Mar 29, 2024  
2012-2013 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2012-2013 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


      Courses numbered from 101–299 are lower-division courses, primarily for freshmen and sophomores; those numbered from 300–499 are upper-division courses, primarily for juniors and seniors. The numbers 296, 396, 496, and 596 designate individual study courses and are available for registration by prior arrangement with the course instructor and approval of the department chair.

The number in parentheses following the course title indicates the amount of credit each course carries. Variable credit courses include the minimum and maximum number of the credits within parentheses.

Not all of the courses are offered every quarter. Final confirmation of courses to be offered, information on new courses and programs, as well as a list of hours, instructor, titles of courses and places of class meetings, is available online in Safari which can be accessed through the Wildcat Connection, and go to www.cwu.edu/registrar/course-information. The registration handbook will assist you in navigating through Safari and is available online at www.cwu.edu/registrar, click on Registration Handbook and then 2012-2013 Registration Handbook, a copy is also available in Registrar Services or your university center office.    

 

FCS: Housing and Interiors

  
  • FCSH 465 - History of Housing and Furniture II


    Description:
    Survey of historic interiors, cabinetmakers, decorative arts, furniture from the late 1700s to the present.

    Credits: (3)

  
  • FCSH 466 - Housing Issues


    Description:
    Cultural factors and social responsibility in housing; evaluating special needs in space planning; economic/environmental issues in family and group housing.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • FCSH 467 - Furnishings


    Description:
    The different manufacturing and marketing processes of furniture will be explored. Underlying concepts and preparations of documents used by designers for furniture purchases and resale.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FCSH 480 - Kitchen Design


    Description:
    Fundamental skills and knowledge are applied to a design problem related to functional, structural, and aesthetic qualities of interior environments, specifically residential kitchen design.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FCSH 392.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • FCSH 485 - Residential Lighting


    Description:
    Students will be introduced to the lighting and electrical systems that affect the interior environment and acquire a working knowledge of architectural lighting planning and electrical drawings.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FCSH 392.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • FCSH 491 - Workshop


    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FCSH 492 - Housing Practicum


    Description:
    A work study course including practical experience in a phase of housing of the student’s choice, accompanied with a seminar.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FCSH 265.

    Credits: (6-12)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated up to 12 credits.
  
  • FCSH 498 - Special Topics


    Credits: (1-6)

  
  • FCSH 499 - Seminar


    Credits: (1-5)


Film & Video Studies

  
  • COM 431 - Editing for Television and Film


    Description:
    History, concepts, and techniques of editing for film and television. Hands-on learning by editing diverse scenes using Final Cut software. Combination of lecture and lab.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: COM 341, COM 315, and admission to either the film & video studies, or the broadcast journalism major.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • FVS 250 - Introduction to Film and Video Studies


    Description:
    Overview of film and video studies, including film viewing and analysis, motion picture language, film genres, and production aspects. Emphasis on the social context, cultural influences, and aesthetic qualities of film.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: ENG 101 with a grade of C- or higher.

    Credits: (5)

    General Education Category
    AH-Aesthetic Experience (W)
  
  • FVS 489 - Senior Colloquium


    Description:
    Students prepare end-of-major portfolios, which illustrate the competence in critical and theoretical analysis of film and video production.

    Credits: (2)

    Grading Basis
    Grade will either be S or U.
  
  • Learning Agreement Forms

    FVS 490 - Cooperative Education


    Description:
    Practical experience in career fields in Film and Video Studies. Individual contract field experience with business, industry, government, or non-profit organization. Requires a student learning plan, cooperating employer supervision, and faculty coordination.

    Credits: (1-12)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for a total of 12 credits.
    Grading Basis
    Grade will either be S or U.
  
  • FVS 491 - Workshop


    Credits: (1-6)

  
  • FVS 492 - Practicum


    Description:
    Practice planning instruction, teaching, and assessing learning.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: major status and program director approval.

    Credits: (2)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
    Grading Basis
    Grade will either be S or U.
  
  
  • FVS 498 - Special Topics


    Credits: (1-6)

  
  • FVS 499 - Seminar


    Credits: (1-6)


Finance

  
  • FIN 364 - Personal Finance


    Description:
    Broad spectrum course covering financial issues encountered by individuals throughout their lives. Topics include but are not limited to: Preparing a personal budget, money management, investments, retirement planning, and insurance. This course cannot be used as a College of Business upper division course.  Those students desiring to use this as a general elective course outside the College of Business requirements please e-mail cbadvising@cwu.edu.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FIN 370 - Introductory Financial Management


    Description:
    An introduction to financial decision making. Topics include financial statement analysis, time value of money, risk and return, securities valuation, capital budgeting, cost of capital, and capital structure.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: admission to a business, accounting, or economics major with a specialization in general economics, managerial economics, or economic and business forecasting, or an actuarial science major who has completed ACCT 251, ECON 201, MATH 172, MATH 173, and BUS 221 or MATH 311 with grades no lower than a C (2.0). MATH 311 may be taken concurrently.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FIN 466 - Working Capital Management


    Description:
    Course covers the management of current assets and current liabilities, describes the nature and types of short-term credit instruments, and incorporates a significant use of Excel.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FIN 370.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FIN 470 - Intermediate Financial Management


    Description:
    A review, consolidation, and extension of the FIN 370 class. Additional focus on the theory, practice, and analysis of the firm’s investing and financing activities as these activities relate to the value creation process.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: FIN 370 and admission to a business administration or accounting major.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FIN 474 - Personal Financial Planning


    Description:
    Introduction to full range of financial planning decisions, including: budgeting, investing, tax planning, risk management, employee benefits, retirement, and estate planning.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: FIN 370 and admission to the business administration or accounting major.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FIN 475 - Investments


    Description:
    Principles of investment valuation. Topics include a survey of securities and securities markets, analysis of risk, expected return, timing, and selection of stocks and bonds in a portfolio context.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: FIN 370 and admission to a business administration, accounting, or actuarial science major.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FIN 476 - Advanced Investments


    Description:
    Portfolio theory, construction, and administration. Cases may be used to analyze key investment decisions and to relate theories and concepts to real-world situations.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: FIN 475 and admission to a business administration or accounting major.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FIN 477 - International Finance


    Description:
    Financial decision making in an international setting. Explores both traditional areas of finance and recent innovations in financial management from the perspective of the multinational corporation.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: FIN 370 and admission to a business administration or accounting major.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FIN 478 - Management of Financial Institutions


    Description:
    Asset-liability management process; investment and financing activities of banks, savings and loans, and credit unions.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: FIN 370 and admission to a business administration or accounting major.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • FIN 479 - Derivative Securities and Risk Management


    Description:
    Survey of characteristics, markets, and pricing of options, futures, and other derivative securities and their use in managing risk for large and small businesses and investors, domestically and internationally.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: FIN 370 and admission to a business administration or accounting major.

    Credits: (5)


World Languages

  
  • FR 380 - Topics in French Language, Literature and Culture


    Description:
    This course will offer different topics on a rotating basis: these topics will include French language (grammar and conversation), French and Francophone literature and cinema, and French and Francophone cultures.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FR 253 or by permission of instructor.

    Credits: (4)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated up to 12 credits.
  
  • WL 298 - Special Topics


    Credits: (1-6)

  
  • WL 398 - Special Topics


    Credits: (1-6)

  
  • WL 401 - Introduction to Romance Linguistics


    Description:
    Analysis of the phonology, morphology, and syntax of the romance languages.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: Two years of a romance language.

    Credits: (3)

    Notes:
    Credits to be counted toward either French or Spanish major or minor.
  
  • WL 481 - Methods and Materials for Language Teaching


    Description:
    Emphasizes the practical concerns of second- and foreign-language instruction. Explores as a group the theory underlying approaches incorporated into personalized teaching styles.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: at least two 300-level courses or equivalent in a foreign language.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • WL 482 - Second- and Foreign-language Acquisition


    Description:
    This course explores second and foreign language acquisition/learning from an applied linguistics perspective.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: WL 481.

    Credits: (4)

    Notes:
    The focus of this course will be on the learner.
  
  • WL 483 - Sociolinguistics


    Description:
    Concepts and methods of sociolinguistic analysis in first and second languages. Will examine differences among cultures in the relationship between language usage and inequality. ANTH 483 and WL 483 are cross-listed courses; students may not receive credit for both.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: either ANTH 180, ENG 180, ANTH 381, or WL 481.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • Learning Agreement Forms

    WL 490 - Cooperative Education


    Description:
    An individualized, contracted field experience with business, industry, government, or social service agencies. This contractual arrangement involves a student learning plan, cooperating employer supervision, and faculty coordination.

    Credits: (1-12)

    Consent
    Department consent.
    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
    Grading Basis
    Grade will either be S or U.
  
  • WL 491 - Workshop


    Credits: (1-6)

  
  
  • WL 498 - Special Topics


    Credits: (1-6)


Foreign Studies - Study Abroad

  
  • FNST 111 - First-year Foreign Language


    Description:
    Offered only in study abroad programs. Courses must be taken in sequence, although a student may enroll in more than one at a time in the case of intensive courses. Interested students should contact the Department of Foreign Languages or the Office of International Studies and Programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 112 - First-year Foreign Language


    Description:
    Offered only in study abroad programs. Courses must be taken in sequence, although a student may enroll in more than one at a time in the case of intensive courses. Interested students should contact the Department of Foreign Languages or the Office of International Studies and Programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 113 - First-year Foreign Language


    Description:
    Offered only in study abroad programs. Courses must be taken in sequence, although a student may enroll in more than one at a time in the case of intensive courses.  Interested students should contact the Department of Foreign Languages or the Office of International Studies and Programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 211 - Second-year Foreign Language


    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
    Notes:
    Offered only in study abroad programs.
  
  • FNST 212 - Second-year Foreign Language


    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
    Notes:
    Offered only in study abroad programs.
  
  • FNST 213 - Second-year Foreign Language


    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
    Notes:
    Offered only in study abroad programs.
  
  • FNST 310 - Culture and Civilization


    Description:
    Major aspects of the culture, philosophy and way of life of the host country will be emphasized.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
    Notes:
    Offered only in study abroad programs.
  
  • FNST 311 - Third-year Foreign Language


    Description:
    A study of grammar, conversation, and/or composition at the third-year level. Offered only in study abroad programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 312 - Third-year Foreign Language


    Description:
    A study of grammar, conversation, and/or composition at the third-year level. Offered only in study abroad programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 313 - Third-year Foreign Language


    Description:
    A study of grammar, conversation, and/or composition at the third-year level. Offered only in study abroad programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 320 - Literature


    Description:
    An in-depth study of one or more authors, periods, or genres of the literature of the host country. Offered only in study abroad programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 411 - Fourth-year Foreign Language


    Description:
    A study of grammar, conversation, and/or composition at the fourth-year level. Offered only in study abroad programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 412 - Fourth-year Foreign Language


    Description:
    A study of grammar, conversation, and/or composition at the fourth-year level. Offered only in study abroad programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 414 - Fourth-year Foreign Language


    Description:
    A study of grammar, conversation, and/or composition at the fourth-year level. Offered only in study abroad programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  • FNST 420 - Literature


    Description:
    An in-depth study of one or more authors, periods, or genres of the literature of the host country. Offered only in study abroad programs.

    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.

French

  
  • FR 151 - First-year French


    Description:
    Conversational approach with intensive oral-aural drill. Firm foundation in the basic structural principles of the language.

    Credits: (5)

    Notes:
    Courses must be taken in sequence.
  
  • FR 152 - First-year French


    Description:
    Conversational approach with intensive oral-aural drill. Firm foundation in the basic structural principles of the language.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FR 151.

    Credits: (5)

    Notes:
    Courses must be taken in sequence.
  
  • FR 153 - First-year French


    Description:
    Conversational approach with intensive oral-aural drill. Firm foundation in the basic structural principles of the language.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FR 152.

    Credits: (5)

    Notes:
    Courses must be taken in sequence.
  
  • FR 251 - Second-year French


    Description:
    Thorough review of French grammar and graduated readings in modern French prose with discussions conducted in French.

    Credits: (5)

    Notes:
    Courses must be taken in sequence.
  
  • FR 252 - Second-year French


    Description:
    Thorough review of French grammar and graduated readings in modern French prose with discussions conducted in French.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FR 251.

    Credits: (5)

    Notes:
    Courses must be taken in sequence.
  
  • FR 253 - Second-year French


    Description:
    Thorough review of French grammar and graduated readings in modern French prose with discussions conducted in French.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FR 252.

    Credits: (5)

    Notes:
    Courses must be taken in sequence.
  
  • FR 298 - Special Topics


    Credits: (1-6)

  
  • FR 301 - Introduction to French Literature


    Description:
    This course is designed as a transition course to prepare students for the advanced literature courses. Appreciation of literature and methods of analysis will be taught on a basic level through the careful examination of specific texts.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FR 253.

    Credits: (3)

  
  • FR 341 - Intermediate Composition and Grammar


    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FR 253.

    Credits: (3)

    Notes:
    Should be taken in sequence with FR 441.
  
  • FR 343 - Intermediate Conversation


    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FR 253.

    Credits: (2)

  
  • FR 398 - Special Topics


    Credits: (1-6)

  
  • FR 442 - Translation and Interpretation


    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: FR 342.

    Credits: (2)

  
  • FR 455 - French Poetry Through the Ages


    Description:
    Selected masterpieces from the Middle Ages to the present.

    Credits: (3)

  
  • FR 460 - French Cinema


    Description:
    Students will view and analyze French films as a backdrop to the discussion of the history of French cinema.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • FR 491 - Workshop


    Credits: (1-6)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for credit.
  
  
  • FR 498 - Special Topics


    Credits: (1-6)


General Studies

  
  • IDS 289 - Proposal Colloquium


    Description:
    Introduction to the interdisciplinary studies major, interdisciplinary studies degree proposal design and preparation.

    Credits: (1)

    Consent
    By permission.
    Grading Basis
    Grade will either be S or U.
  
  • IDS 489 - Senior Colloquium


    Description:
    End-of-program assessment; preparation of comprehensive degree report and/or descriptive portfolio of project. Students must earn at least a C grade to pass this course.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: IDS 289, student must have completed a minimum of 165 credits, and admission to the Interdisciplinary Studies: Social Sciences major.

    Credits: (1)


Geography

  
  • GEOG 101 - World Regional Geography


    Description:
    Regions and nations of the world together with the changing elements of the physical and human environment that support them.

    Credits: (5)

    General Education Category
    SB-Perspective on World Culture
  
  • GEOG 107 - Introduction to Physical Geography


    Description:
    The complex weather, climate, water, landforms, soils, and biota of Earth’s physical environments over space and time. Four hours of lecture and two hours of laboratory each week.

    Credits: (5)

    General Education Category
    NS-Patterns&Connection Natural
  
  • GEOG 108 - Introduction to Human Geography


    Description:
    Distribution and spatial variation of population, settlement patterns, cultural elements of language, religion, and lifeways, and the economic and political organization of the planet.

    Credits: (5)

    General Education Category
    SB-Found Human Adaptations
  
  • GEOG 203 - Introduction to Maps and Cartography


    Description:
    Basic introduction to the principles of cartographic communication. Emphasis on using and understanding a wide variety of general purpose, topographic, and thematic map types.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • GEOG 215 - Concepts of GIS


    Description:
    Basic principles and uses of geographic information systems (GIS). Practice with the use of GIS in solving land management and evaluation problems.

    Credits: (3)

    Notes:
    Two hours lecture and four hours laboratory per week.
  
  • GEOG 250 - Natural Resource Conservation


    Description:
    The meaning of resources and conservation; population growth and its implications for land management, public control, and environment quality; attitudes regarding the use of resources; conservation thought and activities in the United States.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • GEOG 265 - Geography of the African Diaspora


    Description:
    Examination of the physical and cultural geography, human-environment interactions, landscapes, and regional diversity of the African Diaspora.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 273 - Geography of Rivers


    Description:
    Global, regional, and local physical and cultural patterns and processes within river basins.

    Credits: (5)

    General Education Category
    NS-Application Natural Science
  
  • GEOG 279 - Geography of the West


    Description:
    In-depth field examination of the complex, physical, human, and resource issues of one or more of the varied subregions of western North America.

    Credits: (1-12)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for up to 12 credits under a different topic.
  
  • GEOG 290 - Cooperative Education Field Experience


    Description:
    Individualized field experience with business, industry, government, or other agency. Requires a student learning plan, cooperating employer supervisors, and faculty coordinator.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: sophomore standing or above.

    Credits: (1-5)

    Consent
    By permission.
    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for up to 10 credits.
    Grading Basis
    Grade will either be S or U.
  
  • GEOG 303 - Introductory GIS


    Description:
    Applications, scope, and benefits of Geographic Information Systems (GIS), classification and components of GIS; data acquisition; data management; data errors; implementation considerations; applied experience using GIS software. Students will be given a computer literacy test during the first week of class. Continued enrollment is dependent upon passing the test.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: computer literacy, and GEOG 203, or GEOG 210, or ANTH 323, or BIOL 360.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 304 - Economic Geography


    Description:
    Geographic survey of human livelihood and interaction with the environment. Agriculture, industry, and urbanization are examined in the context of an increasingly interdependent world system.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 305 - Introduction to Land Use Planning


    Description:
    Investigation into the process and practice of urban and regional planning. Emphasis on historical development, legal foundations, and techniques of planning in the United States.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 306 - Transportation Geography and Planning


    Description:
    Introduction to the planning and spatial analysis of transportation networks. Evaluation of the economic, environmental, and social consequences of major transportation modes. Application of transportation planning principles at the local, regional, and national scales.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • GEOG 308 - Cultural Geography


    Description:
    Consequences of cultural diversity in the human occupation of the Earth and the interactions of human and natural systems.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 310 - Introduction to Landscape Analysis


    Description:
    Application of concepts and techniques of landscape analysis. Specific landscapes are analyzed utilizing various techniques including remotely sensed imagery, historical records, and field observation and measurement.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 346 - Political Geography


    Description:

    The spatial structure of political units. The effect of political, economic, social, and Earth resource factors on the areas, shapes, and boundaries of these units, and on the distribution of populations and institutions.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • GEOG 352 - Geography of North America


    Description:
    Examination of the physical and cultural geography, human-environment interactions, landscapes, and regional diversity of the United States, Canada, and Mexico.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 355 - Geography of the Pacific Northwest


    Description:
    Examination of the physical and cultural geography, human-environment interactions, landscapes, and regional diversity of the Pacific Northwest.

    Credits: (4)

  
  • GEOG 361 - Soils


    Description:
    Properties, factors, processes, and classification of Earth’s soils, past and present. Four hours lecture and three hours of laboratory or field trips each week. GEOG 361 and GEOG 461 are layered courses; students may not receive credit for both.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: GEOG 107.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 365 - Geography of Africa


    Description:
    Examination of the physical and cultural geography, human-environment interactions, landscapes, and regional diversity of Africa, with an emphasis on Subsaharan Africa.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 366 - Geography of the Middle East


    Description:
    Examination of the physical and cultural geography, human-environment interactions, landscapes, and regional diversity of the Middle East.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 371 - Geography of Europe


    Description:
    Examination of the physical and cultural geography, human-environment interactions, landscapes, and regional diversity of Europe.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 373 - Water Resources


    Description:
    Foundation course for understanding the physical and social dimensions of water resource use on a global scale. Special attention paid to issues in the American West.

    Credits: (4)

    Notes:
    GEOG 107 is recommended.
  
  • GEOG 379 - Geography of the West


    Description:
    In-depth field examination of the complex physical, human, and resource issues of one or more of the varied sub-regions of western North America.

    Credits: (1-12)

    Repeatable for Credit
    May be repeated for up to 12 credits under a different topic.
  
  • GEOG 382 - Hydrology


    Description:
    Provides a comprehensive introduction to both the global and local hydrologic cycle. Covers constituent processes, their measurements and quantitative relationships, plus basic water quality parameters. GEOG 382 and GEOG 482 are layered courses; students may not receive credit for both.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisite: GEOG 107.

    Credits: (5)

  
  • GEOG 386 - Geomorphology


    Description:
    Descriptive and interpretive examination of the Earth’s landforms and the processes and factors that shape these features over space and time. Four lectures and three hours laboratory or field trips each week. GEOG 386, GEOG 486, and GEOL 386 are cross-listed courses; students may not receive credit for more than one.

    Prerequisites & Notes:
    Prerequisites: (GEOL 101 or GEOL 102 or GEOL 103  and GEOL 101LAB) or GEOG 107.

    Credits: (5)

 

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