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Course Criteria
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2.00 Credits
This course is designed to develop basic performance and pedagogical skills for woodwind instruments. In addition to performance development, course topics include acoustics, embouchure development, breathing, instrument selection, and basic maintenance and repair. PR: MUS 152, 156 S
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1.00 Credits
The MUS 287-2 sequence, presented in the twelve-station electronic piano lab, develops keyboard musicianship and pedagogical skills for public school teaching. MUS 287 establishes basic keyboard rudiments in a group piano setting for music degree program students with little or no keyboard background. Competencies include playing and sight reading easy piano solos and song accompaniments, scales, chords and transpositions. PR: approved entrance audition for music degree programs F
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1.00 Credits
This course builds on the foundations of MUS 287 with emphasis on public school teaching applications. Competencies include scales, playing/reading solos, and preparation of diatonic accompaniments to songs and instrumental solos. Students are assigned to one of the following groups: A) basic keyboard background or B) intermediate keyboard background. PR: MUS 287 S
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1.00 Credits
This course further develops keyboard musicianship and pedagogical resources established in MUS 288. Materials are expanded to include harmonies, greater use of minor mode, leading a school music class and accompanying performances. Students are assigned to one of two skill level groups appropriate to their performance concentration and background. PR: MUS 288 F
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3.00 Credits
This course is a general introduction to the study of materials: metals, ceramics, polymers, and electronic materials. This course investigates the relationship between bonding, structure (crystals and microstructure) and properties of these materials. It examines some elementary principles of thermodynamics as they apply to materials, mechanical properties of materials, and the electronic, optical and magnetic properties of materials.
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces students to the field of nanoscale materials. Nanoscale materials have chemical and physical properties that are significantly different from those of bulk materials. At the end of the course, students should also be able to appreciate the underlying principles of the resulting size-dependent properties and the processing and fabrication of these materials at the molecular level. This course will cover the structure and properties of a variety of nanoscale materials. In addition, this course will cover the syntheses and assembly of nanoscale materials based on top-down and bottom-up approaches. The major and potential applications of nanodevices made from nanoscale materials will also be discussed. PR: NMT 150, CHM 121 CR: PHY 154
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3.00 Credits
Vacuum science and technology have evolved significantly over the past thirty years and are now indispensable to various fields of scientific research and industry. This hands-on laboratory course will provide an introduction to vacuum equipment and instrumentation and will consist of three major parts: 1) the basics of various pumps, including rotary pumps, dry pumps, turbo pumps, and cryo pumps; 2) the physical and chemical principles underlying the design and use of high vacuums; and 3) vacuum measurements, leak detection, calibration and standards, and safety issues related to vacuum equipment. PR: PHY 154, CHM 121, NMT 150 or appropriate industrial experience
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3.00 Credits
This hands-on laboratory course will introduce thin film deposition processes, measurements, and controls in a high-tech manufacturing environment. Advanced applications such as superconductor and semiconductor processes will be used to illustrate the fundamentals of thin film deposition processes. Physical vapor deposition and chemical vapor deposition will be compared and contrasted. Key measurements in thin film deposition processes and properties, both during and after deposition, will be illustrated. Process and quality controls in manufacturing will be discussed. PR: PHY 154, CHM 121, NMT 150 or appropriate industrial experience CR: NMT 152, NMT 225
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to the law and legal system of the United States and the individual states. It first examines the roles of the participants from lawmakers and judges to attorneys, legal assistants and litigants. Ethical considerations for these parties are also discussed. Sources of law and the part played by each branch of government in producing law is analyzed. Broad areas of substantive law relating to contracts, torts, crimes, property and personal rights are examined, with the focus on constitutional, statutory and common law developments in these areas. F, S
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3.00 Credits
This course is designed to equip students with the skills necessary to accurately and efficiently research virtually any topic in the law. In addition to providing a background for understanding the tools used, students are taught the fundamental techniques of how to find applicable legal principles and authority among primary and secondary sources of law. Methods for updating the law, through the use of Shepard's Citations and other tools, are presented so that the legal research product will be accurate and timely. PR: PAL 111 F, S
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