ST-Skeletal Tissue: Biomech II

In this course students will be introduced to the architecture and mechanical properties of soft and hard biological tissue and finite element analysis techniques used to model both hard and soft tissues at the anatomical scale. Students will execute a term project to develop and predict the response of tissue to mechanical loads using a commercial finite element tool such as ANSYS Workbench.

S-TransitonalJustice&TruthComm

This course will examine how justice interventions are designed and implemented to redress mass violence, including periods of war and authoritarian reign. It will focus on truth commissions, which are quasi-judicial bodies designed to investigate, document, and publicize information about a period of violence. In examining transitional justice and truth commissions, this class will address the history of violence in a dozen countries, and how truth commissions have been used to redress them. Satisfies the Integrative Experience requirement for BA-Legal majors.

Maternal & Child Health Policy

This course is designed to introduce students to a maternal and child public health perspective, which is focused on identifying and meeting the needs of women, infants, children, adolescents, and families. We will examine problems, programs, and policies related to these populations, with an emphasis on the United States. This course will use the life course perspective to examine how social, economic, and political context affect health and development over a lifetime.

Reproductive Epidemiology

This course introduces undergraduate students to the field of reproductive epidemiology - population level research into aspects of human reproductive health, with a focus on their public health significance, descriptive epidemiology, etiology and prevention. Using a combination of lectures and small group discussions of published peer reviewed research, this class addresses both methodologic and substantive challenges to reproductive and perinatal epidemiological research.

General Chemistry

A continuation of CHEM121H. Basic Principles of chemistry. Topics include solids, liquids, solutions, equilibrium, kinetics, thermodynamics, electrochemistry, acids & bases, precipitation, and descriptive chemistry. More extensive lecture treatment of advanced topics and laboratory work than CHEM 112.

Prerequisite: CHEM 121H with a grade of 'C-' or better.

General Chemistry

A continuation of CHEM121H. Basic Principles of chemistry. Topics include solids, liquids, solutions, equilibrium, kinetics, thermodynamics, electrochemistry, acids & bases, precipitation, and descriptive chemistry. More extensive lecture treatment of advanced topics and laboratory work than CHEM 112.

Prerequisite: CHEM 121H with a grade of 'C-' or better.
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