Courses

CHEM-6401 (1-3) Seminar: Physical Chemistry

Student, faculty, and guest presentations of current research in physical chemistry. Discussion of research topics related to the subject of weekly physical chemistry/chemical physics seminar and appropriate journal articles. Prereq., graduate standing or instructor consent. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

GEOG-6402 (3) Seminar: Comparative Environmental Studies

Critically examines cross-cultural experience with adjustments to natural hazards and political management of resource exploitation. Restricted to graduate students. May be repeated up to 6 total credit hours. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

COMM-6410 (3) Discourse Analysis

Acquaints students with the main types of discourse analysis: conversation analysis, critical discourse analysis, and rhetorically-informed discourse approaches. Teaches how to conduct discourse analysis, including transcribing, selecting excerpts, documenting inferences, and linking to scholarly controversies. Prereq., graduate standing or instructor consent. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

CHEM-6411 (1-3) Advanced Topics in Physical Chemistry

Lect. May be repeated up to 7 total credit hours. Prereq., graduate standing or instructor consent. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

HIST-6417 (3) Readings in Environmental History

Offers historical perspective on the complex and interdependent relationship between human social and cultural institutions and the natural world. Considers interdisciplinary methodologies incorporating history, biology, geography, law, and other disciplines.

COMM-6420 (3) Interaction Analysis

Educates students in one of a selected set of methodological specializations used in the study of human interaction. May be repeated up to 6 total credit hours on different topics. Prereq., graduate standing or instructor consent.

HIST-6420 (3) Memory and History in Transnational Perspective

Engages in debates about historical methods and how the past is represented. Central topics will include memory and the forces of nationalism and war; commemoration and monuments; the role of memory in the construction of race and ethnicity; personal past and cultural remembrance; and the relationships between academic, public, and popular histories. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

HIST-6427 (3) Readings in African American History

Introduces classic and recent scholarship, and critical issues in African American history, from slavery to the present. Prereq., graduate standing.

COMM-6435 (3) Interpersonal Processes in Communication

Focuses on key processes in interpersonal communication relevant to understanding interaction at the dyadic, group, and organizational levels. Examines theory and research on selected interpersonal processes such as facework/identity, support/emotional communication, relational communication, and conflict in interaction. Prereq., graduate standing or instructor consent.

COMM-6440 (3) Grounded Practical Theory

Examines theory, method, and application of grounded practical theory, an approach to building normative theory through description, critique, and theoretical reconstruction of situated communication practices. Semester project involves analysis of a sample of discourse from a public or field observation setting. Prereq., graduate standing or instructor consent. Recommended prereq., COMM 5210.

EBIO-6440 (2) Remote Sensing Field Methods

Explores theory and practical field measurements for validation of airborne and spaceborne spectral image acquisition. Emphasizes radiative scattering properties of soil, vegetation, cryosphere, and atmosphere. Characterization and calibration of instrumentation used to measure these properties. Prereq., GEOL/GEOG 4093/5093. Recommended prereq., GEOL 5240. Same as GEOG 6443.

MCDB-6440 (1-3) Special Topics in MCD Biology

Acquaints students with various topics not normally covered in the curriculum. Offered intermittently or upon student demand, and often presented by visiting professors. May be repeated up to 4 total credit hours. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

GEOG-6443 (2) Remote Sensing Field Methods

Theory and practical field measurements for validation of airborne and spaceborne spectral image acquisition. Emphasizes radiative scattering properties of soil, vegetation, cryosphere, and atmosphere. Also focuses on characterization and calibration of instrumentation to measure these properties. Restricted to graduate students. Prereqs., GEOL/GEOG 4093/5093. Recommended prereq., GEOL 5240. Same as EBIO 6440.

COMM-6445 (3) Communication and Culture

Focuses on cultural diversity in human communication. There are two main objectives: to acquaint students with classic and contemporary readings that articulate the relationship between communication and culture, and to introduce them to methodologies they can use to develop a cultural approach toward a variety of observable forms and practices of communication. Prereq., COMM 5425.

COMM-6450 (3) Group Interaction Facilitation and Pedagogy

Examines theory, research, and practice associated with facilitating group interaction processes (e.g.,group creation, conflict communication management, conversation and discussion, task accomplishment, and team communication), including facilitation associated with teaching an introductory group interaction course. Prereq., graduate standing or instructor consent. Recommended prereq., COMM 5420. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

LING-6450 (3) Syntactic Analysis

Introduces the major constructs used by formal theories of syntax to capture the relationship between meaning and syntactic form and uses data from diverse languages to explore the universality of these constructs. Restricted to graduate students.

APPM-6470 (3) Advanced Partial Differential Equations

Continuation of APPM 5470. Advanced study of the properties and solutions of elliptic, parabolic, and hyperbolic partial differential equations. Topics include the study of Sobolev spaces and variational methods as they relate to PDEs, and other topics as time permits. Prereq., APPM 5470. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

COMM-6470 (3) Meetings, Their Practices and Problems

Explores the history, routine communicative practices, common interactional troubles, cross-cultural differences, and expectations about "Ideal" communicative conduct for workplace and public meetings. Seminar project involves field study of a meeting group. Prereq., graduate standing or instructor consent. Recommended prereq., Comm 6030.

PHIL-6490 (3) Seminar in Philosophy of Language

Studies some of the main topics in the philosophy of language, such as meaning and theories of meaning, translation, speech acts, rules of language, reference, relevance of psycholinguistics, language and thought, and language and ontology. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

HIST-6500 (3) Comparative Labor History

Examines major issues in labor history through comparative study of Europe, the United States, and Latin America. Issues to be studied include working-class formation, the development of worker identities, and workers and the state.

SLHS-6504 (1) Professional Ethics in Audiology

Overview of ethics and ethical issues in the profession of audiology. Topics to be discussed include code of ethics by professions, approaches to analyzing ethical dilemmas, ethics in relationships with manufacturers, and ethical considerations inteaching, clinical practice and research. Prereq., good standing in SLHS graduate program or instructor consent. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

LING-6510 (3) Language Structures

Surveys the structure of one or more languages, emphasizing understanding how parts of the language interact. Designed to supplement courses in which parts of languages are used to illustrate theoretical claims. Prereqs., LING 5410 and 5420. Prerequisites: Restricted to Graduate Students only.

Pages