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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
3-3-4 Offered Spring and Summer Semesters Prerequisite: EET 145 This course is a study of binary numbers; microprocessor operations, architecture, instruction sets and interfacing with operating systems; and applications in control, data acquisition, data reduction and analysis. Programs are written and tested.
Prerequisite:
EET 145
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1.00 Credits
0-3-1 Offered Spring Semester Prerequisite: EET 251 or permission of academic program director This course includes the construction and testing of an instructor-approved project. This is an opportunity for the student to do a self-paced independent research, design, and construction of a project of the individual's choice. A written report is required.
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1.00 Credits
0-3-1 Offered Fall, Spring, and Summer Semesters Prerequisite: Placement into RDG 100 and MAT 101 Co-requisite: COL 103 This course is an overview of a variety of technical careers in the industrial and engineering technologies and the technical skills required for each. Students will evaluate different career paths through courses, guest speakers, and site visits. Students will also assess their aptitude and abilities through standardized tests to choose a technology major that best fits their ability and personal goals.
Prerequisite:
Placement into RDG 100 and MAT 101
Corequisite:
COL-103
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3.00 Credits
2-3-3 Offered Fall, Spring, and Summer Semesters Prerequisite: MAT 105 Co-requisite: RDG 100 This course covers the development and use of computer programs to solve engineering technology problems, including spreadsheets, databases, word processing and operating systems. Analytical problem solving using calculators and computers as preparation for physics and statics courses is also covered.
Prerequisite:
MAT 102
Corequisite:
RDG-100
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3.00 Credits
2-3-3 Offered Fall and Spring Semesters Co-requisites: ENG 101 and MAT 105 or suitable math placement This course is a study of the properties, material behaviors, and applications of materials used in engineering structures and products. The mechanical properties and the classification systems of metals, ceramics, plastics and composites are covered. Studies start with the forces that bind atoms together and proceed up through crystal structure to macroscopic properties. Includes techniques for improving the strength of materials, with heavy emphasis on the heat treatment of steel.
Prerequisite:
MAT 101 or higher math
Corequisite:
ENG-101, MAT-102
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3.00 Credits
2-4-3 Offered Spring and Summer Semesters Prerequisite: EGR 130 Pre or Co-requisites: ENG 101 and MAT 110 (prerequisite preferred) Co-requisite: EGR 210 or EGR 275 or other department head approved CAD course (required) This course includes the processes, alternatives, and operation in the manufacturing environment. The most important methods used by modern industry to convert materials into useful shape, including numerous variants of casting, forging, rolling, extruding, pressing and sintering, molding, joining, machining and grinding. Emphasis will be placed on types of parts for which each process is best suited.
Prerequisite:
Pre- or Co-requisites: ENG 101 and MAT 110 (prerequisitepreferred)Co-requisite: EGR 210 or EGR 275 or EGT 152 or otherdepartment head approved CAD course (required)
Corequisite:
EGR-275, EGT-152, EGR-210
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4.00 Credits
2-6-4 Offered Fall, Spring, and Summer Semesters Prerequisite: PHY 201 Pre- or Co-requisite: MAT 111 (prerequisite preferred) This course covers external and internal forces in structures and/or machines, including conditions of equilibrium, systems of force, moment of inertia and friction. It also covers the stress/strain relationships in materials, centroids, shear and moment diagrams, bending stresses and shear stresses with application to size determination of components under various loading conditions.
Prerequisite:
PHY 201 Pre- or Co-requisite: MAT 111 or MAT 179 (prerequisitepreferred)
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3.00 Credits
2-3-3 Offered Spring and Summer Semesters Prerequisites: MAT 240, PHY 222 This course is an introduction to control volumes, conservation laws of mass, momentum, and energy. Concepts of work and heat are introduced, including rate forms. Knowledge and skills will be developed that allow the solution of problems through application of conservation principles in combination with appropriate models of the behavior of pure substances. This transfer course is primarily intended for engineering students.
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3.00 Credits
2-3-3 Offered Fall and Spring Semesters Prerequisites: EGR 260, MAT 240 Co-requisites: EGR 206, MAT 242 (required) This course is a study of the relationships between external loads on solid bodies and the resulting internal effects and dimension changes, including the derivation of rational formulas for stresses and deformations. This transfer course is primarily intended for engineering students.
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3.00 Credits
2-3-3 Offered Fall and Spring Semesters Prerequisite: CHM 110 Co-requisite: MAT 141 (required) This course studies the relationships between a material's structure, processing, and properties (electrical, mechanical, and thermal). All levels of structure are considered from gross structures easily visible to the eye through electronic structure of atoms. This transfer course is primarily intended for engineering students.
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