SURVEY OF THE UNIVERSE

Discover how the forces of nature shape our understanding of the cosmos. Explore the origin, structure and evolution of the Earth, moons and planets, comets and asteroids, the Sun and other stars, star clusters, the Milky Way and other galaxies, clusters of galaxies, and the universe as a whole. Designed for nonscience majors.

ECONOMY, ECOLOGY & SOCIETY

This course concerns the cultural evolution of human society, looking at changes in social organization and technological complexity from our origin as nomadic foragers to current configurations of centralized industrialized states. This course examines issues of economy (production, exchange, consumption) and ecology (human-resource interaction, adaptation and competition for resources), and looks in particular at the development and spread of capitalist relations and effect on marginal and disempowered peoples.

WRITING ABOUT AMER SOCIETY

Topics course. Same as AMS 351. In this class, students develop their skills in narrative, long-form nonfiction writing as they explore the ways that science and technology are transforming American culture. This course focuses on writing about the country's weather and climate-past, present and future. As the United States confronts the consequences of global climate change, some sectors of the population continue to deny that any human-induced crisis looms. What is the scientific evidence to support the prediction of impending climate catastrophe?

COLQ: TOPICS IN BLACK STUDIES

Topics course. Throughout the African diaspora in the Atlantic World, children were active participants in maintaining slave economies. They began working on plantations from as early as the age of 6. In the aftermath of Emancipation (both in the U.S.A. and Caribbean contexts) children's labor continued to play an important role in the economic stability of family life as well as in the hope for social and economic mobility.

CHEM IV:INTRO INORG & PHYS CHM

This final course in the chemistry core sequence provides a foundation in the principles of physical and inorganic chemistry that are central to the study of all chemical phenomena. Topics include quantitative treatment of thermochemistry, chemical equilibria, electrochemistry and reaction kinetics. Prerequisite: CHM 111 or equivalent and MTH 111 or equivalent. Enrollment limited to 16 per lab section.
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