Courses of Instruction
Courses numbered below 100 are developmental, courses in the 100 series are designed for freshmen, 200 courses are for sophomores, and 300 and 400 courses are for juniors and seniors. Admission to courses numbered 300 or above requires sophomore standing and completion of six semester hours of non developmental English and three semester hours of non developmental mathematics. Numbers preceded by an asterisk (*) indicate courses carrying undergraduate credit or graduate credit. Such courses are structured to ensure appropriate attention to both groups. Courses numbered 500 to 599 are designed for graduate students. Seniors, however, may be admitted under certain conditions (see Admissions of Seniors to Part Time Graduate Study). A freshman or sophomore cannot register for a course listed and offered for graduate or undergraduate credit, if a graduate student is enrolled in the course.
Courses numbered below 100 are developmental and are not acceptable for credit toward graduation. Some other courses numbered above 100 may not carry credit toward graduation; see course description.
The numerical listing after the course titles gives the following information: first number, semester credit hours; second number, lecture hours per week; third number, laboratory or other contact hours per week.
Examples:
ACCT 205. Introduction to Financial Accounting. 03 3 0. (3 semester credit hours. 3 hours lecture per week. No laboratory.) (52.0301)
BIOL 204. General Microbiology Laboratory. 1-0-3. (1 semester credit hour. No lecture. 3 hours laboratory per week.) (26.0503)
CHEM 451. Research Problems. 2 1 3. (2 semester credit hours. 1 hour lecture per week. 3 hours laboratory per week.) (40.0599)
Courses offered only in specific semesters are identified by the following designations:
-
Su only
Fa- odd years only
Sp only
Fa- even years only
Fa only
Sp- odd years only
Sp- even years only
If courses have no designation(s), they are generally offered each semester, but students should contact individual departments for variations.
Summer Session course offerings vary greatly. Students must consult with their Dean's office for summer course offerings.
The University reserves the right to withdraw, modify, or add to the courses offered.
The four capital letters in parentheses represent the computerized abbreviation for that subject field; the abbreviation is often used on documents and course schedules. The numbers in parentheses represent the Integrated Post-secondary Education Data System (IPEDS).
Courses
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Education Administration and Supervision Education Curriculum and Instruction Education Foundations and Research
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Educational Technology Leadership Emergency Medical Services Paramedic |
