Intro Electrical & Comp Engin

Students select one of the four introductory engineering courses (ENGIN 110, 111, 112, or 113). Within a small class, student teams explore real engineering designs. This introduction to engineering design and/or manufacturing emphasizes development of communication skills (written, oral, and graphical). Project required. Corequisites: Simultaneous enrollment in MATH 131, or higher; enrollment in, or eligibility to enroll in ENGLWRIT 112.

Intro/Engin:Topics/EnginDiscpl

This course provides beginning engineering students with an overview of the fields of electrical and computer engineering, mechanical and industrial engineering, civil and environmental engineering, and chemical engineering so they can confidently decide which engineering discipline to pursue as a profession. Throughout the semester, students will develop basic skills in problem-solving, computation, design, and communication that will help them in all future engineering courses.

Intro/Engin:Topics/EnginDiscpl

This course provides beginning engineering students with an overview of the fields of electrical and computer engineering, mechanical and industrial engineering, civil and environmental engineering, and chemical engineering so they can confidently decide which engineering discipline to pursue as a profession. Throughout the semester, students will develop basic skills in problem-solving, computation, design, and communication that will help them in all future engineering courses.

Journal Club/EnvirmentalHealth

This course examines current advances in environmental health science via critical reading and discussion of recently published peer-reviewed papers related to environmental health. Using the typical journal club format, the papers (and topics) discussed will change from week to week and will include topics such as pollution, exposure assessments, mechanistic toxicology, environmental epidemiology, and others.

Env. & Occupational Toxicology

The toxicological activity of toxic substances found in the general environment and in industrial settings. Topics include biochemical mechanisms for absorption, excretion, tissue distribution, metabolic transformations, and conjugations; comparative metabolism of animal species; special applications to the toxicology of heavy metals, pesticides, and other industrial chemicals.
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