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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
3 hrs. (Two, 1-hour lectures and one 3-hour lab) A systematic study involving classification reactions and physical properties of organic compounds and their identification. Reactions of various functional groups, along with solubility measurements, are used to elucidate structural features of compounds. Instrumental methods such as infrared, nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy, gas chromatography, and mass spectrometry are used as supplementary identification techniques. Prerequisites: CHE 221 and CHE 221L; and CHE 302 and CHE 302L ( Offered as needed)
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3.00 Credits
- 3hrs. This course will provide a detailed understanding into the transition metal organometallic chemistry. It will develop the student's understanding in bonding theory, synthesis and reactivity of sigma - bonded alkyls and aryls, metal carbonyls, and pibonded organic ligands such as alkenes, alkynes, allyls, and arenes. Applications of organometallic complexes in organic synthesis and industrial catalysis. Credit for this course will be counted toward the degree requirement. Prerequisites: CHE 301, 301L, CHE 302, 302L, CHE 303. ( Offered Spring Semester).
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2.00 Credits
- 2 hrs: Study of construction industry practice emphasizing business organizations and management techniques and career opportunities. Topics include organizational environments, decision making, design, technology, leadership, and basic construction management including terminology, quantity take-offs, estimating, planning, scheduling and inspection. Occasional field trips required. Prerequisites: None ( Offered Fall)
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2.00 Credits
- 2 hrs: Introduction to basic construction materials, to their properties in place in completed projects and to their characteristics that affect construction processes. Overview and study of the principal construction materials used within the construction industry: concrete, masonry, metals, woods, thermal materials, finishes, construction equipment, and specialties. Labs and field trips are required. Prerequisites: None ( Offered Fall)
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3.00 Credits
- 3 hrs: The students will be exposed to the whole spectrum of construction blueprint reading-from what a blueprint is to how to make use of a set of plans. The students will learn the proper meaning of the construction symbols, abbreviations, and keynotes common to construction for all trades; the difference in the plan groups and how they are applied to a project; how to associate plans, sections, and details on blueprints to get a better understanding of the object(s) noted; and how to determine the coordination of the plans and how to reference the plans to each other. Prerequisites: None ( Offered Spring)
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3.00 Credits
- 3 hrs: Detailed unit price cost estimating including quantity takeoff, labor, material, mechanical and electrical systems, equipment unit pricing and computer-aided estimation applications. The course will also examine bidding strategies, worker and equipment productivity, and value engineering. Prerequisites: CMG 105 and CMG 110 ( Offered Spring)
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3.00 Credits
- 3 hrs: Introduction to the techniques, methods, and materials of building and road construction. Excavation, foundations, framing, masonry, roofing, finishing, and mechanical, electrical, and plumbing systems are covered. Prerequisites: TGC 217, TGC 218, CE 201, CMG 105 and CMG 110 ( Offered Fall)
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2.00 Credits
- 3 hrs: Properties of concrete, masonry, metals, woods, thermal materials and hot mix asphalt. Construction materials testing and inspection procedures in laboratory and field situations using standard testing equipment, methods and field inspection techniques. Testing concrete, steel, wood, soils, aggregate, asphalt and masonry materials and samples relative to ASTM testing standards, laboratory reports, computer analysis, data collection and simulated field inspections. Two hours lecture and 2 hours lab. Prerequisites: CMG 105, TGC 217 and TGC 218 ( Offered Fall)
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3.00 Credits
- 3 hrs: Study the fundamentals of planning and scheduling of construction projects. Introduction to all of the aspects and techniques of scheduling such as precedence diagrams, activity durations, contract provisions, resource allocation and leveling, money, project monitoring and control, computer scheduling, CPM and PERT methods, earned value, productivity, litigation, short-interval schedules, linear scheduling, arrow diagrams and, scheduling using Primavera and Microsoft projects. Prerequisites: CMG 110, CMG 300 ( Offered Fall)
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2.00 Credits
- 3 hrs: Study of origin, formation, classification, identification and subsurface exploration of soil. Physical and mechanical properties of soils, shear strength, consolidation, settlement, lateral earth pressure and bearing capacity. Introduction to foundation analysis. Two hours lecture and 2 hours lab. Prerequisites: TGC 217 and TGC 218 ( Offered Fall)
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