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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
(Meets MnTC Goals 6 and 7) Focuses on American literature from approximately 1865 to the present. Readings will include short fiction and poetry, but may also include novels, plays, essays, and other creative non-fiction. Students will gain a sense of the historical and cultural significance of the literature and will analyze, interpret, and evaluate the literary works. (Successful completion of ENGL 1121 is recommended.)
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3.00 Credits
(Meets MnTC Goals 1 and 6) Prerequisite: Grade of C or better ENGL 1121 Opportunity for advanced writers to study the theory of and to practice the writing of fiction and poetry. Students will be instructed in contemporary aesthetics, genre, and craft with emphasis on individual creative effort and writing for a public audience.
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3.00 Credits
(Meets MnTC Goals 1 and 6) Prerequisite: Grade of C or better in ENGL 1121 Opportunity for writers to analyze and write literary non-fiction. Students will be instructed in contemporary aesthetics, genre, and craft with emphasis on individ-ual creative effort and writing for a public audience. Students will explore creative non-fiction in various genres, including new and literary journalism, nature and travel writing, and contemporary memoir writing.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Two courses in English successfully completed Designed to offer the student the opportunity to do extensive programming or research on a specific topic in English.
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2.00 Credits
Introduction to the engineering profession. Historical and global perspectives, engineering disciplines and functions, professional and ethical aspects of engineering, creativity, and innovation. Basics of computers will be introduced. Methods of problem solving and an introduction to the concept of engineering design.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MATH 1201 or concurrent enrollment Introduction to engineering graphics. Topics include: pencil sketches, standards of engineering drawings, multiview drawings, auxiliary drawings by rotations, and computer-aided design using Pro/ENGINEER.
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisites: MATH 1400 and PHYS 1327 or concurrent enrollment Introduction to the fundamentals of digital circuit analysis and design. Covers logic gates, Boolean algebra, Karnough Maps, mathematical operations, flip-flops and counters. Laboratory included.
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisites: MATH 1401 and PHYS 1327 Physical principles underlying the modeling of circuit elements: Kirchhoff's laws, mesh and nodal analysis, source transformations, superposition, Thevenin's and Norton' theorems, transient R-L-C circuit analysis, sinusoidal steady state analysis, power. Electronics topics include diodes, transistors, and operational amplifiers. Laboratory included
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Grade of C or better in ENGR 2219 or equivalent A continuation of Linear Circuits: polyphase circuits, complex power, magnetically coupled circuits, two-port networks, Laplace transforms, Fourier analysis, and Fourier transforms, electronic filters, high-frequency response of diodes, transistors, and amplifiers. Laboratory included.
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2.00 Credits
Prerequisites: MATH 1400 and PHYS 1327 or concurrent enrollment Introduction to the fundamentals of digital circuit analysis and design. Covers logic gates, Boolean algebra, Karnaugh Maps, mathematical operations, and combinational logic circuits. Laboratory included.
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