
1003. (1 600 3) Introduction to Chemistry
Fundamentals of chemical terms and applications to laboratory studies. Extensive
drills on calculations and use of hand-held calculator in problem solving.
Recommended for thoes with no prior study of chemistry. Corequisite: MATH
0003, MATH 0013, or MATH 1023.
(F, S, SU)
1011. (1 601 4) Laboratory for General Chemistry I Three
hours per week. (Credit for this course is contingent upon earlier or
simultaneous completion of CHEM 1013). (F, S, SU)
1013. (1 601 4) General Chemistry I Study of
chemical reactions and equations, periodic relationships, the gaseous state, and
the fundamentals of atomic theory, quantum theory, electronic structure,
chemical bonding, stoichiometry and thermochemistry. Corequisite: MATH
0013 or MATH 1023. Prerequisite: CHEM
1003 or high school chemistry. (F, S, SU)
1021. (1 602 4) Laboratory for General Chemistry II
Three hours per week. Corequisite or prerequisite: CHEM 1023.
Prerequisite: CHEM 1011 (Credit for this course is
contingent upon earlier or simultaneous completion of CHEM
1023.) (F, S, SU)
1023. (1 602 4) General Chemistry II Study of
liquids, solids, solutions and the fundamentals of chemical kinetics, chemical
equilibria, acids and bases, thermodynamics, and electrochemistry.
Prerequisites: CHEM 1011 and CHEM
1013. (F, S, SU)
English (ENG)
1003. (1 000 3) Freshman English I Study
and practice of fundamentals of written communication including principles of
grammar, punctuation, spelling, organization, and careful analytical reading.
Prequisite, with grade of C or better, for ENG 1013. (F, S)
1013.
(1 001 3) Freshman English II Continues the practice of ENG 1003, to
develop further the skills learned in that course. Based on reading and
discussion of various types of writing, the students' essays will provide
practice in different kinds od rhetorical development including research and
documentation. Prerequisite: complete ENG 1003 with a
grade of C or better. (F, S)
Mathmatics (MATH)
0003 (1 400 3x) Developmental Algebra
(Credit not applicable toward a degree.) Prerequisite: ACT of 16. (F, S, SU)
0013 (1 401 3x) Intermediate Algebra Exponents,
radicals, polynomials, rational expressions, linear equations, functions,
graphs, factoring, introduction to quadratic equations, and related topics.
Prerequisite: High School Algebra I, an 17-18 ACT or a grade of C or better in MATH
0003. (F, S, SU)
1023 (1 402 3) College Algebra (No credit given
if taken following MATH 1054) Prerequisite: High School Algebra II and ACT 19 or
above, or a grade of "C" or better in MATH 0013.
(F, S, SU)
1033 (1 403 3) Plane Trigonometry (No credit
given if taken following MATH 1054) Prerequisite: MATH 1023
or equivalent. (F, S, SU)
1054 (1 405 4) Precalculus Mathematics Selected
topics from algebra, trigonometry, analytical geometry, sets, relations, and
functions. (No credit given if taken following MATH 1023 or MATH 1033.)
Prerequisite: High School Algebra II or a grade of C or better in MATH
0013. (F, S)
2204 (2 420 4) Calculus I Prerequisite: MATH
1033 or MATH 1054 or equivalent. (F, S, SU)
2214 (2 421 4) Calculus II Prerequisite: MATH
2204. (F, S, SU)
3254 (3 425 4) Calculus III Prerequisite: MATH
2214. (F, S, SU)
3243 (3 424 3) Linear Algebra Introduction to vector
spaces, with application to matrix theory. Prerequisite: MATH
2214. (S, SU)
4403 (4 440 3) Differential Equations Topics in
the elementary theory of differential equations, including existence theorems.
Prerequisite: MATH 3254. (F, S)
Physics (PHYS)
2034 University Physics I (Multimedia) Basic
principles of mechanics, thermodynamics, materials and wave motion utilizing
calculus with multimedia computers (at each station) in a unified lecture/lab
format. 6 hours per week. Corequisite: MATH 2204. This course may be
substituted for PHYS 2073 and 2071 or for PHYS 2053 and 2051. (This course
will meet the General Education Requirements for Physical Science.) (F, S, Su)
2044 University Physics II (Multimedia) Continuation
of PHYS 2043 covering the basic principles of electricity, magnetism, waves,
optics and topics from modern physics utilizing calculus with multimedia
computers (at each station) in a unified lecture/lab format. 6 hours per
week. Corequisite: MATH 2214. Prerequisite: PHYS2034 or 2073 and 2071 or
2053 and 2051. This course may be substituted for PHYS 2063 and 2061 or for PHYS
2083 and 2081. (F, S, Su)
2071 Laboratory for Fundamental Physics I
Two hours per week. (Credit for this course is contingent upon earlier or
simultaneous completion of PHYS 2073.) (F, S, SU)
2073 Fundamental Physics I Basic principles of
mechanics, special relativity, thermodynamics, and wave motion utilizing
calculus. Lecture three hours per week. Students enrolling in this course
should enroll in Laboratory for Fundamental Physics I. Corequisite: MATH
2204. (F, S, SU)
2081 Laboratory for Fundamental Physics II Two
hours per week. Prerequisites: PHYS 2071 and 2073
(Credit for this course is contingent upon earlier or simultaneous completion of
PHYS 2083.) (F, S, SU)
2083 Fundamentals Physics II Continuation of
PHYS 2073, covering electricity, magnetism, optics, and modern physics. Lecture
three hours per week. Students enrolling in this course should enroll in
Laboratory for Fundamental Physics II. Prerequisites: PHYS
2071 and 2073. Corequisite: MATH
2214. (F, S, SU)
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