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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Systems engineering best practices prescribe a set of methodologies for architecting and designing complex systems. This course covers requirements analysis, functional analysis and allocation, and synthesis and their interaction with systems analysis and control functions, including system trades, management of risk, configuration, interfaces and data, and development of performance measures. The lectures are complemented by a class design project to architect a complex system leading to development of a functional and physical architecture and associated functional and allocated baselines.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Specialty topics in systems engineering, such as requirements, management, specialty engineering (i.e., reliability, manufacturability, survivability, etc.), risk management, and system integration and verification. Cr. 1-3.
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4.00 Credits
Courses in the fundamentals of Russian, both written and spoken, for beginners. Drill in pronunciation, fundamental grammatical structures of the language, and readings of easy materials. Extensive practice in spoken Russian. Cr. 4.
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4.00 Credits
Courses in the fundamentals of Russian, both written and spoken, for beginners. Drill in pronunciation, fundamental grammatical structures of the language, and readings of easy materials. Extensive practice in spoken Russian. Cr. 4.
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3.00 Credits
Review of first-year materials. Intermediate morphological and syntactic pattern of modern Russian. Drills in classroom and audio laboratory, written exercises, and reading in modern fiction and nonfiction. Extensive practice in spoken Russian.
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3.00 Credits
Review of first-year materials. Intermediate morphological and syntactic pattern of modern Russian. Drills in classroom and audio laboratory, written exercises, and reading in modern fiction and nonfiction. Extensive practice in spoken Russian.
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3.00 Credits
Nature of interpersonal relationships, societies, groups, communities, and institutional areas such as the family, politics, education, the economy, and religion. Includes social process operating within these areas; significance for problems of social change, and social stratification. Cr. 3.
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3.00 Credits
Major social problems in areas such as the family, religion, economic order, crime, mental disorders, civil rights; racial, ethnic, and international tensions. Relation to structure and values of larger society. Although no prerequisite is required, it is strongly recommended that students have some previous social science course work and/or familiarity with basic sociological concepts and methodology. Cr. 3.
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3.00 Credits
Specific topics to be announced, e.g., social stratification, formal organizations, urban social organization, education, religion, politics, demography, social power, social conflict, social change, comparative social systems, race and ethnic relations, rural sociology, urban sociology, and work reorganization. May be repeated; however, only six hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor. Cr. 3.
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3.00 Credits
Specific topics to be announce, e.g., crime, juvenile delinquency, law enforcement, corrections, mental illness, sexual deviance, drug use, and violence. May be repeated; however, only six? hours may be applied to the requirements of the sociology major or minor. Cr. 3.
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