CWL 202 Literature and Ideas

Submitted by admin on Tue, 11/30/2021 - 16:12

Analysis of several important world-views in Western civilization (such as classical, Romantic, modern, and so forth), studied comparatively and in relation to selected figures in Western literature.

Prerequisite: CWL 241 and CWL 242; or one year of college literature; or consent of instructor.

This course satisfies the General Education Criteria for:

Cultural Studies - Western
Humanities – Lit & Arts

CS 475 Formal Models of Computation

Submitted by admin on Tue, 11/30/2021 - 15:27

Finite automata and regular languages; pushdown automata and context-free languages; Turing machines and recursively enumerable sets; linear-bounded automata and context-sensitive languages; computability and the halting problem; undecidable problems; recursive functions; Chomsky hierarchy; computational complexity. Course Information: Same as MATH 475. 3 undergraduate hours. 3 or 4 graduate hours. Prerequisite: CS 373.

CS 412 Introduction to Data Mining

Submitted by admin on Tue, 11/30/2021 - 15:25

Concepts, techniques, and systems of data warehousing and data mining. Design and implementation of data warehouse and on-line analytical processing (OLAP) systems; data mining concepts, methods, systems, implementations, and applications.

3 undergraduate hours. 3 or 4 graduate hours. Prerequisite: CS 225.

CS 225 Data Structures

Submitted by admin on Tue, 11/30/2021 - 15:23

Data abstractions: elementary data structures (lists, stacks, queues, and trees) and their implementation using an object-oriented programming language. Solutions to a variety of computational problems such as search on graphs and trees. Elementary analysis of algorithms.

Prerequisite: CS 125 or ECE 220; One of CS 173, MATH 213, MATH 347, MATH 412 or MATH 413.

Students must register for one lecture-discussion and one lecture section.

CS 101 Intro to Computing: Engrg&Sci

Submitted by admin on Tue, 11/30/2021 - 15:20

Fundamental principles, concepts, and methods of computing, with emphasis on applications in the physical sciences and engineering. Basic problem solving and programming techniques; fundamental algorithms and data structures; use of computers in solving engineering and scientific problems. Intended for engineering and science majors.

Prerequisite: MATH 220 or MATH 221.

Students must register for one lab-discussion and one lecture section. Engineering students must obtain a dean's approval to drop this course after the second week of instruction.

CHEM 105 General Chemistry Lab Ⅱ

Submitted by admin on Tue, 11/30/2021 - 15:09

Laboratory studies to accompany CHEM 104.

Additional fees may apply. See Class Schedule. Credit is not given for both CHEM 105 and CHEM 205. Prerequisite: CHEM 102 and CHEM 103; credit or concurrent registration in CHEM 104 is required.

CHEM 105 is the laboratory course that accompanies CHEM 104. Engineering students must obtain a dean's approval to drop this course after the second week of instruction. CHEM 104 and CHEM 105 are approved for General Education credit only as a sequence. Both courses must be completed to receive Natural Science and Technology credit.

CHEM 104 General Chemistry Ⅱ

Submitted by admin on Tue, 11/30/2021 - 15:05

Lecture and discussions. Chemistry of materials, including organic and biological substances, chemical energetics and equilibrium, chemical kinetics, and electrochemistry.
Credit is not given for both CHEM 104 and CHEM 204. Prerequisite: CHEM 102 or CHEM 202 or advanced placement credit for one semester of college-level chemistry.

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