater flow directions and velocities. Consideration of exploitation and degradation of water resources.Prereq: GEOL 1201 and MATH 21103 lecture hours 2 lab hours $
  
  • GEOL 4485 - Senior Project

    Credits: 1-4
    In-depth study of a selected topic in geology, culminating in the preparation of a research paper.Prereq: Senior standing and instructor permission. $
  
  • GEOL 4490 - Seminar in Geology

    Credits: 1-4
    Discussion of advanced topics in geology.Prereq: Junior or senior standing.
  
  • GEOL 4495 - Undergraduate Research

    Credits: 1-4
    Independent Earth science investigation, under the direction of a faculty member.Prereq: Junior or senior standing and instructor permission. $
  
  • GEOL 4999 - Special Topics in Geology

    Credits: 1-4
    Individual or small-group study, under the supervision of instructor, of topics not otherwise available to students.May include a lab.Prereq: Junior or senior standing. $
  
  • GOVT 1101 - National Government

    Credits: 3
    An analysis of the constitutional basis and development of American politics in light of classical democratic theory and contemporary practices. Emphasis on the structures, processes, and functions of the national government.
  
  • GOVT 2240 - Contemporary Political Ideologies

    Credits: 3
    Surveys major political theories, movements, and regimes and how they shape attitudes, beliefs, and political practice of societies across the world.
  
  • GOVT 2250 - Introduction to Political Science

    Credits: 3
    The fundamentals of the field of political science and introductory treatments on the four subfields of the discipline (i.e., political theory, comparative politics, international relations, and American government).This course is required for all social science majors. GEP
  
  • GOVT 2999 - Topics in Government

    Credits: 3
    Individual or small-group study, under the supervision of instructor, of topics not otherwise available to students.Repeatable for credit.
  
  • GOVT 3310 - United States Foreign Policy

    Credits: 3
    The conceptual bases underlying the development of post-World War II foreign policy, its changing concerns, and its various modes of policy implementation in selected cases and geographic areas (e.g., the Cold War, the Third World, and North/South issues).Prereq: GOVT 1101 or 2250
  
  • GOVT 3320 - Third World Politics

    Credits: 3
    The individual and collective study of the causes of development and underdevelopment, crisis politics, and the prospects for the future of nations in Asia, Latin America, and Africa.Prereq: GOVT 2250 or HIST 1140 GEP
  
  • GOVT 3330 - Mass Media Politics

    Credits: 3
    A study of the globalization of the media and its effects on local, national, and international politics; economics; and socialization processes in the United States and other nations.Prereq: GOVT 1101 or 2250
  
  • GOVT 3340 - European Politics

    Credits: 3
    Examines the historical, political, and economic realities of selected nations from an individual and a cross-national perspective with additional attention to the current European Economic Community’s supranational integration development process.Prereq: GOVT 1101 or 2250
  
  • GOVT 3350 - National Policy Issues

    Credits: 3
    Study of the politics of policy formation and implementation by the national government in selected areas (e.g., foreign policy, welfare, political economy, and environment).Prereq:/coreq. GOVT 2250
  
  • GOVT 3360 - Women and Politics

    Credits: 3
    Studies women’s political, social, economic, and legal equality in the United States and abroad.
  
  • GOVT 3370 - Global Politics

    Credits: 3
    Emphasis on international conflict and cooperation, interdependency, and the increasing importance of economic and transnational relations in the contemporary world. A critical examination of a variety of analytic concepts concerning types of international systems and political behavior.Prereq: ENGL 1105 or GOVT 2250 or HIST 1140 GEP
  
  • GOVT 3999 - Special Topics in Government

    Credits: 3
    Individual or small-group study, under the supervision of instructor, of topics not otherwise available to students.Repeatable for credit.Prereq: GOVT 1101 or 2250
  
  • GOVT 4401 - State of the World

    Credits: 3
    A critical analysis of the relationship between humans and their physical environment at the local, regional, and global level. Surveys issues, identifies problems, and examines actual and possible solutions pertinent to this relationship by utilizing an interdisciplinary approach incorporating students’ backgrounds from previous social science courses.Prereq: Junior standing and GOVT 3370
  
  • GOVT 4420 - International Political Economy

    Credits: 3
    Introduces students to thinking about the growing interdependence and complex interrelationships of states, firms, markets and societies. Students learn to evaluate these important changes from the perspectives of realism, liberalism, and conflict theory and to view problems from a multidisciplinary perspective, including economics, political science, and sociology.Prereq: Junior standing and GOVT 3370
  
  • HIST 1110 - American History to 1865

    Credits: 3
    Survey of United States history from the conquest and colonization of the New World to the origins and outcome of the American Civil War.
  
  • HIST 1120 - American History Since 1865

    Credits: 3
    Survey of United States history from the period of Reconstruction to the beginning of the twenty-first century.
  
  • HIST 1130 - World History to 1600

    Credits: 3
    Introduction to the development of human civilizations from their Paleolithic origins through the formation of ancient empires and modern nation states in the Middle East, Africa, Asia, Europe, Oceania, and the Americas by 1600 CE.
  
  • HIST 1140 - World History Since 1600

    Credits: 3
    Introduction to the development of human civilizations from approximately the year 1600 CE to the present, focusing on the growing interaction of cultures and civilizations of the middle East, Africa, Asia, Europe, Oceania, and the Americas.
  
  • HIST 1999 - Topics in History

    Credits: 3
    Individual or small-group study, under the supervision of instructor, of topics not otherwise available to students.
  
  • HIST 2102 - Medieval and Renaissance Europe, 476 to 1517

    Credits: 3
    Survey of European history from the fall of Rome to the start of the Reformation.
  
  • HIST 2103 - Revolutionary Europe 1517-1921

    Credits: 3
    Survey of European history from the start of the Reformation to the end of World War I.
  
  • HIST 2150 - Banned Books

    Credits: 3
    A variable-content course, which examines texts that have been condemned, burned, and reviled throughout history.
  
  • HIST 2203 - Revolutionary Europe

    Credits: 3
    A survey of European history from the French Revolution to the present.
  
  • HIST 2999 - Special Topics in History

    Credits: 3
    Individual or small-group study, under the supervision of instructor, of topics not otherwise available to students.Prereq: HIST 1110 and 1120 or 1130 and 1140 or 2102 and 2103
  
  • HIST 3101 - Ancient History

    Credits: 3
    An examination of ancient civilizations in the West, from Egypt and Sumeria to classical Greece and Rome.
  
  • HIST 3110 - Nazi Germany and Fascist Europe

    Credits: 3
    An examination of fascism and national socialism in its various forms, with an emphasis on Adolf Hitler, World War II, the concentration camps, and genocide.
  
  • HIST 3115 - Women in Medieval Europe

    Credits: 3
    Survey of women’s roles and contributions in the history of Medieval Europe.
  
  • HIST 3130 - History of Russia

    Credits: 3
    Survey of Russian history beginning with the conversion of Russia to Christianity. Emphasis on the history of imperial Russia since Peter the Great, efforts at reform and modernization, the emergence of Russian radicalism, the collapse of the Tsarist state, and the rise and fall of the Soviet Union.
  
  • HIST 3170 - Alternative Religions and Cults

    Credits: 3
    An examination of nontraditional religions, their histories, beliefs, and ethics. Apocalyptic, racist, Eastern, Magickal, Neo-Pagan, Satanic, UFO, and sexual cults are examined.
  
  • HIST 3177 - Early Christianity

    Credits: 3
    Introduction to the main beliefs, doctrines, and heresies of the early orthodox Christians and their opponents.
  
  • HIST 3300 - Colonial American, 1492-1763

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the conquest and colonization of North America from Columbus’s first voyage to the Great Awakening and French and Indian War of the mid-18th century.Prereq: HIST 1110 or 1140
  
  • HIST 3301 - Revolutionary America, 1763-1789

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the causes and consequences of the American Revolution from Pontiac’s War in 1763 to the ratification of the Federal Constitution.Prereq: HIST 1110 or 1140
  
  • HIST 3302 - Early American Republic, 1789-1848

    Credits: 3
    An examination of first decades of United States history from the ratification of the Federal Constitution through the Mexican War.Prereq: HIST 1110 or HIST 1140
  
  • HIST 3303 - Civil War and Reconstruction, 1848-1877

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the Civil War Era from the Mexican War through Reconstruction.Prereq: HIST 1110 or 1140
  
  • HIST 3304 - Gilded Age and Progressive Era, 1877-1920

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era, 1877-1920.Prereq: HIST 1120 or 1140
  
  • HIST 3305 - United States in Depression and War 1920-1945

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the history of the United States from the economic prosperity of the 1920s through the Great Depression and New Deal, ending with U.S. participation in World War II.Prereq: HIST 1120 or 1140
  
  • HIST 3306 - Cold War America, 1945-1992

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the history of the United States from the end of World War II and the development of nuclear weapons through the end of the Cold War during the presidency of George H. W. Bush.Prereq: HIST 1120 or 1140
  
  • HIST 3310 - American Foreign Relations Since 1914

    Credits: 3
    A survey of U.S. Foreign relations since 1914, covering U.S. diplomacy and military actions from World War I through the Cold War and the War on Terror.Prereq: HIST 1120
  
  • HIST 3320 - History of Ohio

    Credits: 3
    A history of the “Buckeye State” from prehistory to the space age, emphasizing economic, social, and political topics.
  
  • HIST 3325 - History of the American South

    Credits: 3
    An examination of major themes and issues in southern history from the Jamestown colony to the present.
  
  • HIST 3340 - Europe and the Rise of the ModernWorld System

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the evolution of industrial and market economies (capitalism) in Europe.Prereq: HIST 1130 or 1140
  
  • HIST 3341 - The U.S. and Modern World System

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the rise of the U.S. as a major world economic and political power. Specific attention is paid to the impact of industrialization on the U.S. and the role of the rest of the world and the American South in U.S. Industrialization.Prereq: HIST 1110 or 1120 or 1130 or 1140 or 3340
  
  • HIST 3346 - History of American Women, 1865-present

    Credits: 3
    An exploration of women’s struggles for equality and control over their lives from post-Civil War era to the present, focused on women’s activism in the public realm.
  
  • HIST 3355 - Ohio River Valley History

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the social, economic, and political history associated with the Ohio River Valley from prehistoric times to the present, with special attention paid to the city of Portsmouth and the tri-state region of Ohio, West Virginia, and Kentucky.
  
  • HIST 3400 - History of Southern Africa

    Credits: 3
    Survey of the African and European experiences in southern Africa from the 17th century to the present. GEP
  
  • HIST 3405 - Premodern East Asia

    Credits: 3
    An entry-level overview of the premodern history of East Asia (China, Korea, and Japan). It provides a broad chronological survey with special attention to interrelationships of intellectual, cultural, political, social, artistic, technological, and economic changes in premodern East Asia up to 1600 C.E.
  
  • HIST 3410 - East Asian History

    Credits: 3
    Survey of the history of East Asia, focusing on China and Japan and mphasizing the past two centuries. GEP
  
  • HIST 3412 - Women in Asian History

    Credits: 3
    Women are represented in multiple roles in a variety of spheres throughout Asian history. This is a comprehensive survey of women in the course of the 3,000 year history of Asia.
  
  • HIST 3430 - Ancient Indian Culture and Society

    Credits: 3
    Through an examination of materials, this course attempts to analyze and understand the history and culture of the Indian subcontinent from 2300 B.C.E. to the present.
  
  • HIST 3431 - Medieval Indian Culture and Society

    Credits: 3
    A study of medieval Indian history and the impact of Islam in India between 700 C.E. – 1947, until the partition and formation of Pakistan.
  
  • HIST 3432 - Gandhi and Modern India

    Credits: 3
    Designed to provide an understanding of the colonial and postcolonial sociopolitical, economic changes in South Asia. Perhaps one of the most influential personalities of this struggle is Gandhi, who changed the course of the national movement through his focus on nonviolence and social reform.
  
  • HIST 3460 - Islamic Religion, Culture, and Civilization

    Credits: 3
    Survey of the cultural legacy of Islam through an integrated look at the religion, social customs, economic practices, arts, and literature. GEP
  
  • HIST 3999 - Special Topics in History

    Credits: 3
    Individual or small-group study, under the supervision of instructor, of topics not otherwise available to students.Prereq: HIST 1110 and 1120 or 1130 and 1140 or 2102 and 2103
  
  • HIST 4101 - History of Medicine

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the history of medicine from prehistory to the modern era. Topics include shamanism and magical methods of healing, exorcism, Chinese acupuncture, classical Greek medicine, and the rise of modern dentistry, obstetrics, surgery, and psychiatry.
  
  • HIST 4110 - Intellectual History

    Credits: 3
    An examination of humanity’s ideas about our cosmos, the earth, and our species from prehistory to the modern era. GEP
  
  • HIST 4111 - Legend, Myth, and Folklore

    Credits: 3
    An examination of legendary and mystical places and beings, the realms and activities of the gods, the demons, and the dead.
  
  • HIST 4174 - History and Practice of Nonviolence

    Credits: 3
    An introduction to the history, theory, and practice of nonviolence with a critical examination of violence.
  
  • HIST 4175 - Terrorism and Crime

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the outlaw and the rebel in history—bandits, guerrillas, terrorists, pirates, Mafias and the police, the spies, and the informants that fight them.
  
  • HIST 4400 - Local and Oral History Research Seminar

    Credits: 3
    A study of the various disciplines and research methodologies associated with local history, with particular attention paid to the practice of oral history.Prereq: HIST 3355 and instructor permission
  
  • HIST 4420 - Middle East in Modern Times

    Credits: 3
    An examination of recent conflicts and turmoil in the Middle East through a concise overview of Middle East history, relationships between today’s turmoil and the development of nationalism and emergence of nation-states, specific conflicts like the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, Arab-Israeli conflict, and the Gulf war. GEP
  
  • HIST 4999 - Special Topics in History

    Credits: 3
    Individual or small-group study, under the supervision of instructor, of topics not otherwise available to students.Separate courses repeatable for credit.Prereq: HIST 1110 and 1120 or 1130 and 1140 or 2102 and 2103
  
  • IDST 1999 - Special Topics in Interdisciplinary Studies

    Credits: 3
    A study of interdisciplinary topics not otherwise available to students.
  
  • IDST 2225 - Civilization and Literature 1

    Credits: 3
    An interdisciplinary introduction to the major thoughts important in the development of western civilization.Prereq: ENGL 1105 GEP
  
  • IDST 2225 - Civilization and Literature 1 (Honors)

    Credits: 3
    An enhanced exploration of important cultural themes in western culture through reading and discussion of major texts in Western culture.Prereq: ENGL 1105 or 1105H GEP
  
  • IDST 2226 - Civilization and Literature 2

    Credits: 3
    An interdisciplinary introduction to the major thoughts important in the development of American civilization.Prereq: ENGL 1105 GEP
  
  • IDST 2226 - Civilization and Literature 2 (Honors)

    Credits: 3
    An enhanced exploration of important cultural themes in American culture through discussion and reading of important American texts.Prereq: ENGL 1105 or 1105H GEP
  
  • IDST 2227 - Civilization and Literature 3

    Credits: 3
    An interdisciplinary introduction to the major thoughts of various non- Western civilizations.Prereq: ENGL 1105 GEP
  
  • IDST 2227 - Civilization and Literature 3 (Honors)

    Credits: 3
    An enhanced exploration of important non-Western cultural themes through discussion and reading of important non-Western texts.Prereq: ENGL 1105 or 1105H GEP
  
  • IDST 3999 - Special Topics in Interdisciplinary Studies

    Credits: 3
    A study of interdisciplinary topics not otherwise available to students.
  
  • IDST 4490 - Senior Seminar

    Credits: 3
    Provides an opportunity for students to place their chosen field of study in an interdisciplinary context with intellectual, ethical, and historical perspectives. The seminar focuses on the synthesis and integration of various concepts by applying them to the analysis and solution of problems chosen in the context of their academic disciplines. Oral and written presentations of a persuasive paper are required.Prereq: Senior standing and all prior requirements, including Ethics (31 semester hours). GEP
  
  • IDST 4490 - Senior Seminar (Honors)

    Credits: 3
    Students engage in extended class discussion of relevant readings for the chosen theme for that semester’s Honors Senior Seminar in addition to meeting the normal requirements of Senior Seminar. Such themes might include the conflict between science and cultural values, different ways of making and validating knowledge claims, or more extensive discussion of what it means to engage in critical thinking.Prereq: Senior standing and all prior requirements, including Ethics (31 semester hours). GEP
  
  • LING 3360 - Language and Linguistics

    Credits: 3
    A comprehensive review of the major language structural subsystems and areas of semantics that constitute language. A discussion of language change, typology, L1 and L2 acquisition, neuro-linguistics, socio-linguistics, dialectology, kinesics, writing systems, origins of language, and animal communication.
  
  • LING 3362 - Patterns of English

    Credits: 3
    A brief examination of English and American dialects, formation of new varieties of English, English pidgins and creoles, men’s vs. women’s speech, questions of English variation and usage. Two-thirds of the course examines English parts of speech and phrase, clause, and sentence patterns and structure.Prereq: LING 3360
  
  • LING 3365 - History of English Language

    Credits: 3
    An examination of the internal and external processes and forces that react with languages to cause language change. An overview of philology and philological processes. Pre- uman (hominid) communication systems and the origin and development of homo sapiens as a species and their language. A review of the Nostratic Period of human development and language, followed by a review of the language, culture, and migrations of the Indo-Europeans. Subsequently a survey of the patterns and events that shaped the English language from the time of the early Germanics to 1800.Prereq: LING 3360
  
  • LING 4452 - Language Acquisition

    Credits: 3
    A systematic study of how human language develops. The course examines what the main factors are that influence language development. Acquisition of dialect vs. standard structure and the transition from a home dialect to a school dialect are central to the course.Prereq: LING 3360
  
  • LING 4455 - English Language in Society

    Credits: 3
    A detailed examination of English language dialects, dialect formation, dialectology, and sociolinguistic patterns, resulting in English language change in progress, style, register, and variation in usage, English social dialects (including men’s and women’s speech), languages in contact, English pidgins and creoles, Black English, and other themes that are appropriate.Prereq: LING 3360
  
  • LING 4490 - Seminar in Linguistics

    Credits: 3
    An individualized studies course in a seminar context. The student selects an approved sub-area of linguistics for study that he/she needs for professional development or is simply interested in. The student shares the results of study in seven themes in the sub-area with the other students, both in the form of a 15-30 minute talk and discussion and a 5 to 15 page written description of the theme’s material.Repeatable for credit.Prereq: LING 3360
  
  • LING 4999 - Special Topics in Linguistics

    Credits: 3
    An individualized linguistic study that is not part of the formal course sequence.Prereq: LING 3360, repeatable for credit.
  
  • MATH 0099 - Fundamental Mathematics

    Credits: 3
    A brief review of the fundamentals of arithmetic, including addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division as applied to integers and rational numbers. Introduces the elementary concepts of basic algebra with emphasis on manipulation of algebraic expressions, solutions to simple equations, graphs, and formula rearrangement.(Does not count toward a degree.)Prereq: Placement
  
  • MATH 1010 - Basic Algebra with Geometry and Applications

    Credits: 5
    A course for students with a good background in arithmatic but little or no background in algebra and geometry. Topics include measurement; area; volume; Pythagorean Theorem; working with linear expressions and equations in numeric, graphic, and symbolic form; solving linear equations; linear models; operations with exponents; roots, radicals, and fractional exponents; radical equations; and polynomial expressions and equations.Prereq: MATH 0099 or placement $
  
  • MATH 1011 - Basic Algebra with Geometry and Applications – Bridge

    Credits: 2
    A study of linear functions through linear modeling of data, polynomial expressions, and operations with exponents including roots, radicals, and solving equations that involve radical equations. Intended for students who took MATH 101 under the quarter system but did not complete MATH 105.This course satisfies the prerequisite for MATH 1020, Intermediate Algebra and Applications, and MATH 1100, Mathematics Core Course.Prereq: MATH 101 (quarter system)
  
  • MATH 1020 - Intermediate Algebra and Applications

    Credits: 3
    A continuation of MATH 1010. Topics include quadratic functions, rational functions, simplifying rational expressions and solving rational equations, systems of linear equations, and right triangle trigonometry.Prereq: MATH 1010 or placement $
  
  • MATH 1100 - Mathematics Core Course

    Credits: 3
    Problem-solving, heuristics, critical thinking, and the collection and interpretation of data. Additional topics included at the discretion of the instructor.Prereq: MATH 1010 or placement $
  
  • MATH 1200 - College Algebra

    Credits: 3
    A study of functions represented algebraically, graphically, numerically, and verbally. Students learn the basic properties of polynomial, rational, exponential, and logarithmic functions. Students learn to use functions and their graphs as tools for modeling.Prereq: MATH 1020 or placement GEP
  
  • MATH 1300 - Precalculus

    Credits: 5
    A study of functions represented numerically, graphically, and symbolically. Students learn the basic properties of linear, polynomial, rational, exponential, and logarithmic and trigonometric functions. Topics also include conditionally defined functions and operations on functions. Students learn to use functions and their graphs as tools for modeling.Prereq: MATH 1020 or placement GEP
  
  • MATH 1301 - Precalculus – Bridge

    Credits: 2
    A study of functions represented numerically, graphically, and symbolically for students who took MATH 131 under the quarter system but did not complete MATH 132. This course satisfies the prerequisite for MATH 2110, Calculus 1. Students learn the basic properties of polynomial, rational, and trigonometric functions.Prereq: MATH 131 (quarter system)
  
  • MATH 1500 - Principles of Statistics

    Credits: 3
    Introduction to the vocabulary, concepts, and presentation of statistics as applied to business, education, and science. Topics include exploring data and describing patterns, sampling and experimentation, planning and conducting a study, normal and sampling distributions, regression analysis, and statistical inference. The course implements the use of technology as a catalyst for critical thinking.Prereq: MATH 1010 or placement GEP
  
  • MATH 1700 - Applied Finite Mathematics

    Credits: 3
    The applications of mathematical models for students in business, economics, and life and social sciences. Models include linear functions, systems of equations, linear programming, matrices, and mathematics of finance. The course implements the use of technology as a catalyst for critical thinkingPrereq: MATH 1020 or placement GEP
  
  • MATH 1900 - Brief Calculus with Applications

    Credits: 4
    An intuitive introduction to differential and integral calculus with an emphasis on applications in business, economics, and life and social sciences.Prereq: MATH 1020 or 1700 or placement GEP
  
  • MATH 2110 - Calculus 1

    Credits: 4
    The first course in the calculus sequence. The main topics are functions, graphs, limits, the derivative and applications of the derivative, properties, interpretations, and applications of the definite integral, the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, basic techniques of anti differentiation.Prereq: MATH 1300 or placement $GEP
  
  • MATH 2111 - Calculus – Bridge

    Credits: 2
    For students who took MATH 201, Calculus 1, under the quarter system and need to complete the prerequisite material needed to be successful in MATH 2120, Calculus 2. The main topics are techniques of antidifferentiation and applications of integrals.Prereq: MATH 201 (quarter system)
  
  • MATH 2120 - Calculus 2

    Credits: 4
    Techniques of antidifferentiation, applications of integrals, elementary differential equations, approximations of definite integrals, improper integrals, sequences, series representations of functions, and convergence of series.Prereq: MATH 2110 or placement $
  
  • MATH 2130 - Calculus 3

    Credits: 4
    Third course in the calculus sequence, covering differential and integral calculus of functions of several variables and the associated analytic geometry. Coordinate systems, basic vector operations, partial differentiation, multiple integrals, parameterized curves and surfaces, line integrals and surface integrals, vector calculus.Prereq: MATH 2120
 

Page: 1 <- 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13