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Course Criteria
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
One to three hours per week. Research guidance. May be repeated for credit up to a total of three semester hours.
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1.00 Credits
Master of Arts in Mathematics students who have not completed their thesis and are not enrolled in any other graduate course must enroll in MATH 699 each fall and spring semester until final approval of their thesis. This course is Pass/Fail and does not count towards any graduate degree.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. A study of modern formal logic, including both sentential logic and predicate logic. This course will improve students' abilities to reason effectively. Includes a review of topics such as proof, validity, and the structure of deductive reasoning.
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2.00 Credits
Four hours per week. (One lecture period and a three-hour laboratory period). General information on engineering disciplines, common engineering practices, engineering profession, engineering education, engineering design including creativity and innovation, engineering ethics and engineering opportunities will be provided by the instructor and/or invited professionals. Machine shop practice, model building projects, competitive design-build projects and a term design project will provide hands-on experience for students.
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2.00 Credits
Four hours per week. Principles of two- and three-dimensional visual presentations such as orthographic projection, isometric and perspective drawings, and sectional and auxiliary views. Location and measurements of lines, planes and solids in space will be included. Problems on all topics will be solved in the laboratory periods.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. Prerequisites: MATH 141 and PHYS 151. Analysis of two- and three-dimensional forces, moments, couples and equilibrium of rigid bodies will be covered. Centroids, moments of inertia and friction resistance will be included.
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2.00 Credits
Four hours per week. Application of computers to drafting, production of mechanical, electrical and architectural drawings. AutoCAD and/or other selected software will be used to generate engineering drawings. Laboratory work will include 2-D and 3-D drawing, detailed dimensioning, and assembly and design projects.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. Prerequisites: ENGL 103. Technical report writing, writing methodology for technical papers, memoranda, proposals and letters will be instructed and exercised. The principles of effective public speaking, especially on technical topics, will be covered. Organization and use of audiovisual equipment and PA systems are emphasized. Students are given frequent opportunities to express themselves and be critiqued by their peers and the instructor. Students are required to write a term paper exceeding 6,000 words and to present it to the class at the end of the term.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. Prerequisite: ME 201. Kinematics and kinetics of particles and rigid bodies in plane motion. Newton's formulation, work and energy, and impulse-momentum will be covered. Computer simulation problems will be assigned, and commercial simulation software packages will be demonstrated.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours per week. Prerequisites: ME 201, MATH 300 and MATH 331. Definition and analysis of strain and stress, application to axially-loaded elements, torsion of circular shafts and bending of beams will be covered. Column buckling will be introduced.
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