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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Study of a specific genre or topic in world literature: its characteristics and significance as both a cultural product and a form of literary expression. Title and topic will vary from year to year. Credit, 3 semester hours. PREREQ: "C" grade or better in ENG 1050 and 1060.
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3.00 Credits
A critical study of a specific literary period, genre, or topic. Title and topic will vary from offering to offering. Credit, 3 semester hours. PREREQ: ENG 3040 or permission of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
A creative writing course emphasizing in-depth study of a specific genre or topic. Workshop format. Credit, 3 semester hours. PREREQ: ENG 2780 or 2790.
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3.00 Credits
Study in a small group setting of particular figures or topics in British, American, or World Literature. As part of the seminar experience, each student must make presentations, contribute to class discussion, and write an extended essay incorporating library sources. Credit, 3 semester hours. PREREQ: ENG 3040 or permission of instructor; upper division standing in the University.
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3.00 Credits
Intensive study of a theme or issue in composition, rhetoric, or professional writing. May be repeated as subject matter changes. Credit, 3 semester hours. PREREQ: One previous writing course at the 3000 level or above.
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3.00 Credits
A study of environmental science emphasizing the impact that an increasing human population has on the biosphere. The course deals specifically with the demands placed by humans on natural resources and the resulting acceleration of environmental deterioration, human attitudes toward the environment, and techniques and policies by which resources could be intelligently managed. Does not fulfill a BIO elective. Lecture. Credit, 3 semester hours.
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4.00 Credits
An introduction to the theory and practice of field botany, with emphasis placed on higher plants. Topics covered will include basic taxonomy, collection of field data, monitoring of the physical environment, census/sampling techniques, physiological and population ecology, and a general treatment of the plant communities of North Carolina. Lecture and Laboratory. Credit, 4 semester hours.
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4.00 Credits
An introduction to the theory and practice of field zoology, with emphasis on vertebrates. Topics covered will include basic identification and taxonomy, collection of field data, monitoring of the physical environment, census/sampling techniques, physiological and population ecology, and mathematical modeling. Lecture and Laboratory. Credit, 4 semester hours.
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4.00 Credits
An introduction to the microorganisms of terrestrial and aquatic ecosystems. Emphasis will be placed on microbes that are important in ecosystem functions such as decomposition, nutrient cycling, and mutualistic relationships, as well as microbes that serve as indicators of water quality or environmental health. Lecture and Laboratory. Credit, 4 semester hours.
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4.00 Credits
An introduction to the ecology of ponds, lakes, streams, and rivers. Topics covered include plant and animal communities, abiotic factors affecting these communities, water chemistry, sampling/ monitoring techniques, and management strategies for aquatic ecosystems and adjacent watersheds. Lecture and Laboratory. Credit, 4 semester hours.
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