COMMITTEE: University Curriculum Committee
MEETING DATE: December 10, 2009
PERSON PRESIDING: Paul Schwager
REGULAR MEMBERS IN ATTENDANCE: Kanchan Das, Donna Kain, Punam Madhok, Janice Neil, Jonathan Reid, Paul
Schwager, and Ralph Scott
EX-OFFICIO MEMBERS IN ATTENDANCE: Sloane Burke, Linner Griffin, and Ron Mitchelson
EXCUSED:
ABSENT:
SUPPORT: Kimberly Nicholson
OTHERS IN ATTENDANCE: Art Rodriguez, Linda Wolfe, Megan Perry, James Joyce, Elaine Ironsmith, Hans Johnson, Susan
McGhee, Carmen Russoniello, and Ivan Wallace
ACTIONS OF MEETING
Agenda Item: II. Old Business
(1.) Electronic
approval of 11-12-09 UCC minutes
Discussion:
Minutes were
circulated by email and approved.
Action Taken:
Minutes approved
Agenda Item: III.
(1.) Proposal of New
Course: CHEM 2110
Discussion:
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously with the changes requested above. The
changes must be submitted by 12/17/09.
(2.) Revision of
Existing Courses: CHEM 1120, 1130
Discussion:
CHEM 1120: Changes in content and credit hours needs to
be taken to the Academic Standards Committee. Change box 15
to “staff is adequate” since graduate assistants are now in place, shorten
course description. Needs grading scale, ISPN # for textbooks.
Delete topics from description.
Revise objectives (recommend consulting Dr. Mike Brown from the Academic
Standards Committee).
CHEM 1130: Changes in content and credit hours needs to
be taken to the Academic Standards Committee.
Objectives need revision (recommend consulting Dr. Mike Brown from the
Academic Standards Committee). Grading
scale added, delete topics from description, ISBN number for textbook.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously with the changes requested above. The
changes must be submitted by 12/17/09.
(3.) Banking of
Existing Course: CHEM 2111
Discussion:
Course banked.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously.
(4.) Editorial
Revision of Existing Courses: CHEM 1150,
1151; 2103; 2250, 2251; 2650; 2651;
2770; 2771; 4103
Discussion:
Changes in
courses. Minor revisions required.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously with the changes requested above. The
changes must be submitted by 12/17/09.
(5.) Revision of
Existing Degrees: BA in Chemistry, BS in
Chemistry
Discussion:
Remove wording about percentile noted on transcript.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously with the changes requested above. The
changes must be submitted by 12/17/09.
_______________________________________________________________________
Agenda Item: IV.
(1.) Proposal of New
Course: ANTH 3030
Discussion:
Add ISBN# to textbook, add course # 3118 in green to the course list
section of the marked catalog copy since it was approved earlier but does not
appear in the catalog as yet. Check
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously with the changes requested above. The
changes must be submitted by 12/17/09.
(2.) Revision of
Existing Degree: BA in Anthropology
Discussion:
Changes noted.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously.
(3.) Revision of
Existing Minor: Classical Studies
Discussion:
Changes noted.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously.
______________________________________________________________________
Agenda Item: V. Thomas Harriot
(1.) Prerequisite
Revision of Existing Courses: PHYS 2350,
2360
Discussion:
Revise changes to prerequisites.
Send memo to Academic Standards committee about changes since it has FC.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously with the changes requested above. The
changes must be submitted by 12/17/09.
_________________________________________________________________
Agenda Item: VI.
(1.) Banking of
Existing Course: PSYC 3290
Discussion:
Banking
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously
(2.) Prerequisite
Revision of Existing Courses: PSYC 3226,
4250, 4333, 4305, 4602
Discussion:
Label sections as noted in the new wording to clarify courses that
qualify in the required areas.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously with the changes requested above. The
changes must be submitted by 12/17/09.
(3.) Deletion of
Existing Course: PSYC 4372
Discussion:
Deletion.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously.
(4.) Revision of
Existing Degree: BA in Psychology
Discussion:
Changes noted
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously
(5.) Revision of
Existing Program: Psychology Honors
Program
Discussion:
Revisions noted
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously
_________________________________________________________________
Agenda Item: VII.
(1.) Proposal of New
Courses: HLTH 4001; RCTX 4001
Discussion:
Approved.
Action Taken:
Proposal approved unanimously.
_________________________________________________________________
Agenda Item: VIII.
(1.) Proposal of New
Course: BITE 4100
Discussion:
Many changes were suggested to include revision of justification,
course description, course and course objectives. ICTN must be notified.
Action Taken:
Tabled - will revise and resubmit to the UCC mailbox for agenda
placement.
(2.) Editorial
Revision of Existing Courses: BITE 1500;
2112; 2123; 2212; 2311; 2500; 3200; 3228; 3291, 3292, 3293, 3294; 3301; 3302;
3311; 3500; 4200; 4300; 4323; 4324; 4325; 4400; 4500; 4700; 5200; 5388, 5389,
5390
Discussion:
Many changes were suggested to include corresponding prerequisite
recommendations to the degree sections of the marked catalog copy. Recommended review of
editorial revisions to be sure that the changes do not have any impact on
course content.
Action Taken:
Tabled - will revise and resubmit to the UCC mailbox for agenda
placement.
(3.) Revision of
Existing Degrees: BSBE in Business
Education, BSBE in Business and Marketing Education, BSBE in Information Technologies
Discussion:
Many changes were suggested to include reformat of HIST 1051 in all
degree sections, correction of s.h. for ART 1910 and MUSC 2208 in all degree
sections, and addition of BITE prefix where missing. Psychology and social studies must be
notified of change to recommended academic concentrations. Unable to approve changes
without approval of BITE 4100.
Provide a table which illustrates the notification to affected units and
unit responses.
Action Taken:
Tabled - will revise and resubmit to the UCC mailbox for agenda
placement.
(4.) Revision of
Existing Minors: Distribution
Technology: Merchandising Minor, Information Processing Minor
Discussion:
Unable to approve changes without approval of BITE 4100. Provide a table
which illustrates the notification to affected units and unit responses.
Action Taken:
Tabled - will resubmit to the UCC mailbox for agenda placement.
(5.) Revision of
Existing Concentration: Communications
Technologies
Discussion:
Unable to approve changes without approval of BITE 4100.
Action Taken:
Tabled - will revise and resubmit to the UCC mailbox for agenda
placement. Provide a table which
illustrates the notification to affected units and unit responses.
_________________________________________________________________
Agenda Item: IX. New Business
Discussion:
No new business.
Action Taken:
Meeting adjourned.
_________________________________________________________________
NEXT MEETING: January 14, 2010
Marked Catalog Copy:
Agenda Item III
Department of Chemistry
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/chemistry.cfm
Catalog Page 132
DEPARTMENT
OF CHEMISTRY
Rickey
P. Hicks, Chair, 300 Science and
Admission
Requirements
Students
enrolled at
BA
in Chemistry
The
BA program provides a flexible major designed to provide the student with a
broad education in chemistry appropriate for further study in a wide range of
fields, such as business, medicine, pharmacy, and law as well as careers
dependent on a basic knowledge in chemistry. The BA in chemistry, in
conjunction with two semesters of laboratory-based biology courses, satisfies
the course requirements for application to most
1.
Foundations curriculum (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for
all
Baccalaureate
Degree Programs), including those listed
below.......................................42 s.h.
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
PHYS 1250, 1260. General Physics (3,3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 1250: MATH 1065 or 1066; P for 1260: PHYS 1250)
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for
1261: 1260 or 2360)
2.
Foreign language through level 1004..............................................................................12 s.h.
3.
Core....................................................................................................................................30 s.h.
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P:
Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH
1065)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
CHEM 2250, 2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (one organic CHEM course CHEM 2650 or 2750)
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) (C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2760. Organic Chemistry II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750; C: CHEM 2763)
CHEM 2763. Organic Chemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750, 2753; C: CHEM 2760)
CHEM 3450. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry (3) (S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3451)
CHEM 3451. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory (1) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3450 or 5550)
CHEM 3850, 3851. Introduction to Physical Chemistry (4,1) (
4.
Cognates.........................................................................................................................
6-13 s.h.
MATH 2121. Calculus for the Life Sciences I (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 or 1077 with a minimum grade of C) and MATH 2122. Calculus for the Life Sciences II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 2121) or MATH 1083. Introduction to Functions (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C) or MATH 1085. Pre-Calculus Mathematics (5) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C) and MATH 2171. Calculus I (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Minimum grade of C in any of MATH 1083 or 1085 or 2122) and MATH 2172. Calculus II (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 2171 with a minimum grade of C or MATH 2122 with consent of instructor)
5.
Electives to complete requirements for graduation.
Chemistry
Requirements for Students Participating in MD in 7 Initiative
Students pursuing a BA in chemistry who are also participating in the MD in 7 Program must meet all the above-specified requirements for their major and the math cognate. In addition, the student will need to fulfill the pre-health concentration by taking BIOL 1100, 1101, 1200, 1201; PHYS 1250, 1251, 1260, 1261. If the student is accepted for admission to the Brody School of Medicine under the MD in 7 Program, the first year of medical studies will count toward fulfilling the remaining 28s.h. of electives as required for graduation.
BS
in Chemistry
The BS degree in chemistry is the appropriate program for students considering advanced degree programs in chemistry, biochemistry, and other related fields or a professional career in chemistry. Graduates of this program meet certification requirements of the American Chemical Society. Students are strongly encouraged to pursue undergraduate research with a faculty member. Up to 6 s.h. of undergraduate research may be applied toward degree requirements. Information regarding undergraduate research may be obtained from the director of undergraduate studies. Students completing the BS degree are encouraged to consider some of the following courses as electives: COMM 2410 or COMM 2420; ITEC 3290 or ENGL
3820; MATH 2228, 3256, 4331; CHEM 4515, 4516, 4517; advanced 5000-level courses in chemistry; and BIOL 5800 or 5810. All students are required to take a departmentally administered assessment examination before graduation. Scores from this examination will not be included in the calculation of GPA for academic standing. The performance on this exam will be noted on the student’s transcript. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:
1.
Foundations curriculum (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for
all
Baccalaureate
Degree Programs), including those listed
below.......................................42 s.h.
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: 1260 or 2360)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University Physics (4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 2350: MATH 2121 or 2171; P for 2360: PHYS 2350)
2.
Core....................................................................................................................................45
s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150;
P/C: MATH 1065)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
CHEM
2103. Introduction to Chemical Literature (1) (WI) (F, S) (P: CHEM 2750)
CHEM
2250, 2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (WI, WI) (F,S) (P:
CHEM 1160, 1161; one organic CHEM course CHEM 2650 or 2750)
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) (C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2760. Organic Chemistry II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750; C: CHEM 2763)
CHEM 2763. Organic Chemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750, 2753; C: CHEM 2760)
CHEM
2770. Biological Chemistry (3) (F, S)
(FC:SC) (P: CHEM 2650 or 2760)
CHEM 3451. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory (1) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3450 or 5550)
CHEM 3950, 3951. Physical Chemistry and Laboratory I (4,1) (WI, WI) (S) (P: PHYS 1261, 2360; MATH 2173; CHEM 2250, 2251)
CHEM 3960, 3961. Physical Chemistry and Laboratory II (4,1) (WI, WI) (F) (P: CHEM 3950, 3951)
CHEM
4103. Seminar (1) (F, S) (P: Junior or
senior standing; CHEM 2103)
CHEM 5350, 5351. Instrumental Analysis (3,1) (WI, WI) (P: CHEM 3960)
CHEM 5550. Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (4) (F) (P: CHEM 3950; C: CHEM 3451
[for BS chemistry majors only])
3.
Elective labs (Choose a minimum of 2 s.h. from the
following.).................................... 2 s.h.
BIOL 5821. Principles of Biochemistry Laboratory (1) (F,S) (P/C: BIOL 5800 or 5810)
CHEM 2111. Applications of Molecular Modeling (1) (F,S)
(FC:SC) (P/C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2301. Teaching Laboratory Chemistry (2,0) (F,S) (P: Grade of B or higher in CHEM 1160 and CHEM 1161or permission of instructor) May count only 1 s.h. toward the 2 s.h. lab requirement
CHEM
2771. Biological Chemistry Laboratory (1) (F, S)
(FC:SC) (C: CHEM 2770)
CHEM 3301. Practicum in Teaching (1) (F,S) (P: CHEM 2301 and consent of instructor)
CHEM 4515, 4516, 4517. Research Problems in Chemistry (1,2,3) (F,S,SS) (P: Consent of instructor)
CHEM 5993. Industrial Internship in Chemistry (3) (P: Selection by joint chem dept/industry screening committee; CHEM 2250, 2760, 3950)
4.
Cognates.............................................................................................................................17
s.h.
MATH 1085. Pre-Calculus Mathematics (5) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 2171, 2172, 2173. Calculus I, II, III (4,4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P for 2171: minimum grade of C in any of MATH 1083, 1085 or 2122; P for 2172: MATH 2171 with a minimum grade of C or 2122 with consent of instructor; P for 2173: MATH 2172 with a minimum grade of C)
5.
Electives to complete requirements for graduation.
Chemistry
Minor
Minimum requirement for the chemistry minor is 25-26 s.h. of credit as follows:
Core...................................................................................................................................25-26
s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150;
P/C: MATH 1065)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
CHEM
2250, 2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (WI, WI) (F,S) (P:
CHEM 1160, 1161; 1 organic CHEM course CHEM 2650 or 2750)
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) (C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2760. Organic Chemistry II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750; C: CHEM 2763)
CHEM 2763. Organic Chemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750, 2753; C: CHEM 2760)
CHEM 3450. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry (3) (S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3451) and CHEM 3451.
Elementary Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory (1) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3450 or 5550) or CHEM 3850, 3851. Introduction to Physical Chemistry (4,1) (WI, WI) (F) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; MATH 2122 or 2172; PHYS 1260, 1261)
Chemistry
Honors Program
The Department of Chemistry Honors Program provides an opportunity for outstanding chemistry majors to do intensive study and research in areas of special interest. A student desiring to enter the honors program must be a junior or senior majoring in chemistry and possess a minimum GPA of 3.2 in all courses taken at East Carolina University as well as in all chemistry and cognate courses. Before participating in the honors program, students must notify the director of undergraduate studies in chemistry and select a project supervisor from the chemistry faculty. Program participants are expected to select a topic of mutual interest to both the student and project supervisor, research the topic through the scientific literature, and then
conduct independent research on the topic. Upon completion of the research, the student must submit a detailed written research report and make an oral presentation on the honors project. Course requirements: CHEM 4103; a minimum of 5 s.h. research and/or independent study from: CHEM 4505, 4506, 4507, 4515, 4516, 4517.
Bachelor
of Science and Accelerated MS in Chemistry
Students working toward a BS degree in chemistry have the opportunity to earn an MS degree in two or three additional semesters of study. These students are encouraged to begin research projects as undergraduates and take advanced classes that can be used to waive some MS course requirements. As seniors they may be granted early admission to the MS program and would be eligible to receive paid teaching assistantships. To be enrolled in the MS program as a senior, a student must be within 6 s.h. credit of completing all undergraduate degree requirements. Applications to the MS program should be submitted during the first semester of the senior year and must include GRE scores.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/CoursesC.cfm#chem
CHEM:
CHEMISTRY
0150. Preparation for College Chemistry (2) (F,S,SS) 3 lectures per week. May not count toward foundations curriculum science requirement. C: MATH 1065. Intensive review and study of basic chemical laws and mathematical tools needed for further study in general chemistry.
1020. General Descriptive Chemistry (4) (F,S) (FC:SC) May not count toward foundations curriculum science requirement for science majors. General chemistry for nonscience majors.
1021. General Descriptive Chemistry Laboratory (1) (F,S) (FC:SC) 3 lab hours per week. Chemistry lab for nonscience majors. P/C: CHEM 1020. Lab experiences illustrate fundamental chemical principles and relevance of chemistry in modern world. Topics include chemical measurements, acids, synthesis and purification of biochemical substances and DNA fingerprinting.
1120.
Basic General, Organic, and Biochemistry I (4)
(F,S,SS) (FC:SC) May not count toward
foundations curriculum science requirement for science majors. General,
organic, and biochemistry and chemical applications in health professions. Introduction to Chemistry for the Allied
Health Sciences (3,0) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) 3 lecture and 1 recitation hours per week. May not count toward
foundations curriculum science requirement for science majors. Fundamental
concepts of chemistry emphasizing applications within the health professions.
1121. Basic General, Organic, and Biochemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S) (FC:SC) 3 lab hours per week. C: CHEM 1120. Introduces lab techniques in general, organic, and biochemistry.
1130.
Basic General, Organic, and Biochemistry II (3)
(F,S,SS) (FC:SC) May not count toward
foundations curriculum science requirement for science majors. P: CHEM 1120.
Continuation of CHEM 1120. Organic and Biochemistry for the Allied Health Sciences
(4,0) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) 4 lecture
hours per week. May not count toward foundations curriculum science requirement
for science majors. P: CHEM 1120.
Fundamentals of organic and biochemistry emphasizing applications within the
health professions.
1131. Basic General, Organic, and Biochemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) 3 lab hours per week. C: CHEM 1130. Continuation of CHEM 1121.
1150,
1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) For science
majors. 3 lecture and 3 lab hours per week. P:
Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH
1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM 1150. Basic principles and laws
of chemistry. Topics include measurements, reactions and stoichiometry,
thermochemistry, atomic structure, periodicity, bonding and molecular
structure, and states of matter.
1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) 3 lecture and 3 lab hours per week. P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085. Continuation of CHEM 1150. Topics include solutions, kinetics, equilibrium, acid-base theory, thermodynamics, and electrochemistry. Introduces
organic, nuclear, and coordination chemistry.
1500. Materials Chemistry I (3) (S) Chemistry of elements and compounds, atomic structure, molecular geometry and intermolecular forces and their effect on the design and uses of materials. May not count toward chemistry major.
1510, 1511. Materials Chemistry II and Laboratory (1,1) (F) 1 hour lecture and 3 hours lab per week. P: CHEM 1500; C for CHEM 1510: CHEM 1511; C for CHEM 1511: CHEM 1510. Continuation of CHEM 1500. Chemistry of elements and compounds, equilibrium, thermodynamics and kinetics and their effect on the design and uses of materials.
Lab experience demonstrates chemical properties of materials. May not count toward chemistry major.
2103.
Introduction to Chemical Literature (1) (WI) (F, S)
P: CHEM 2750. Introduces methods used to search and access chemical
literature. Development of technical writing skills.
2110.
Scientific Glassblowing (1) (F,S,SS)
3 lab hours per week. P: Consent of instructor. Fundamentals of glassblowing
with emphasis on the properties of glass and techniques commonly used in the
construction and repair of specialized glassware in chemical laboratories.
2111. Applications of Molecular Modeling (1) (F,S) (FC:SC) P/C: CHEM 2750. Applies molecular modeling to explore
relationships between molecular structure and molecular properties.
2250,
2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (WI, WI) (F,S) 3 lecture
and 6 4 lab
hours per week. P: CHEM 1160, 1161; 1 semester of
organic CHEM CHEM 2650 or 2750;
C for 2250: CHEM 2251; C for 2251: CHEM 2250. Theories and techniques of
classical quantitative and modern instrumental analysis.
2301. Teaching Laboratory Chemistry (2,0) (WI) (F,S) 1 lecture and 3 lab hours per week. P: Grade of B or higher in CHEM 1160 and CHEM 1161 or permission of instructor. Instruction and supervised experience in methods and practice of teaching introductory chemistry lab.
2650. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences (4) (F, S) May not count toward CHEM major or minor. May not substitute as a prerequisite for CHEM 2760. P: CHEM 1160, 1161. Principles of organic chemistry. Emphasis on biologically important topics.
2651. Organic Chemistry Lab for the Life Sciences (1) (F, S) 3 lab hours per week. May not count toward CHEM major or minor. May not substitute as a prerequisite for CHEM 2763. C: CHEM 2650. Organic lab techniques.
2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753. Classes of compounds and their typical reactions, mechanisms, stereochemistry, and instrumental methods in organic chemistry.
2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) 3 lab hours per week C: CHEM 2750. Organic lab techniques.
2760. Organic Chemistry II (3) (F,S,SS) P: CHEM 2750; C: CHEM 2763. Continuation of CHEM 2750.
2763. Organic Chemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) 3 lab hours per week P: CHEM 2750, 2753; C: CHEM 2760. Continuation of CHEM 2753.
2770.
Biological Chemistry (3) (F, S) (FC:SC) P:
CHEM 2650 or 2760. Chemistry and intermediary metabolism of proteins,
carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids.
2771.
Biological Chemistry Laboratory (1) (F,S)
(FC:SC) 3 lab hours per week. C: CHEM 2770. Applies chemical lab techniques
to study of proteins, carbohydrates, lipids, and nucleic acids.
3301. Practicum in Teaching (1) (F,S) 3 lab hours per week. May be repeated for credit. May count maximum of 4 s.h. toward CHEM major. P: CHEM 2301 and consent of instructor. Supervised practicum in teaching introductory chemistry lab.
3450. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry (3) (WI) (S) P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3451. Survey of fundamental concepts and theories of inorganic chemistry, periodicity, descriptive chemistry of selected main group elements and transition metals, and their role in organometallic, bioinorganic, and industrial chemistry.
3451. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory (1) (WI) (F,S) P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3450 or 5550. Inorganic laboratory techniques, physical methods, and the synthesis and characterization of inorganic and organometallic compounds.
3501, 3502, 3503. Special Topics in Chemistry (1,2,3) May be repeated for maximum of 6 s.h. with change of topic. May not count toward foundations curriculum science credit. P: CHEM 1160; consent of instructor. Selected topics of contemporary interest.
3850, 3851. Introduction to Physical Chemistry (4,1) (WI, WI) (F) 4 lecture and 3 lab hours per week. P: CHEM 1160, 1161; MATH 2122 or 2172; PHYS 1260, 1261; C for 3850: CHEM 3851; C for 3851: CHEM 3850. Physical chemistry for students with limited mathematical background.
3950, 3951. Physical Chemistry and Laboratory I (4,1) (WI, WI) (S) 4 lecture and 3 lab hours per week. P: CHEM 2250, 2251; MATH 2173; PHYS 1261, 2360; C for 3950: CHEM 3951; C for 3951: CHEM 3950. Theoretical and mathematical treatment of fundamental laws and theories underlying science of chemistry.
3960, 3961. Physical Chemistry and Laboratory II (4,1) (WI, WI) (F) 4 lecture and 3 lab hours per week. P: CHEM 3950, 3951; C for 3960: CHEM 3961; C for 3961: CHEM 3960. Continuation of CHEM 3950, 3951.
4103.
Seminar (1) (F, S) P: Junior or
senior standing; CHEM 2103. Discuss contemporary topics in chemistry,
instruction on technical presentations, and submission of written and oral
reports on approved topics. Requires attendance at selected departmental
seminars.
4505, 4506, 4507. Independent Study (1,2,3) (F,S,SS) May be repeated for credit. May count a maximum of 3 s.h. toward CHEM major. P: Consent of instructor and dept chair. Individual study in selected area of chemistry under immediate direction of faculty member.
4515, 4516, 4517. Research Problems in Chemistry (1,2,3) (F,S,SS) May be repeated for credit. May count maximum of 6 s.h. toward CHEM major. P: Consent of instructor. Advanced problems in chemistry pursued under supervision of faculty member.
5350, 5351. Instrumental Analysis (3,1) (WI, WI) 3 lecture and 3 lab hours per week. P: CHEM 3960; C for 5350: CHEM 5351; C for 5351: CHEM 5350. Theory and practical uses of modern instrumental methods of chemical analysis.
5525, 5526, 5527. Special Topics (1,2,3) May be repeated for credit with change of topic. P: Consent of instructor. Selected topics of current interest in areas of analytical, inorganic, organic, and physical chemistry.
5550. Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (4) (F) P: CHEM 3950; C: CHEM 3451 (for BS chemistry majors only). Advanced treatment of atomic and molecular structure, molecular symmetry, group theory, MO theory, the solid state and ionic bonding, transition metal coordination and organometallic compounds, homogeneous catalysis, and acid-base, redox,
and bioinorganic chemistry.
5750. Advanced Organic Chemistry (3) P: CHEM 2760; P/C: CHEM 3960. Physical organic topics, including aromaticity, acid/base chemistry, reactive intermediates, mechanisms of common organic reactions, and relationship between structure and reactivity.
5760. Organic Structure Elucidation (3) P: Consent of instructor. Applies modern instrumental methods to elucidation of structures of organic compounds, with particular regard to elucidation of complex structures from combined application of spectral tools.
5993. Industrial Internship in Chemistry (3) 25-30 lab hours per week. May count maximum of 3 s.h. toward CHEM major. May be repeated. P: Selection by joint Department of Chemistry/Industry screening committee; CHEM 2250, 2760, 3950. Professional experience in industrial application of chemistry.
CHEM
Banked Courses
1163.
Introduction to Computer Techniques in Experimental Chemistry (1)
2111. Applications of Molecular Modeling (1)
3860,
3861. Introduction to Instrument- Computer Interfacing (2,1)
5390.
Bioanalytical Chemistry (2)
5450.
Industrial Chemistry (3)
5560.
Inorganic Reaction Mechanisms (2)
5950,
5951. Introduction to Nuclear Chemistry (2,1)
5970.
Chemical Thermodynamics (2)
Marked catalog
copy for affected units created by the Office of Academic Programs:
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Nursing (BSN)
4.
Cognates............................................................................................................................17
s.h.
BIOL
2110, 2111. Fundamentals of Microbiology (4,0) (F,S) (P for 2110: 7 s.h. in CHEM; RP for 2110: BIOL 1050, 1051 or 1100, 1101)
CHEM
1120. Basic General, Organic, and Biochemistry I Introduction to Chemistry for the Allied Health Sciences (4 3,0) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC)
CHEM
1130. Basic General, Organic, and Biochemistry II
Organic and Biochemistry for the Allied Health
Sciences (3 4,0) (F,S,SS)
(FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1120)
NUTR
2105. Nutrition Science (3)
An
approved 3 s.h. statistics course
5.
Electives to complete requirements for graduation.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Biology, General
1.
Foundations curriculum (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for
all
Baccalaureate
Degree Programs), including those listed
below.......................................42 s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085
MATH
1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics
placement test)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Biochemistry
Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:
1.
Foundations curriculum (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for
all
Baccalaureate
Degree Programs), including those listed
below.......................................42 s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Geology
4.
Cognates............................................................................................................................28
s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Mathematics
3.
Concentration area (Choose one
area.)......................................................................20-27
s.h.
Mathematics
(27-33 s.h.):
MATH 4110. Elementary Complex Variables (3) (S) (P: MATH 2173)
Minor (24-30 s.h.)
Science
(27-28 s.h.)
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 1050; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM 1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160, CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; R/C: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 4110. Elementary Complex Variables (3) (S) (P: MATH 2173)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University Physics (4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C: MATH 2121 or 2171; P for PHYS 2360: PHYS 2350)
Choose one of the following:
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology I (4,0) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) and BIOL 1200, 1201. Principles of Biology II (4,0) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC)
A combination of any 3 courses numbered above 1999 in Chemistry or numbered above 3999 in Physics.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Physics
1.
Foundations curriculum (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for
all
Baccalaureate
Degree Programs), including those listed
below.......................................42 s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test) or equivalent
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BSAP (BS in Applied Physics)
1.
Foundations curriculum (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for
all
Baccalaureate
Degree Programs), including those listed
below.......................................42 s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test) or equivalent
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Clinical Laboratory Science
1.
Foundations curriculum requirements (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum
Requirements for all Baccalaureate Degree Programs), including those listed
below............................. 42 s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
Recommended:
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
PSYC 2101. Psychological Statistics (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: MATH 1065 or MATH 1066)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
Academic Concentrations
Chemistry
(44 s.h.)
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
CHEM
2250, 2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (WI, WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM
1160, 1161; 1 organic CHEM course CHEM 2650 or 2750)
CHEM 2650. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences (4) (F,S) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)
CHEM 2651. Organic Chemistry Lab for the Life Sciences (1) (F,S) (C: CHEM 2650)
CHEM 3450. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry (3) (S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3451)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Science Education
1.
Foundations curriculum and special requirements for certification (See Section
4,
Foundations
Curriculum Requirements for all Baccalaureate Degree programs), including
those
listed
below.................................................................................................................
42 s.h.
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1101: BIOL 1100)
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
PSYC 3206. Developmental Psychology (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
Choose a history course (FC:SO)
Choose a literature course (FC:HU)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
Science Minor
Minimum requirement for the science minor is 24 s.h. of credit as follows:
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1101: BIOL 1100)
BIOL 1200, 1201. Principles of Biology and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1201: BIOL 1200)
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
PHYS 1250, 1260. General Physics (3,3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 1250: MATH 1065 or 1066; P for 1260: PHYS 1250)
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: PHYS 1260 or 2260)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Exercise Physiology
1.
Foundations curriculum requirements (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum
Requirements
for
all Baccalaureate Degree Programs), including those listed
below........................... 42 s.h.
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1101: BIOL 1100)
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Environmental Health
3.
Cognates.............................................................................................................................30
s.h.
Required
Cognates (24 s.h.):
BIOL 2110, 2111. Fundamentals of Microbiology and Laboratory (3,1) (F,S) (P for 2110: 7 s.h. in CHEM; RP for 2110; BIOL 1050, 1051 or 1100, 1101)
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C: MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM 1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
CHEM 2650, 2651. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences (4,1) (F,S) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)
PHYS 1250, 1251. General Physics and Laboratory (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: MATH 1065)
MATH 2228. Elementary Statistical Analysis (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or equivalent)
or BIOS 1500. Introduction to Biostatistics (3) (P: MATH 1065 or equivalent or consent of instructor)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Health Education and Promotion
Prehealth Professions (47-55 s.h.)
Basic
Science Requirements:
BIOS 1500. Introduction to Biostatistics (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 1065 or equivalent)
BIOL 2140, 2141. Human Physiology and Anatomy (3,1) (P: 1 CHEM course)
BIOL 2150, 2151. Human Physiology and Anatomy (3,1) (P: BIOL 2140/41)
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C: MATH 1065)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC)
HIMA 3000. Medical Terminology for Health Professionals (3) (F,S,SS) or ATEP 2800. Medical Nomenclature for Human Performance (2) (F,S,SS) (P: HLTH 1000)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Nutrition and Dietetics
1.
Foundations curriculum requirements (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum
Requirements
for
all Baccalaureate Degree Programs), including those listed
below.......................... 42 s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM
1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
COMM 2410. Public Speaking (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA) or COMM 2420. Business and Professional Communication (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA)
ECON 2113. Principles of Microeconomics (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
SOCI 2110. Introduction to Sociology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Computer Science
Option
1 - Physics:
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: 1260 or 2360)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University Physics (4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: MATH 2121 or 2171; P for PHYS 2360: PHYS 2350)
2 s.h. of science that satisfy ECU foundation requirements.
Option
2 – Chemistry:
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C:
MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM 1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
4 s.h. of science that satisfy ECU foundation requirements.
Option
3 - Biology
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C: for 1101: BIOL 1100)
BIOL 1200, 1201. Principles of Biology and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C: for 1201: BIOL 1200)
4 s.h. of science that satisfy ECU foundations curriculum requirements.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Engineering
3.
Cognates............................................................................................................................21
s.h.
CHEM
1150, 1151. General Cemistry and Laboratory I (3,1)
(F,S,SS) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing
grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for
1151: CHEM 1150)
MATH 2152. Engineering Calculus II (3) (S) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 2151 or 2171; or consent of instructor)
MATH 2153. Engineering Calculus III (3) (F) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 2152 or 2172; or consent of instructor)
MATH 2154. Engineering Linear Algebra and Differential Equations I (4) (S) (P: ENGR 2050; MATH 2153)
MATH 3307. Mathematical Statistics I (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 2172)
PHYS 2360. University Physics (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: PHYS 2350)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS
in Biology, General
5.
Research skills (Choose one
area.)................................................................................
8-9 s.h.
Students contemplating graduate school should consider admission requirements before selecting a research skills area.
a. Foreign language through level 1003.
b. Quantitative and Communication Skills (1 course each in scientific writing, statistics, and computer programming.)
Recommended courses:
ENGL 3820. Scientific Writing (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200) or ITEC 3290. Technical Writing (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200) or a course in scientific writing
MATH 2228. Elementary Statistical Methods I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or equivalent)
MIS 2223. Introduction to Computers (3) (F,S,SS) or CSCI 2510. Introduction to Computer Science I (3) (F,S,SS)
(P: MATH 1065 or 1066) or ACCT 2401. Financial Accounting (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066 or 2119 or 2121 or 2171)
c. Relevant cognate area–courses chosen to meet this requirement must be planned through consultation with a faculty advisor and approved in advance by the dept chair and the dept director of undergraduate studies.
d. Recommended for microbiology and molecular biology/biotechnology:
CHEM
2250, 2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (WI, WI) (F,S) (P:
CHEM 1160, 1161; 1 organic chemistry course CHEM 2650 or 2750)
MIS 2223. Introduction to Computers (3) (F,S,SS) or CSCI 2510. Introduction to Computer Science I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Biochemistry
2.
Core....................................................................................................................................40
s.h.
Biology:
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1101: BIOL 1100)
BIOL 1200, 1201. Principles of Biology and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1201: BIOL 1200)
BIOL 2300. Principles of Genetics (3) (F,S,SS) (P: 2 BIOL courses)
BIOL 3310, 3311. Cellular Physiology (4,0) (F,S,SS) (P: Organic chemistry or biochemistry course)
BIOL 5800, 5810. Principles of Biochemistry I, II (3,3) (P: CHEM 2760, 2763)
BIOL 5821. Principles of Biochemistry Laboratory I (1) (P/C: BIOL 5800 or 5810)
Chemistry:
CHEM
2250, 2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (WI, WI) (F,S) (P:
CHEM 1160, 1161; 1 organic chemistry course CHEM 2650 or 2750)
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) (C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2760. Organic Chemistry II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750; C: CHEM 2763)
CHEM 2763. Organic Chemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750, 2753; C: CHEM 2760)
CHEM 3950, 3951. Physical Chemistry and Laboratory I (4,1) (WI, WI) (S) (P: PHYS 1261, 2360; MATH 2173; CHEM 2250, 2251) or CHEM 3850, 3851. Introduction to Physical Chemistry (4,1) (WI,WI) (F) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; MATH 2122 or 2172; PHYS 1260, 1261; C for 3850: CHEM 3851; C for 3851: CHEM 3850)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Clinical Laboratory Science
3.
Cognates.............................................................................................................................22
s.h.
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1101: BIOL 1100)
BIOL 2110, 2111. Fundamentals of Microbiology and Laboratory (3,1) (F,S) (P for 2110: 7 s.h. in CHEM; RP for 2110;
BIOL 1050, 1051 or 1100, 1101)
BIOL 2130. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy (4) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 1050, 1051; or 1100, 1101)
CHEM
2250, 2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM
1160, 1161; organic CHEM course CHEM 2650 or 2750)
CHEM 2650. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences (4) (F,S) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)
CHEM 2651. Organic Chemistry Lab for the Life Sciences (1) (F,S) (C: CHEM 2650)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Science Education
Chemistry
(23 s.h.):
CHEM
2250, 2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM
1160, 1161; 1 organic CHEM course CHEM 2650 or 2750)
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 3450. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry (3) (S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3451)
CHEM 3451. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory (1) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3450 or 5550)
CHEM 3850, 3851. Introduction to Physical Chemistry (4,1) (WI) (F) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; MATH 2122 or 2172; PHYS 1260)
PHYS 1250, 1260. General Physics (3,3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 1250: MATH 1065 or 1066; P for 1260: PHYS 1250)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
Certif icate in Forensic Anthropology
2.
Electives (Choose one from the
following)....................................................................
3 s.h.
JUST 3501. Criminal Procedure (3) (WI) (F,S) (P: JUST 1000 and consent of the Department of Criminal Justice)
SOCI 3220. Deviant Behavior (3) (F,S,SS) (P: SOCI 2110)
PSYC 4375. Abnormal Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
BIOL 2130. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy (4) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 1050, 1051 or 1100, 1101)
CHEM 2650. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences (4) (F,S) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)
Other electives may be approved by the Department of Anthropology.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
Forensic Science Minor
2.
Electives.........................................................................................................................
9-11 s.h.
CHEM 2650. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences (4) (F,S) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)
BIOL 2130. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy (4) (F,S,SS) (P:BIOL 1050, 1051; or 1100,1101)
ANTH 3026. Forensic Anthropology (3) (S) (P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor)
Other courses approved by the Chair of the Department of Criminal Justice.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Nutrition and Dietetics
3.
Cognates............................................................................................................................22
s.h.
BIOL 1050. General Biology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC)
BIOL 2110, 2111. Fundamentals of Microbiology (4,0) (F,S) (FC:SC) (P for 2110: 7 s.h. in CHEM; RP for 2110: BIOL
1050, 1051 or 1100, 1101)
BIOL 2130. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy (4) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 1050, 1051; or 1100, 1101)
BIOL 2131. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy Laboratory (1) (F,S,SS) (P/C: BIOL 2130)
CHEM 2650. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences (4) (F,S) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)
CHEM 2651. Organic Chemistry Lab for the Life Sciences (1) (F,S) (C: CHEM 2650)
HIMA 3000. Medical Terminology for Health Professionals (3) (F,S,SS)
Choose a 3 s.h. statistics course
4. Electives to complete requirements for graduation.
Nutrition
Minor
The minor in nutrition requires 28 s.h. of credit as follows:
1.
Core...................................................................................................................................15
s.h.
NUTR 1010. Cultural Foods (3)
NUTR 2105. Nutrition Science (3)
NUTR 2400. Nutrition Assessment (3) (P: NUTR 2105)
NUTR 3104. Advanced Vitamins and Minerals (2) (P: BIOL 2130, 2131; NUTR 2105)
NUTR 3311. Life Cycle Nutrition (4) (P: NUTR 2105)
2.
Cognates.............................................................................................................................13
s.h.
BIOL 2130. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy (4) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 1050, 1051; or 1100, 1101)
BIOL 2131. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy Laboratory (1) (F,S,SS) (P/C: BIOL 2130)
CHEM 2650, 2651. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences and Laboratory (4,1) (F,S) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)
Choose a 3 s.h. statistics course.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS in Engineering
Bioprocess
Engineering.......................................................................................................25
s.h.
BIOE 3000. Bioprocess Engineering Systems (3) (S) (P: BIOL 2110; CHEM 2650, 2651; consent of instructor)
BIOE 4000. Bioprocess Validation and Quality Engineering (4) (F) (P: MATH 3307; consent of instructor)
BIOE 4010. Bioprocess Separation Engineering (3) (F) (P: BIOE 3000)
BIOE 4020. Bioprocess Plant Design, Simulation and Analysis (3) (S) (P: BIOE 4010, MATH 3307)
BIOL 2110. Fundamentals of Microbiology (3) (F,S) (P for 2110: 7 s.h. in CHEM; RP for 2110: BIOL 1050, 1051 or 1100, 1101)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
CHEM 2650. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences (4) (F,S) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)
CHEM 2651. Organic Chemistry Lab for the Life Sciences (1) (F,S) (C: CHEM 2650)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
Neuroscience Studies
Minor
3.
Electives..........................................................................................................................
2-5 s.h.
BIOL 2130. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: BIOL 1050, 1051; or 1100, 1101)
BIOL 2131. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy Laboratory (1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C: BIOL 2130)
BIOL 2300. Principles of Genetics (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: 2 BIOL courses)
BIOL 3310, 3311. Cellular Physiology (4,0) (F,S,SS) (P: Organic chemistry or biochemistry course)
BIOL 3320. Principles of Animal Physiology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: 2000-level organic chemistry or biochemistry course)
BIOL 5510, 5511. Transmission Electron Microscopy (4,0) (P: Senior standing as a biology major or consent of instructor)
BIOL 5520, 5521. Scanning Electron Microscopy and X-Ray Analysis (2,0) (P: Senior standing as a biology major or
consent of instructor)
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) (C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2760. Organic Chemistry II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750; C: CHEM 2763)
CHEM 2763. Organic Chemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750, 2753; C: CHEM 2760)
CHEM
2770. Biological Chemistry (3) (F,S)
(FC:SC) (P: CHEM 2650 or 2760)
CHEM
2771. Biological Chemistry Laboratory (1) (F,S)
(FC:SC) (C: CHEM 2770)
ITEC 2054, 2055. Electricity/Electronics Fundamentals (3,0) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066 or 1085 or 2119)
MATH 2121. Calculus for the Life Sciences I (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA)
MATH 2122. Calculus for the Life Sciences II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 2121)
NEUR 4200. Literature in Neuroscience (1) (F)
PHIL 1262. Introduction to Philosophical Issues in Biology (3) (F,S) (FC:HU)
PHIL 2261. Introduction to Philosophy of Science (3) (FC:HU)
PSYC 2210. Research Methods in Psychology (4) (WI) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: MATH 1065 or MATH 1066; PSYC 2101)
PSYC 3225. Psychology of Learning (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
PSYC 3226. Cognitive Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
PSYC 3290. Comparative and Evolutionary Psychology (3) (FC:SO)
PSYC 3311. Neuropsychology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)
PSYC 4340. Behavioral Pharmacology Seminar (3) (P: PSYC 3310, 3311; or consent of instructor)
Any course listed under 2., above, not used to meet lab requirement may be chosen as an elective.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
BS
in Health Education and Promotion
Health
Education Requirements:
HLTH 3300. Introduction to Patient Education (3) (P: HLTH 3010 or consent of instructor)
HLTH 3011. Introduction to Epidemiology in Health Education and Promotion (3) (F,S,SS)
Choose 12 s.h. from the following:
ANTH 3252. Medical Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200)
BIOL 2110, 2111. Fundamentals of Microbiology and Laboratory (3,1) (F,S) (P for 2110: 7 s.h. in CHEM; RP for 2110; BIOL 1050, 1051 or 1100, 1101)
BIOL 2300. Genetics (3) (P: 2 BIOL courses)
BIOL 5800, 5821. Principles of Biochemistry and Laboratory (3,1) P: BIOL 3310, 3311; or consent of instructor; CHEM 2760, 2763)
BIOL 5810. Principles of Biochemistry II (3) (P: BIOL 3310, 3311; or consent of instructor; CHEM 2760, 2763)
BIOS 5010. Epidemiology for Health Professionals (3) (P: BIOS 1500 or consent of instructor)
CHEM 2770, 2771. Biological Chemistry and Lab (3,1) (S) (P: CHEM 2650 or 2760)
EXSS 3805. Physiology of Exercise (3) (P: BIOL 2130 or 2140, 2150; EXSS 2850)
HLTH 3515. AIDS HIV Disease in Modern Society (3) (P: HLTH 1000 or 1050 or consent of instructor)
HLTH 4901, 4902. Prehealth Professions Clinical Field Experience (3,3) (P: HLTH 3010, 3020 and consent of instructor)
HLTH 4910. Prehealth Professions Internship (6) (F,S,SS) (P: Completion of all major requirements and consent of program director)
HLTH 5310. Education for Human Sexuality (3) (P: Health education major or consent of instructor)
HLTH 5900. Stress Management (3) (P: Undergraduate course in anatomy and physiology, graduate standing or consent of instructor)
HPRO 2100. Perspectives in Health Care (2)
HPRO 5000. Seminar in Human Sexual Dysfunctions (3)
PHIL 3281. Introduction to Philosophical Ethics in the Health Care Profession (3) (WI*) (FC:HU)
SOCI 3327. Introductory Medical Sociology (3) (FC:SO) (P: SOCI 2110 or consent of instructor)
SOCI 5200. Seminar in Sociology of Health (3) (P: SOCI 2110 or consent of instructor)
Students in the prehealth professions concentration who have been accepted for admission to the Brody School of Medicine under the MD in 7 Program may substitute the successful completion of the first-year medical school curriculum for HLTH 4910 (6 s.h.) and 22 s.h. of electives.
Agenda Item IV
Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences
Department of Anthropology
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/ClassicalStudies.cfm
Thomas Harriot College
of Arts and Sciences
Classical
Studies
John Given, Director, 3317 Bate Building
Multidisciplinary
Studies Major
A
multidisciplinary studies major with a focus in classics or classical
civilization is available. Interested students should contact
the
director of classical studies.
Minor
The
classical studies minor is an interdisciplinary program in the Thomas Harriot
College of Arts and Sciences. The minimum
requirement
is 24 s.h., which
includes required courses in history and either Latin or Greek. The program,
with electives in
archaeology,
art, classical studies, English, foreign languages, history, philosophy, and
religious studies, is designed to encourage
students
to study all aspects of the ancient civilizations of Greece and Rome. A maximum
of 6 s.h. from each of the following
may
count toward the classical studies minor: courses used to satisfy the
foundations curriculum requirements; LATN or
GRK
courses used to satisfy the foreign language requirement for the BA degree;
directed readings in LATN or GRK; and
study
abroad programs approved by the director. Additional courses beyond those
listed may be approved by the director
if
they significantly advance the student’s understanding of classics. No semester
hours counted toward the student’s major
may
count toward the classical studies minor. In many cases, prerequisites for
courses listed below will be waived by the constituent departments.
1.
Core.........................................................................................................................................15
s.h.*
Choose
3 s.h. from:
HIST
3405. History of Ancient Greece to 146 BC (3) (FC:SO)
HIST
3410. History of Ancient Rome (3) (F) (FC:SO)
Choose
6 s.h. of the same language from:
GRK
1001. Ancient Greek Level I (3) (F)
GRK
1002. Ancient Greek Level II (3) (S) (P: GRK 1001 or consent of instructor)
LATN
1001. Latin Level I (3) (F,SS)
LATN
1002. Latin Level II (3) (S,SS) (P: LATN 1001 or consent of instructor)
Choose
an additional 6 s.h. of courses listed above, or from the following:
CLAS
2000. Introduction to Classics (Humanities) (3) (WI) (F) (FC:HU) or CLAS 2001.
Introduction to Classics
(Social
Sciences) (3) (FC:SO) or CLAS 2002. Introduction to Classics (Fine Arts) (3)
(FC:FA)
CLAS
2220. Great Works of Ancient Literature I: Greece (3) (FC:HU)
CLAS
2230. Great Works of Ancient Literature II: Rome (3) (FC:HU)
CLAS
2500. Greek Tragedy in Translation (3) (FC:HU)
CLAS
4000. Seminar in Classics (3) (WI) (S)
GRK
1003. Ancient Greek Level III (3) (F)(P: GRK 1002 or consent of instructor)
GRK
1004. Ancient Greek Level IV (3) (S) (P: GRK 1003 or consent of instructor)
GRK
3001. Homer and Hesiod (3) (F) (FC:HU) (P: GRK 1004 or consent of instructor)
GRK
3002. Age of Herodotus (3) (S) (FC:HU) (P: GRK 3001 or consent of instructor)
GRK
3330. Greek Prose Composition (3) (RP: GRK 3001)
GRK
3700. Selected Topics in Ancient Greek (3) (P: GRK 3001 or consent of
instructor)
GRK
4001. Athenian Drama (3) (FC:HU) (P: GRK 3002 or consent of instructor)
GRK
4002. Classical Greek Prose Authors (3) (FC:HU) (P: GRK 4001 or consent of
instructor)
GRK
4521, 4522, 4523. Directed Readings in Greek (1,2,3) (P: Consent of instructor)
LATN
1003. Latin Level III (3) (F,SS) (P: LATN 1002 or consent of instructor)
LATN
1004. Latin Level IV (3) (S,SS) (P: LATN 1003 or consent of instructor)
LATN
3001. Age of Cicero (3) (F) (FC:HU) (P: LATN 1004 or consent of instructor)
LATN
3002. Age of Augustus (3) (S) (FC:HU) (P: LATN 3001 or consent of instructor)
LATN
3330. Latin Prose Composition (3) (RP: LATN 3001)
LATN
3700. Selected Topics in Latin (3) (P: LATN 3001 or consent of instructor)
LATN
4001. Silver Latin Literature (3) (FC:HU) (P: LATN 3002 or consent of
instructor)
LATN
4002. Roman Drama (3) (FC:HU) (P: LATN 4001 or consent of instructor)
LATN
4521, 4522, 4523. Directed Readings in Latin (1,2,3) (P: Consent of instructor)
PHIL
1311. Great Philosophers from Antiquity to the Present (3) (FC:HU)
PHIL
3313. Ancient Philosophy (3) (FC:HU)
PHIL
3321. Medieval and Renaissance Philosophy (3) (FC:HU)
2.
Electives........................................................................................................................................
9 s.h.*
Choose
an additional 9 s.h. of courses listed above, or from the following:
ANTH 3030. Death and Disease in the Classical World (3) (P: ANTH 2000
or ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor)
ANTH/RELI
3113. Archaeology of the Old Testament World (3) (OY) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or
PHIL 1695 or consent of instructor)
ANTH/RELI
3114. Archaeology of the New Testament World (3) (OY) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or
PHIL 1696 or consent of instructor)
ANTH 3118.
Pyramids, Pharaohs, and Mummies: The Archaeology of Ancient Egypt (3) (P: ANTH
1000 or 2000 or consent of instructor)
ART
1906. Art History Survey (3) (F,S) (FC:FA)
ART
2910. Ancient Art History (3) (WI*) (F,S) (P: ART 1906, 1907)
ART
2920. Art of the Middle Ages (3) (WI) (P: ART 1906, 1907)
CLAS
1300. Greek and Latin for Vocabulary Building (3) (FC:HU)
CLAS
2400. Women in Classical Antiquity (3) (FC:HU)
CLAS
2600. The Power of Images in Ancient Greece and Rome (3) (FC:HU)
CLAS
3400. The Ancient City: Rome (3) (F,S) (FC:HU)
CLAS
3410. The Ancient City: Pompeii (3) (FC:HU)
CLAS/ENGL
3460. Classical Mythology (3) (FC:HU)
CLAS/RELI
3600. Greek and Roman Religions (3) (FC:HU)
CLAS
3700. Selected Topics in Classical Studies (3) (WI*)
CLAS
4521, 4522, 4523. Directed Readings in Classics in Translation (1,2,3) (FC:HU)
(P: Consent of instructor)
ENGL
3600. Classics Homer to Dante (3) (FC:HU)
HIST
3406. War and Society in Ancient Greece and Rome (3) (F) (FC:SO)
HIST
3412. A History of Christianity to 1300 (3) (FC:SO)
HIST
3415. The Middle Ages (3) (F) (FC:SO)
HIST
5340. The Ancient Near East (3)
HIST
5505. Maritime History of the Western World to 1415 (3)
PHIL
3350. Great Philosopher (3) (F) (FC:HU) (P: 3 s.h. in PHIL or consent of
instructor)
RELI
5000. Religious Studies Seminar (3) (WI*)
*
Students who have satisfied core requirements with courses whose semester hours
cannot be counted toward the minor
(e.g.,
by applying LATN or GRK 1003, 1004 toward the foreign language requirement) may
replace those hours with any listed course(s) to equal 24 s.h.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/anthropology.cfm
Department
of Anthropology
Linda Wolfe, Chairperson, 231 Flanagan Building
BA
in Anthropology
Minimum
degree requirement is 126 s.h. of
credit as follows:
1.
Foundations curriculum (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for
all
Baccalaureate
Degree
Programs.).............................................................................................42
s.h.
2.
Foreign language through level
1004........................................................................................12
s.h.
3.
Core
........................................................................................................................................16-17
s.h.
ANTH
2000. Archaeology Around the World (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)
ANTH
2010. Societies Around the World (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) or ANTH 2200.
Introduction to Cultural
Anthropology
(3) (F,S)
ANTH
2015. Introduction to Biological Anthropology (3) (WI*) (FC:SC) (RP: BIOL
course)
ANTH
2016. Biological Anthropology Laboratory (1) (FC:SC) (C: ANTH 2015)
ANTH
3050. Enthnographic Field Methods (3) (S) (P: ANTH 2010 or 2200 or consent of
instructor) or ANTH 3077.
Archaeological
Methods (3) (S) (P: ANTH 2000 or consent of instructor) or ANTH 4400, 4401.
Human Skeletal
Analysis
(4,0) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 2015, 2016 or consent of instructor)
ANTH
4025. Theory in Anthropology (3) (WI) (S) (P: ANTH 2010 or 2200, 2000 and
2015/16 or consent of
instructor;
RP: ANTH 3050 or 3077 or 4400, 4401)
4.
Subfields (Choose one in each subfield above 2999.)...........................................................
9 s.h.
Archaeology:
ANTH
2000. Archaeology Around the World (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)
ANTH
3011. Hunter-Gatherer Lifeways (3) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or 2005 or 2010 or
2200 or consent
of
instructor)
ANTH
3012. Lifeways of Pastoral Nomads (3) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or 2005 or 2010 or
2200 or consent
of
instructor)
ANTH
3111. North American Archaeology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or consent
of instructor)
ANTH
3113. Archaeology of the Old Testament World (3) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or PHIL
1695 or
consent
of instructor)
ANTH
3114. Archaeology of the New Testament World (3) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or PHIL
1696 or
consent
of instructor)
ANTH
3115. Caribbean Archaeology (3) (F) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or consent of
instructor)
ANTH
3116. Latin American Archaeology (3) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000; or consent of
instructor)
ANTH
3117. Prehistory of the Middle East (3) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2000; or consent of
instructor)
ANTH 3118.
Pyramids, Pharaohs, and Mummies: The Archaeology of Ancient Egypt (3) (P: ANTH
1000 or 2000 or consent of instructor)
ANTH
3175. Archaeological Field Training (6) (SS) (P: ANTH 3077 or equivalent)
ANTH
4201. Special Topics in Archaeology (3) (P: ANTH 2000; or consent of
instructor)
ANTH
5120. Archaeology of the Southeastern US (3) (P: ANTH 2000 or consent of
instructor)
ANTH
5125. Historical Archaeology (3) (P: ANTH 2000 or consent of instructor)
Biological
Anthropology:
ANTH
2015. Introduction to Biological Anthropology (3) (WI*) (FC:SC) (RP: A BIOL
course)
ANTH
2016. Biological Anthropology Laboratory (1) (FC:SC) (C: ANTH 2015)
ANTH
3020. Primate Behavior and Social Organization (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 2015, 2016;
or consent of
instructor)
ANTH
3026. Forensic Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 2016; or consent of instructor)
ANTH
3027. Human Health and Disease Ecology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or
consent of instructor)
ANTH
3028. Human Adaptation and Variation (3) (P: ANTH 2015; or consent of
instructor)
ANTH 3030. Death and Disease in the Classical World (3) (P: ANTH 2000
or ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor)
ANTH
4203. Special Topics in Biological Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 2015; or consent
of instructor)
ANTH
4225. Human Evolution (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of
instructor)
Cultural
Anthropology:
ANTH
2005. Environmental Anthropology (3) (FC:SO)
ANTH 2010. Societies Around the World (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
ANTH
2200. Introduction to Cultural Anthropology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)
ANTH
3002. Cultures of East Asia (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or
consent of instructor)
ANTH
3003. Cultures of Africa (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent
of instructor)
ANTH
3004. Cultures of the South Pacific (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200
or consent
of
instructor)
ANTH
3005. North American Indians (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or
consent of instructor)
ANTH
3009. Motherhood of God in Asian Traditions (3) (FC:SO)
ANTH
3016. Cultures of the Caribbean (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or
consent of instructor)
ANTH
3017. Cultures of Mexico and Guatemala (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or
2200 or consent
of
instructor)
ANTH
3018. Cultures of South and Central America (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010
or 2200 or
consent
of instructor)
ANTH
3150. Applying Anthropology to Contemporary Cultural Issues (3) (SL*) (P: ANTH
1000 or 2010 or
2200
or consent of instructor)
ANTH
3176. Cultural Anthropology Field School I (3) (SS) (RP: ANTH 1050 or consent
of instructor)
ANTH
3177. Cultural Anthropology Field School II (3) (SS) (RP: ANTH 1050 or consent
of instructor)
ANTH
3200. Women’s Roles in Cross-Cultural Perspective (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or
2010 or 2200 or
consent
of instructor)
ANTH
3252. Medical Anthropology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent
of instructor)
ANTH
4050. Psychological Anthropology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or
consent of instructor)
ANTH
4054. Anthropology of Religion (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or
consent of instructor)
ANTH
4202. Special Topics in Cultural Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 2200 or 2010; or
consent of instructor)
ANTH
4253. Social Anthropology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent
of instructor)
ANTH
4260. Cultural Ecology (3) (FC:SO) (P: ANTH 1000 or 2010 or 2200 or consent of
instructor)
ANTH
5030. Economic Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 2200 or consent of instructor)
ANTH
5065. Maritime Anthropology (3) (P: ANTH 2200 or consent of instructor)
One
of the following two courses may be taken to fulfill the course requirement for
a course above 2999 in
cultural
anthropology:
ANTH
3720. Writing Systems of the World (3) (F) (Same as ENGL 3720) (P: ENGL 1200)
ANTH
3770. Language Universals (3) (Same as ENGL 3770)
5.
ANTH
electives.............................................................................................................................
6 s.h.
The
following courses, including those listed above, may be taken as electives:
ANTH
2760. Afro-Caribbean Language and Culture (3) (S) (Same as ENGL 2760) (P: ENGL
1200)
ANTH
3720. Writing Systems of the World (3) (F) (Same as ENGL 3720) (P: ENGL 1200)
ANTH
3770. Language Universals (3) (Same as ENGL 3770)
ANTH
4990. Internship in Applied Anthropology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ANTH major with
consent of department
chair
and supervising faculty member)
ANTH
4991. Advanced Internship in Applied Anthropology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: ANTH major
with consent of
department
chair and supervising faculty member)
(ANTH
5010, 5175 may not count as ANTH electives.)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/coursesa.cfm#anth
3020.
Primate Behavior and Social Organization (3) P: ANTH
2015, 2016; or consent of instructor. Comparative examination of prosimians,
monkeys, and apes in natural and experimental situations that enhance
understanding of human behavior and social organization.
3026.
Forensic Anthropology (3) P: ANTH 2015, 2016, or
consent of instructor. May not count toward foundations curriculum requirement.
Human osteology, establishing a biological profile, analysis of trauma and
manner of death, and the legal duties of the forensic anthropologist.
3027.
Human Health and Disease Ecology (3) P: ANTH 2015,
2016; or consent of instructor. Interaction between environment, behavior, and
illness. Environmental niches conducive to maintenance and spread of disease.
Methods of examining diseases in prehistoric societies.
3028.
Human Adaptation and Variation (3) P: ANTH 2015;
or consent of instructor. Evolutionary perspective of the adaptive nature of
contemporary human physical diversity.
3030. Death and Disease in the Classical World (3) P: ANTH 2000 or ANTH 2015, 2016; or consent of instructor. Explores archaeological and bioarchaeological
evidence for disease and death in Classical Greece and Rome.
3050.
Ethnographic Field Methods (3) (S) P: ANTH 2010 or
2200 or consent of instructor. Lectures, readings, and fieldwork. Application
of formal and informal ethnographic research techniques.
3077.
Archaeological Methods (3) (S) P: ANTH 2000 or
consent of instructor. Basic archaeological methods and techniques in site
survey, site types, excavation, recording processing, presentation,
chronometry, and analysis of materials.
3111.
North American Archaeology (3) (FC:SO) P: ANTH 1000 or
2000 or consent of instructor. Culture, history, and development of prehistoric
cultures of North America from earliest times to European colonization.
3113.
Archaeology of the Old Testament World (3) Same as RELI 3113 P:
ANTH 1000 or 2000 or PHIL
1695
or consent of instructor. Survey of Bronze and Iron Age cultures of
Syria-Palestine, ca. 3500-586 BC/BCE, with emphasis on use of archaeological
materials in historical reconstruction.
3114.
Archaeology of the New Testament World (3) Same as RELI 3114 P:
ANTH 1000 or 2000 or PHIL
1696
or consent of instructor. Survey of Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine
periods in Syria-Palestine, 539 BC/BCE to 640 AD/CE, with emphasis on use of
archaeological materials in historical reconstruction.
3115.
Caribbean Archaeology (3) (F) P: ANTH 1000 or
2000 or consent of instructor. Archaeology of Circum-Caribbean area from
Archaic Period to end of Colonial Period.
3116.
Latin American Archaeology (3) P: ANTH 1000 or
2000; or consent of instructor. Archaeology of Latin America from initial human
colonization (Late Pleistocene) until European contact, including impact of
food production, and development of social complexity.
3117.
Prehistory of the Middle East (3) P: ANTH 1000 or
2000 or consent of instructor. Prehistoric cultures of Mesopotamia and
surrounding areas with an emphasis on changes to the socio-economic
organization in response to environment and cultural factors.
3118.
Pyramids, Pharaohs, and Mummies: The Archaeology of Ancient Egypt (3) P: ANTH 1000 or 2000 or consent of instructor. Survey of
Egyptian material culture, from the Predynastic
through the Greco-Roman period.
3150.
Applying Anthropology to Contemporary Cultural Issues (3) (SL*) (S) P:
ANTH1000 or 2010 or
2200
or consent of instructor. Experiential learning about real life conditions both
globally and within local communities in eastern North Carolina.
3175.
Archaeological Field Training (6) (SS) 40 hours of
field work per week (summer). P: ANTH 3077 or equivalent. Practical application
of archaeological methods and cultural analysis in field research situations.
3176.
Cultural Anthropology Field School I (3) (SS) May
be taken concurrently with ANTH 3177. May count maximum of 6 s.h. of ANTH 3176,
3177, 4501, 4502, 4503, 4990, and 4991 toward any degree offered in the anthropology
department. RP: ANTH 1050 or consent of instructor. Practical application of
ethnographic methods and analysis in a crosscultural field setting.
Agenda Item V
Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences
Department of Physics
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/CoursesP.cfm#phys
PHYS: Physics
2021.
Experimental Physics (1) (F-04) 3 lab hours
per week. P: PHYS 1261, 2360. Experiments involving basic electricity and
digital electronics concepts.
2350, 2360. University Physics (4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) P for 2350: MATH 2121, 2151, or 2171; P for PHYS 2360: PHYS 2350. Calculus-based introduction to basic principles of physics. Mechanics, thermodynamics, electricity and magnetism, optics, and modern physics.
3516,
3517, 3518. Problems in Physics (1,1,1) Equivalent
of 1 lecture hour per week. P: Consent of instructor and dept chair. Research
under faculty supervision.
Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH 1065)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160:
CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
Biology:
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1101: BIOL 1100)
BIOL 1200, 1201. Principles of Biology and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1201: BIOL 1200)
BIOL 2300. Principles of Genetics (3) (F,S,SS) (P: 2 BIOL courses)
BIOL 3310, 3311. Cellular Physiology (4,0) (F,S,SS) (P: Organic chemistry or biochemistry course)
BIOL 5800, 5810. Principles of Biochemistry I, II (3,3) (P: CHEM 2760, 2763)
BIOL 5821. Principles of Biochemistry Laboratory I (1) (P/C: BIOL 5800 or 5810)
Chemistry:
CHEM 2250, 2251. Quantitative and
Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) (C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2760. Organic Chemistry II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750; C: CHEM 2763)
CHEM 2763. Organic Chemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750, 2753; C: CHEM 2760)
CHEM 3950, 3951. Physical
Chemistry and Laboratory I (4,1) (
MATH 1083. Introduction to Functions (3) (F, S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C) or
MATH 1085. Pre-Calculus Mathematics (5) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 2171, 2172, 2173. Calculus I, II, III (4,4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P for 2171: minimum grade of C in any of MATH 1083, 1085, or 2122; P for 2172: MATH 2171 with minimum grade of C or 2122 with consent of instructor; P for 2173: MATH 2172 with minimum grade of C)
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: 1260 or 2260)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University
Physics (4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 2350:
MATH 1085 2121,
2151, or 2171; P for PHYS 2360: PHYS 2350;
C: MATH 2121 or 2171)
BIOL 2100, 2101. Basic Laboratory Methods for Biotechnology (3,0) (F,SS) (Formerly BIOL 3100, 3101) (P: BIOL 1100, 1101; MATH 1065;1 semester of CHEM with lab)
BIOL 3220, 3221. Microbiology (4,0) (F) (P: BIOL 1200, 1201; 1 organic chemistry course)
BIOL 5510, 5511. Transmission Electron Microscopy (4) (P: Senior standing as a BIOL major or consent of instructor)
BIOL 5520, 5521. Scanning Electron Microscopy and X-Ray Analysis (2,0) (P: Senior standing as a BIOL major or consent of instructor)
BIOL 5870. Molecular Biology of the Gene (3) (F) (P: BIOL 2300)
BIOL 5900, 5901. Biotechniques and Laboratory (2,3) (P: BIOL 2100, 2101, 5870; consent of chair or instructor; RP: BIOL 5810)
CHEM 3960, 3961. Physical
Chemistry and Laboratory II (4,1) (
MATH 4331. Introduction to Ordinary Differential Equations (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 2173)
PDF catalog: page 114
HTML catalog: http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/chemistry.cfm
The BS degree in chemistry is the appropriate program for students considering advanced degree programs in chemistry, biochemistry, and other related fields or a professional career in chemistry. Graduates of this program meet certification requirements of the American Chemical Society. Students are strongly encouraged to pursue undergraduate research with a faculty member. Up to 6 s.h. of undergraduate research may be applied toward degree requirements. Information regarding undergraduate research may be obtained from the director of undergraduate studies. Students completing the BS degree are encouraged to consider some of the following courses as electives: COMM 2410 or COMM 2420; ITEC 3290 or ENGL 3820; MATH 2228, 3256, 4331; CHEM 4515, 4516, 4517; advanced 5000-level courses in chemistry; and BIOL 5800 or 5810. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: 1260 or 2360)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University
Physics (4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 2350: MATH 2121, 2151, or 2171; C for 2350:
MATH 2121 or 2171; P for 2360: PHYS 2350)
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH 1065)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
CHEM 2103. Introduction to Chemical Literature (1) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2250, 2251. Quantitative and
Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) (C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2760. Organic Chemistry II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750; C: CHEM 2763)
CHEM 2763. Organic Chemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750, 2753; C: CHEM 2760)
CHEM 2770. Biological Chemistry (3) (F,S) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 2650 or 2760)
CHEM 3451. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory (1) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3450 or 5550)
CHEM 3950, 3951. Physical
Chemistry and Laboratory I (4,1) (
CHEM 3960, 3961. Physical
Chemistry and Laboratory II (4,1) (
CHEM 4103. Seminar (1) (F,S) (P: Junior or senior standing; CHEM 2103)
CHEM 5350, 5351. Instrumental
Analysis (3,1) (
CHEM 5550. Advanced Inorganic Chemistry (4) (F) (P: CHEM 3950; C: CHEM 3451 [for BS chemistry majors only])
BIOL 5821. Principles of Biochemistry Laboratory (1) (F,S) (P/C: BIOL 5800 or 5810)
CHEM 2111. Applications of Molecular Modeling (1) (F,S) (FC:SC) (P/C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2301. Teaching Laboratory Chemistry (2,0) (F,S) (P: Grade of B or higher in CHEM 1160 and CHEM 1161 or permission of instructor) May count only 1 s.h. toward the 2 s.h. lab requirement
CHEM 2771. Biological Chemistry Laboratory (1) (F,S) (FC:SC) (C: CHEM 2770)
CHEM 3301. Practicum in Teaching (1) (F,S) (P: CHEM 2301 and consent of instructor)
CHEM 4515, 4516, 4517. Research Problems in Chemistry (1,2,3) (F,S,SS) (P: Consent of instructor)
CHEM 5993. Industrial Internship in Chemistry (3) (P: Selection by joint chem dept/industry screening committee; CHEM 2250, 2760, 3950)
MATH 1085. Pre-Calculus Mathematics (5) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 2171, 2172, 2173. Calculus I, II, III (4,4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P for 2171: minimum grade of C in any of MATH 1083, 1085 or 2122; P for 2172: MATH 2171 with a minimum grade of C or 2122 with consent of instructor; P for 2173: MATH 2172 with a minimum grade of C)
Credit toward a mathematics major will not be given in any MATH course or in CSCI 2510 with a grade less than C. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:
MATH 2171, 2172, 2173. Calculus I, II, III (4,4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P for 2171: MATH 1083, 1085, 2122 with minimum grade of C; P for 2172: MATH 2171 or 2122 with consent of instructor; P for 2173: MATH 2172)
MATH 2300. Transition to Advanced Mathematics (3) (P: MATH 2171)
MATH 3256. Linear Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 2172)
MATH 3263. Introduction to Modern Algebra (3) (WI) (F,S) (P: MATH 2300, 3256)
MATH 3307. Mathematical Statistics I (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 2172)
MATH 3308. Mathematical Statistics II (3) (F) (P: MATH 3307)
MATH 4101. Advanced Calculus I (3) (P: MATH 2173, 2300, or consent of instructor)
MATH 4331. Introduction to Ordinary Differential Equations (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 2173)
CSCI 2310, 2311. Algorithmic Problem Solving and Programming Laboratory (4,0) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065; C for 2310: CSCI 2311; C for 2311: CSCI 2310)
Mathematics (27-33 s.h.):
MATH 4110. Elementary Complex Variables (3) (S) (P: MATH 2173)
Minor (24-30 s.h.)
Science (27-28 s.h.)
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 1050; P/C: MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM 1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160, CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; R/C: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 4110. Elementary Complex Variables (3) (S) (P: MATH 2173)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University
Physics (4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C: MATH 2121 or
2171; P for 2350: MATH 2121, 2151, or
2171; P for PHYS 2360: PHYS 2350)
Choose one of the following:
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology I (4,0) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) and BIOL 1200, 1201. Principles of Biology II (4,0)(F,S,SS) (FC:SC)
A combination of any 3 courses numbered above 1999 in Chemistry or numbered above 3999 in Physics.
Statistics (21 s.h.)
ENGL 3880. Writing for Business and Industry (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
MATH 4031. Applied Statistical Analysis (3) (WI) (P: MATH 2228 or 2283 or 3308; MATH 3256 or MATH/CSCI 3584; or equivalent; or consent of instructor)
MATH 4201. Introduction to Stochastic Processes (3) (P: MATH 3307 or equivalent or consent of instructor) or MATH 5000. Introduction to Sampling Design (3) (F) (P: MATH 3308 or 3229 or consent of instructor)
MATH 4774. Programming for Research (3) (P: MATH 2228 or MATH 2283 or equivalent)
MATH 4801. Probability Theory (3) (P: MATH 2173 or 3307)
MATH 4999. Capstone and Statistical Consulting (3) (P: MATH 4031)
PHIL 2274. Business Ethics (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU)
Computer Science (16 s.h.)
CSCI 2300. Computer Science Survey (3) (F,S,SS)
CSCI 3300. Introduction to Algorithms and Data Structures (4) (F,S,SS) (P: CSCI 2300, 2310, 2427)
CSCI 3310. Advanced Data Structures and Data Abstraction (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CSCI 3300)
CSCI 3650. Analysis of Algorithms (3) (S,SS) (P: CSCI 3200 or 3300; CSCI 2427)
The BA is designed for students interested in employment in nontechnical fields or in graduate study in the social sciences, medicine, public health, business, and the humanities depending on elective choices. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: PHYS 1260 or 2360)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University
Physics (4,4) (FC:SC) (P for 2350: MATH 2121, 2151,
or 2171; P
for 2350: MATH 2121 or 2171; P for 2360: PHYS 2350)
PHYS 3700, 3701. Advanced Laboratory (3,0) (3700:WI) (S) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4416. Modern Physics I (3) (F) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4417. Modern Physics II (3) (S) (P: PHYS 4416)
MATH 1083. Introduction to Functions (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 2171, 2172, 2173. Calculus I, II, III (4,4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P for 2171: minimum grade of C in any of MATH 1083, 1085, 2122; P for 2172: MATH 2171 with a minimum grade of C or 2122 with consent of instructor; P for 2173: MATH 2172 with a minimum grade of C)
The BS is a traditional physics program designed for students interested in graduate study in physics or engineering. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH 1065)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test) or equivalent
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: PHYS 1260 or 2360)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University
Physics (4,4) (FC:SC) (P for 2350: MATH 2121, 2151,
or 2171; P for 2350: MATH 2121 or 2171;
P for 2360: PHYS 2350)
PHYS 3700, 3701. Advanced Laboratory (3,0) (3700:WI) (F) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4120. Thermodynamics (3) (S-OY) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4226. Mechanics I (3) (F) (P: MATH 2173; PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4310. Modern Optics (3) (F-EY) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4326. Electricity and Magnetism I (3) (F) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4416. Modern Physics I (3) (F) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4417. Modern Physics II (3) (S) (P: PHYS 4416)
PHYS 4560. Mathematical Methods for Physics (3) (S) (P: MATH 2173; PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4610. Electronics (3) (F-OY) (P: PHYS 2021, 2360)
Choose 3 s.h. of PHYS electives above 2999
MATH 1083. Introduction to Functions (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 2171, 2172, 2173. Calculus I, II, III (4,4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P for 2171: minimum grade of C in any of MATH 1083, 1085, 2122; P for 2172: MATH 2171 with a minimum grade of C or 2122 with consent of instructor; P for 2173: MATH 2172 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 4331. Introduction to Ordinary Differential Equations (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 2173)
The BSAP is designed for students interested in employment in technical fields or in graduate study in engineering, business, public health, medicine, environmental science, and related technical fields depending on elective choices. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH 1065)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test) or equivalent
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: PHYS 1260 or 2260)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University
Physics (4,4) (FC:SC) (P for 2350: MATH 2121, 2151,
or 2171; P
for 2350: MATH 2121 or 2171; P for 2360: PHYS 2350)
PHYS 3700, 3701. Advanced Laboratory (3,0) (3700:WI) (F) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4310. Modern Optics (3) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4416. Modern Physics I (3) (F) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4417. Modern Physics II (3) (S) (P: PHYS 4416)
PHYS 4610. Electronics (3) (F-OY) (P: PHYS 2021, 2360)
Choose 3 s.h. of PHYS electives above 2999
MATH 1083. Introduction to Functions (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 2171, 2172, 2173. Calculus I, II, III (4,4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P for 2171: minimum grade of C in any of MATH 1083, 1085, 2122; P for 2172: MATH 2171 with a minimum grade of C or 2122 with consent of instructor; P for 2173: MATH 2172 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 4331. Introduction to Ordinary Differential Equations (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 2173)
Students pursuing a BA or BSAP in physics who are also participating in the MD/7 Program must meet all the above-specified requirements for their major and the math cognate. It should also be noted that students coming in under the MD/7 Program in physics will need to have obtained prior credit for MATH 1065, 1085. In addition, the student will need to fulfill the prehealth concentration by taking BIOL 1100, 1101, 1200, 1201; CHEM 1150, 1151, 1160, 1161, 2750, 2751, 2760, 2763. If the student is accepted for admission to the Brody School of Medicine under the MD/7 Program, the first year of medical studies will count toward fulfilling the remaining 28 s.h. of electives as required for graduation.
Minimum requirement for physics minor is 24 s.h. credit as follows:
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: PHYS 1260 or 2260)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University
Physics (4,4) (FC:SC) (P for 2350: MATH 2121, 2151,
or 2171; P for 2350: MATH 2121 or 2171;
P for 2360: PHYS 2350)
The science education degree prepares and develops professionals in science education by offering classroom instruction and research opportunities in programs for students whose career goals are teaching science in the elementary, middle, and secondary schools, and in higher education. Undergraduate areas of preparation include the methods and processes of teaching the biological, physical, and earth sciences. Minimum degree requirement is 128 s.h. of credit as follows: (Note: These degree requirements are subject to change beginning Fall 2010 pending NC State Board of Education approval of revised licensure program requirements. Students should consult their departmental advisor for specific program information.)
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1101: BIOL 1100)
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH 1065)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
PSYC 3206. Developmental Psychology (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
Choose a history course (FC:SO)
Choose a literature course (FC:HU)
BIOL 1200, 1201. Principles of Biology and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1201: BIOL 1200)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
GEOL 1500. Dynamic Earth (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC)
GEOL 1501. Dynamic Earth Laboratory (1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C: GEOL 1500)
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: PHYS 1260 or 2360)
SCIE 3323. Introduction to Teaching in the High School Science Classroom (3) (S) (P: SCIE 2123)
SCIE 3350, 3351. Descriptive Astronomy (4,0) (S) or SCIE 3360, 3361. Physical Meteorology (4,0) (S) (P: CHEM 1150; MATH 1085; PHYS 1250, 1260)
SCIE 3602. Investigations in Physical and Earth Science (4) (F,S,SS)
SCIE 3604. Investigations in Life and Environmental Science (4) (F,S,SS)
SCIE 4323. The Teaching of Science in High School (3) (WI) (F) (P: Admission to upper division)
Choose 5-6 s.h. mathematics from one area as follows:
Biology and Earth Science:
MATH 1085. Pre-Calculus Mathematics (5) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 2121. Calculus for the Life Sciences I (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 or 1077 with a minimum grade of C) and MATH 2122. Calculus for the Life Sciences II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 2121)
Chemistry and Physics:
MATH 2121. Calculus for the Life Sciences I (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1065 or 1077 with a minimum grade of C)
MATH 2122. Calculus for the Life Sciences II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 2121)
Biology (20 s.h.):
BIOL 2100, 2101. Basic Laboratory Methods for Biotechnology (3,0) (F,SS) Formerly BIOL 3100, 3101. 1 lecture and 4 lab hours per week. P for 2110: 7 s.h. in CHEM; RP for 2110; BIOL 1050, 1051 or 1100, 1101.
BIOL 2110, 2111. Fundamentals of Microbiology (4,0) (F,S) (P: 4 s.h. in BIOL; 8 s.h. in CHEM)
BIOL 2250. Ecology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 1100, 1101, 1200, 1201)
BIOL 2251. Ecology Laboratory (1) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 1100, 1101, 1200, 1201; C: BIOL 2250)
BIOL 2300. Principles of Genetics (3) (F,S,SS) (P: 2 BIOL courses)
PHYS 1250, 1260. General Physics (3,3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 1250: MATH 1065 or 1066; P for 1260: PHYS 1250)
Chemistry (23 s.h.):
CHEM 2250, 2251. Quantitative and Instrumental Analysis (3,2) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; 1 organic CHEM course)
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 3450. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry (3) (S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3451)
CHEM 3451. Elementary Inorganic Chemistry Laboratory (1) (WI) (F,S) (P: CHEM 2250, 2251; C: CHEM 3450 or 5550)
CHEM 3850, 3851. Introduction to Physical Chemistry (4,1) (WI) (F) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; MATH 2122 or 2172; PHYS 1260)
PHYS 1250, 1260. General Physics (3,3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 1250: MATH 1065 or 1066; P for 1260: PHYS 1250)
Earth Science (22 s.h.):
GEOL 1550. Oceanography (4) (S) (FC:SC)
GEOL 1600. Earth and Life Through Time (4) (S) (FC:SC)
GEOL 1700. Environmental Geology (4) (F,S) (FC:SC)
GEOL 3050, 3051. Mineralogy and Petrology I (4,0) (F) (P: A 1000-level GEOL course) 3 lecture and 3 lab hours per week.
PHYS 1250, 1260. General Physics (3,3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 1250: MATH 1065 or 1066; P for 1260: PHYS 1250)
Physics (20 s.h.):
PHYS 2350, 2360. University
Physics (4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C: MATH 2121 or
2171; P for 2350: MATH 2121, 2151, or
2171; P for PHYS 2360: PHYS 2350)
PHYS 4120. Thermodynamics (3) (S-OY) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4310. Modern Optics (3) (F-EY) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4416. Modern Physics I (3) (F) (P: PHYS 2360)
PHYS 4417. Modern Physics II (3) (S) (P: PHYS 4416)
EDTC 4001. Technology in Education (2) (F,S) (P: Admission to upper division)
EDUC 3200. Introduction to American Education (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (P: Early experience course or consent of instructor)
EDUC 4400. Foundations of School Learning, Motivation, and Assessment (3) (F,S) (P: Admission to upper division) or PSYC 4305. Educational Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: PSYC 2201 or 2240 or 3206 or 3240 or equivalent)
READ 3990. Teaching
SCIE 2123. Early Experiences for the Prospective Teacher (1) (F,S)
SCIE 4324. Internship in Science Education (10) (S) (P: Admission to upper division; SCIE 4323; C: SCIE 4325)
SCIE 4325. Internship Seminar: Issues in Science Education (1) (S) (P: Admission to upper division; C: SCIE 4324)
SPED 4010. Exceptional Students in the Regular Classroom (2) (F,S) (P: Admission to upper division; RP: SPED 2000)
Credit toward a computer science major will not be given for any CSCI course with a grade less than C being used to satisfy the requirements specified in the common core and CSCI electives. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h. of credit as follows:
See cognates below for courses that fulfill science requirements.
COMM 2410. Public Speaking (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA) or COMM 2420. Business and Professional Communication (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA)
PHIL 2275. Professional Ethics (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU)
CSCI 2310, 2311. Algorithmic Problem Solving and Programming Laboratory (4,0) (F,S) (P: MATH 1065; C for 2310: CSCI 2311; C for 2311: CSCI 2310)
CSCI 3300. Introduction to Algorithms and Data Structures (4) (F,S) (P: CSCI 2300, 2310; C: CSCI 2427)
CSCI 3310. Advanced Data Structures and Data Abstraction (3) (F,S) (P: CSCI 2427, 3300)
CSCI 3526. Switching Theory and Computer Organization (3) (F,S) (P: CSCI 2310 or 2610; CSCI 2427)
CSCI 3675. Organization of Programming Language (3) (F) (P: CSCI 3200 or 3310)
CSCI 4000. Ethical and Professional Issues in Computer Science (1) (F,S)
CSCI 4200. Software Engineering I (3) (WI) (F,S) (P: CSCI 3299 or 3310; CSCI major)
CSCI 4230. Software Engineering II (3) (F,S) (P: CSCI 4200 or consent of the instructor)
CSCI 4602. Theory of Automata and Linguistics (3) (F) (P: CSCI major; CSCI 2427)
CSCI 4630. Operating Systems I (3) (F,S) (P: CSCI 3300; CSCI major)
CSCI/MATH 2427. Discrete Mathematical Structures (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066)
CSCI/MATH 3584. Computational Linear Algebra (3) (F,S) (P: Calculus course)
ENGL 3880. Writing for Business and Industry (3) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200) or ITEC 3290. Technical Writing (3)(WI) (F,S,SS) (P: ENGL 1200)
MATH 2171. Calculus I (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: minimum grade of C in any of MATH 1083, 1085, or 2122) or MATH 2121. Calculus for the Life Sciences I (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (May not receive credit for MATH 2121 after taking MATH 2171) (P: MATH 1065 or 1077 with minimum grade of C)
MATH 2172. Calculus II (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 2171 with a minimum grade of C or MATH 2122 with consent of instructor) or MATH 2122. Calculus for the Life Sciences II (3) (F,S,SS) (May not receive credit for MATH 2122 after taking MATH 2172.) (P: MATH 2121)
MATH 2228. Elementary Statistical Methods I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or equivalent) or MATH 2283. Statistics for Business (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066 or equivalent) or MATH 3307. Mathematical Statistics I (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 2172)
MATH 3229. Elementary Statistical Methods II (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 2228 or equivalent) or MATH 3308. Mathematical Statistics II (3) (F) (P: MATH 3307) or CSCI 5774. Programming for Research (3) (F,S) (P: General course in statistics or consent of instructor)
12 s.h. of science. (Note that 8 of these 12 units count toward foundation curriculum requirements.)
One of the following options must be selected.
Option 1 - Physics:
PHYS 1251, 1261. General Physics Laboratory (1,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C for 1251: PHYS 1250 or 2350; C for 1261: 1260 or 2360)
PHYS 2350, 2360. University
Physics (4,4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 2350: MATH
2121, 2151, or 2171; P: MATH 2121 or
2171; P for PHYS 2360: PHYS 2350)
2 s.h. of science that satisfy ECU foundation requirements.
Option 2 – Chemistry:
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM 1150)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
4 s.h. of science that satisfy ECU foundation requirements.
Option 3 - Biology
BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C: for 1101: BIOL 1100)
BIOL 1200, 1201. Principles of Biology and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C: for 1201: BIOL 1200)
4 s.h. of science that satisfy ECU foundations curriculum requirements.
*Requirements for 5 above, may be met by satisfying the requirements for a minor.
Minimum degree requirement for the engineering program is 128 s.h. credit as
follows:
BIOL 1050. General Biology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) and BIOL 1051. General Biology Laboratory (1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (C:BIOL 1030 or 1050) or BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1101: BIOL 1100)
ECON 2113. Principles of Microeconomics (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
MATH 2151. Engineering Calculus I (3) (S) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 1083 or 1085 or placement test criteria; or consent of instructor)
PHIL 2275. Professional Ethics (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU) or PHIL 2274. Business Ethics (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:HU)
PHYS 2350. University Physics (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P for 2350: MATH 2121, 2151, or 2171)
ENGR 1012. Engineering Graphics (2) (F) (C: MATH 1083 or higher)
ENGR 1014. Introduction to Engineering (3) (S) (P: ENGR 1012)
ENGR 2022. Statics (3) (S) (P: PHYS 2350)
ENGR 2050. Computer Applications in Engineering (3) (S) (C: MATH 1083 or higher)
ENGR 2070. Materials and Processes (3) (F)
ENGR 3004. Dynamics (3) (F) (P: ENGR 2022; MATH 2153)
ENGR 3012. Thermal and Fluid Systems (4) (S) (P: ENGR 3004)
ENGR 3014. Circuit Analysis (3) (F) (P: MATH 2154; PHYS 2360)
ENGR 3024. Mechanics of Materials (3) (WI) (F) (P: ENGR 2020, 2070)
ENGR 3050. Sensors, Measurements and Controls (3) (S) (P: ENGR 3014)
ENGR 3300. Introduction to Engineering Project Management (3) (WI) (F) (P: ENGL 1200; ENGR 1014)
ENGR 3400. Engineering Economics (3) (WI) (F) (P: MATH 3307)
ENGR 4010. Senior Capstone Design Project I (2) (WI) (F) (P: Consent of instructor)
ENGR 4020. Senior Capstone Design Project II (2) (WI) (S) (P: ENGR 4010)
CHEM 1150, 1151. General Chemistry and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (P: Chemistry placement test or passing grade in CHEM 0150; P/C: MATH 1065; C for 1150: CHEM 1151; C for 1151: CHEM 1150)
MATH 2152. Engineering Calculus II (3) (S) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 2151 or 2171; or consent of instructor)
MATH 2153. Engineering Calculus III (3) (F) (FC:MA) (P: MATH 2152 or 2172; or consent of instructor)
MATH 2154. Engineering Linear Algebra and Differential Equations I (4) (S) (P: ENGR 2050; MATH 2153)
MATH 3307. Mathematical Statistics I (3) (F,S) (P: MATH 2172)
PHYS 2360. University Physics (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: PHYS 2350)
Biomedical Engineering - 25 s.h.
BIME 3000. Foundations of Biomedical Engineering (3) (F) (P: Consent of instructor)
BIME 4030. Biomechanics and Materials (4) (F) (P: CHEM 2750, 2753; ENGR 3004, 3024)
BIME 4040. Physiological Systems and Modeling for Engineering (3) (F) (P: BIME 3000)
BIME 4200. Biomedical Instrumentation (4) (F) (P: BIME 4040; ENGR 3050)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) (C: CHEM 2750)
ENGR 4000. Quality Systems Design (3) (F) (P: MATH 3307)
Bioprocess Engineering - 25 s.h.
BIOE 3000. Bioprocess Engineering Systems (3) (S) (P: BIOL 2110; CHEM 2650, 2651; consent of instructor)
BIOE 4000. Bioprocess Validation and Quality Engineering (4) (F) (P: MATH 3307; Consent of instructor)
BIOE 4010. Bioprocess Separation Engineering (3) (F) (P: BIOE 3000)
BIOE 4020. Bioprocess Plant Design, Simulation and Analysis (3) (S) (P: BIOE 4010; MATH 3307)
BIOL 2110. Fundamentals of Microbiology (3) (F,S) (P: 7 s.h. in CHEM; RR: BIOL 1050, 1051 or 1100, 1101)
CHEM 1160, 1161. General Chemistry and Laboratory II (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 1150, 1151; C for 1160: CHEM 1161; C for 1161: CHEM 1160; RC: MATH 1083 or 1085)
CHEM 2650. Organic Chemistry for the Life Sciences (4) (F) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161)
CHEM 2651. Organic Chemistry Lab for the Life Sciences (1) (F) (C: CHEM 2650)
Industrial and Systems Engineering - 25 s.h.
ISYS 3010. Principles and Methods of Industrial and Systems Engineering (3) (F) (P: Junior standing in engineering)
ISYS 3060. Systems Optimization (3) (F) (P: MATH 2154, 3307)
ISYS 4010. Work Measurement and Human Factors (3) (S) (P: MATH 3307)
ISYS 4020. Analysis of Production Systems and Facility Design (3) (F) (P: MATH 3307)
ISYS 4065. Discrete System Modeling (3) (F) (P: MATH 2154, 3307)
ENGR 4000. Quality Systems Design (3) (F) (P: MATH 3307)
Technical electives, 7 s.h. as approved by the academic advisor.
Mechanical Engineering - 25 s.h.
MENG 3624. Solid Mechanics (3) (S) (P: ENGR 3024)
MENG 4018. Thermodynamics (3) (P: ENGR 3012)
MENG 4150. Fluid Mechanics (3) (S) (P: ENGR 3012)
MENG 4260. Heat and Mass Transfer (3) (F) (P: ENGR 3012)
MENG 4650. Machine Design (3) (S) (P: MENG 3624)
ENGR 4000. Quality Systems Design (3) (F) (P: MATH 3307)
Technical electives, 7 s.h. as approved by the academic advisor.
Agenda Item VI
Thomas Harriot College of Arts and Sciences
Department of Psychology
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/psychology.cfm
Thomas Harriot
College of Arts and Sciences
Department of Psychology
Kathleen A. Row, Chairperson, 132
Rawl Building
BA in Psychology
In order to declare a major in
psychology, an undergraduate must have a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.0 and at
least a grade of "C" in PSYC 1000 or 1060. A faculty advisor will be
assigned to each student to aid in planning an overall program. A student
desiring to minor in psychology should consult the major department faculty
advisor or the director of undergraduate studies of the Department of
Psychology to determine the most appropriate sequence of courses for the minor.
Undergraduate students majoring in psychology are encouraged to minor in
biology, business, chemistry, child development and family relations,
mathematics, philosophy, or sociology or to take a composite minor approved by
the faculty advisor and chairperson. Minimum degree requirement is 126 s.h.
of credit as follows:
Foundations curriculum (See Section
4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for all Baccalaureate Degree Programs),
including those listed below - 42 s.h.
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3)
(F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test) or MATH
1066. Applied Mathematics for Decision Making (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA)
Foreign language through level 1004
- 12 s.h.
Core - 35 s.h.
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology
(3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) or PSYC 1060. Honors Introduction to Psychology (3) (F,S)
(FC:SO) Minimum grade of "C" required.
PSYC 2101. Psychological Statistics
(4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: MATH 1065 or MATH 1066)
PSYC 2210. Research Methods in
Psychology (4) (WI) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: MATH 1065 or MATH 1066; PSYC 2101)
Choose one from Learning & Cognition Group:
PSYC 3225. Cognitive Psychology (3)
(F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3226. Human Learning and
Cognition (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) (May receive psychology major or minor credit for one of PSYC
2201, 3206) or PSYC 4333. Learning Theories and Applications (3)
(F,S) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
Choose one from Biological Bases Group:
PSYC 3310. Introduction to
Neuroscience (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3311.
Neuropsychology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3312.
Sensation and Perception (3) (F,S) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
Choose two from General Course Group:
PSYC 3206. Developmental Psychology
(3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 3221. Social Psychology (3)
(F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 3300. Psychology of
Personality (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 4375. Abnormal Psychology (3)
(F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 5325. Introduction to
Psychological Testing (3) (P: A statistics course; PSYC 1000 or 1060)
Choose one from Capstone Group:
PSYC 4000. Advanced General
Psychology (3) (WI) (F,S) (P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; two courses from the
learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups)
PSYC 4250. Advanced Seminar (3)
(WI) (F,S,SS) ((P: PSYC 2210 and consent of
instructor) (P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; 2 courses
from the learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups)
PSYC 4280. History of Psychology
(3) (WI) (F,S) (P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; two courses from the learning and
cognition, biological bases, or general course groups)
PSYC 4402. Senior Thesis/Project (3) (WI) (F,S) (P: PSYC major;
PSYC 4401; two courses from the learning and cognition, biological bases, or
general course groups; GPA above 3.00 overall and in Psychology)
PSYC 4602. Senior Honors Thesis (3)
(WI) (F,S) (P: PSYC major; PSYC 4601 with a minimum grade of B; 2 courses from
the learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups; GPA
above 3.5 overall and in Psychology)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/psychology.cfm
Thomas Harriot
College of Arts and Sciences
Psychology Honors Program
In order to enter the honors program in
psychology, a student must be a second semester junior majoring in psychology;
must have completed a minimum of 80 s.h. with a minimum cumulative 3.0 GPA;
must have completed at least 20 s.h. in psychology with at least a B in PSYC
2101, 2210 and with a minimum 3.5 GPA in psychology. After admission to the
honors program by the director of undergraduate studies in psychology, the
student will take PSYC 4601 during the second semester of the junior year and
PSYC 4602 the first semester of the senior year. This sequence will satisfy the
requirement for a capstone course and will qualify the student for honors in
psychology if at least a B is earned in each course.
Students are qualified for the psychology
honors program if they have completed at least 24 semester hours and have a
cumulative and psychology GPA of at least 3.3.
Students are then eligible to take honors sections of psychology
courses. To qualify to graduate with honors in psychology, students must have
an overall and psychology GPA of 3.5. They must complete PSYC 4601 and 4602
with a grade of at least B and must do a public presentation of their thesis
research.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/CoursesP.cfm
PSYC: Psychology |
|
3226. Cognitive Psychology (3)
(F,S,SS) (FC:SO) P: PSYC 1000 or 1060.
Focus on human research and
cognition including attention, perception, consciousness, memory, concept
learning, language, symbolic behavior, and problem solving.
3241. Personnel and Industrial
Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
May receive credit for one of MGMT
4242, PSYC 3241. P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Systems approach to study
employee-employer relationships influencing productivity and satisfaction.
Secondary emphasis on employee selection, job analysis, performance appraisal,
and training. Research applied to industrial, governmental, and military
organizations.
3290. Comparative and Evolutionary
Psychology (3) (FC:SO)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Examines
similarities and differences among species (including humans) by relating
behaviors to reproductive success and adaptation to disparate environments.
3300. Psychology of Personality (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Theories of
personality. Emphasis on structure, development, and dynamics.
3310. Introduction to Neuroscience
(3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) Same as NEUR 3310
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Neuroanatomy
and neurophysiology and their relationship to behavior.
3311. Neuropsychology (3) (F,S)
(FC:SO)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Clinical and
cognitive neuropsychology. Basic anatomy of nervous system and neuronal
physiology, cortical lesion syndromes, brain disorders affecting higher
functions, and basic research on attention, laterality, language, and thought.
3312. Sensation and Perception (3)
(F,S)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Anatomy and
functioning of the various sensory/perceptual systems, including empirical
research, controversies, and theories of perception.
3314. Psychology of Religion (3)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Psychological
perspectives on religious behavior, cognition and affective experience,
including research methods, spiritual development, biological and evolutionary
approaches to religious experience and behavior, altruism, and current
theoretical approaches.
3777. Ethnocultural Influences on
the Development of the Self (3)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Importance of
various ethnocultural factors (gender, race, age, nationality, education,
occupation, religion, geographical location, family background) which impact
psychological development of self.
4000. Advanced General Psychology
(3) (WI) (F,S,SS)
P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; 2 courses
from learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups.
In-depth overview of psychology as a science organized around five main
questions: How do humans (and, where relevant, animals) act, how do they know,
how do they interact, how do they develop, and how do they differ from each
other?
4250. Advanced Topics Seminar (3)
(WI) (F, S, SS)
May be repeated with change of
topic for a maximum of 6 s.h. P: PSYC 2210 and
consent of instructor. P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; 2 courses from learning and cognition,
biological bases, or general course groups.
In-depth coverage of primary research sources in a psychological topic.
4280. History of Psychology (3)
(WI)
P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; 2 courses
from learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups.
Psychological thought from ancient Greek philosophers to present.
4305. Educational Psychology (3)
(F,S,SS)
P: PSYC 2201 or 3206 or 3240 or equivalent. PSYC 1000 or 1060. Psychological principles applied to educational settings,
including learning, motivation, classroom management, and psychological
assessment.
4312. Laboratory Methods in
Behavioral Neuroscience (3) Formerly PSYC 5312, 5313
1 lecture and 4 lab hours per week.
P: PSYC 3310, 3311; or consent of instructor. Basic techniques of animal
surgery, histological, examination, drug administration, and behavior testing.
4315. Neuroscience: Literature and
Laboratory Experience (3) (F,S) Formerly PSYC 5315, 5316
1-hour seminar and 8 hours lab per
week. May be repeated for maximum of 12 s.h. May count a maximum of 12 s.h.
toward PSYC major. P: PSYC 2210; 3310 or 3311; consent of instructor. Recently
published research in behavioral neuroscience and lab work on ongoing research
project.
4333. Learning Theories and
Applications (3) (F,S)
P: PSYC 1000 or PSYC 1060. Introductory survey of
the basic theories and principles of learning, including classical and operant
conditioning, and successful applications of these principles in a variety of
settings.
4335. Psychology of Women (3)
(FC:SO)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Psychological
issues pertaining to women. Impact of sex and gender on cognitive and
personality development, mental health, methodological issues in research, roles
of women in psychology, and influence of feminist theories.
4340. Behavioral Pharmacology
Seminar (3) Formerly PSYC 5320
P: PSYC 3310, 3311; or consent of
instructor. Behavioral and neurophysiological effects of psychoactive drugs in
experimental animals and clinical populations.
4350. Psychology of Sexual Behavior
(3)
P: 6 s.h. of PSYC to include PSYC
1000 or 1060. Research relating to psychological aspects of sexual behavior.
Historical and cultural perspectives and conventional and unconventional sexual
expression.
4372. Psychology of Thinking (3)
P: PSYC 3225, 3226; or equivalent; or
consent of instructor. Theory and research on complex human behavior. Focus on
problem solving, conceptual behavior, memory, psycholinguistics, and
creativity.
4375. Abnormal Psychology (3)
(F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Systematic
appraisal of development of human deviant behavior. Examination of formation of
deviancy and current diagnostic procedures.
4401. Thesis Research (3)
P: PSYC major; PSYC 2210; GPA above
3.00 overall and in Psychology. Research under direction of full-time faculty
member leading to preparation of written senior thesis proposal.
4402. Senior Thesis/Project (3)
(WI)
9 lab hours per week. P: PSYC
major; PSYC 4401; 2 courses from the learning and cognition, biological bases,
or general course groups; GPA above 3.00 overall and in Psychology. Design,
conduct, analyze, interpret, and write up an experiment. Conducted in lab or
field setting.
4501, 4502. Psychological Research
I, II (2,2) (F,S,SS)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060; consent of
instructor and dept chair. Supervised research involving planning, conducting,
and writing of behavioral study.
4521, 4522, 4523. Readings in
Psychology (1,1,1) (F,S,SS)
Application form obtained from
Department of Psychology. No class meetings; performance mode and reporting to
be arranged with the instructor. P: PSYC major; PSYC 1000 or 1060. Survey,
review, and/or critical analysis of reading material appropriate to students’
interests and needs.
4601. Honors Research (3)
To be taken in second semester of
junior year. P: PSYC 2210; admission to PSYC Honors Program; GPA above 3.5
overall and in psychology. Research with full-time faculty member leading to
preparation of written senior thesis proposal.
4602. Senior Honors Thesis (3) (WI)
Satisfies departmental requirements
for capstone course. Minimum of 9 hours per week. P: PSYC major; PSYC 4601 with a minimum grade of B; 2 courses from
the learning and cognition, biological bases, or general course groups; GPA above
3.5 overall and in Psychology. Research with
full-time faculty member resulting in senior thesis.
4990, 4991, 4992. Field Experience
in Psychology (1,1,1) (F,S)
May be taken concurrently.
Approximately 10 hours per week for 1 s.h. credit. May count maximum of 3 s.h.
field experience toward PSYC major. Additional hours may count as general
electives. P: PSYC major; minimum cumulative and major 2.0 GPA; 9 s.h. in PSYC;
consent of dept chair. Application of concepts and principles from related
courses to applied situations in field. Lab and/or field experiences under
joint supervision of field supervisor and university instructor.
5250. Topics in Psychology (3)
(WI*)
May be repeated with change of
topic for a maximum of 6 s.h. P: Minimum of 9 s.h. in PSYC. Selected topics at
advanced level. Topics vary.
5325. Introduction to Psychological
Testing (3)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060; a statistics
course. Principles of testing, including requirements for validity,
reliability, norm samples, and examples of psychological tests.
5380. Psychology of the Exceptional
Child (3)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060. Study of
children who are markedly different from the average child in physical, mental,
emotional, academic, or social characteristics.
5400. Advanced Gerontology (3)
P: PSYC 1000 or 1060; GERO 2400 or
consent of instructor. Seminar on psychological research and its applications
to the aged.
5990, 5991, 5992. Field Experience
in Psychology (1,1,1)
May be taken concurrently. Accepted
graduate psychology students spend approximately 10 hours per week per credit
hour in lab/field experiences under joint supervision of field supervisor and
university instructor. May count maximum of 3 s.h. of field experience toward
BA or MA PSYC requirement. Additional hours may count toward electives. P for
undergraduate students: PSYC major; 9 s.h. in PSYC; minimum cumulative and PSYC
major 2.0 GPA; dept consent. P for graduate students: PSYC major; minimum
cumulative and major GPA of 3.0 in PSYC; dept consent. Application of concepts
and principles from related courses to applied situations in the field.
PSYC Banked Courses
2010. Memory and Thinking (3)
2150. Applied Psychology (2)
3240. Psychology of Adolescence
3290. Comparative and Evolutionary
Psychology
4320, 4321. Behavioral Research
(3,0)
5311. Sensation and Perception
5370. Mental Hygiene in Schools (2)
Marked catalog copy for affected units created by
the Office of Academic Programs:
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
Neuroscience Studies
Minor
3.
Electives...............................................................................................................
2-5 s.h.
BIOL 2130. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: BIOL 1050, 1051; or 1100, 1101)
BIOL 2131. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy Laboratory (1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C: BIOL 2130)
BIOL 2300. Principles of Genetics (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: 2 BIOL courses)
BIOL 3310, 3311. Cellular Physiology (4,0) (F,S,SS) (P: Organic chemistry or biochemistry course)
BIOL 3320. Principles of Animal Physiology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: 2000-level organic chemistry or biochemistry course)
BIOL 5510, 5511. Transmission Electron Microscopy (4,0) (P: Senior standing as a biology major or consent of instructor)
BIOL 5520, 5521. Scanning Electron Microscopy and X-Ray Analysis (2,0) (P: Senior standing as a biology major or consent of instructor)
CHEM 2750. Organic Chemistry I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 1160, 1161; C: CHEM 2753)
CHEM 2753. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I (1) (F,S,SS) (C: CHEM 2750)
CHEM 2760. Organic Chemistry II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750; C: CHEM 2763)
CHEM 2763. Organic Chemistry Laboratory II (1) (F,S,SS) (P: CHEM 2750, 2753; C: CHEM 2760)
CHEM 2770. Biological Chemistry (3) (F,S) (FC:SC) (P: CHEM 2650 or 2760)
CHEM 2771. Biological Chemistry Laboratory (1) (F,S) (FC:SC) (C: CHEM 2770)
ITEC 2054, 2055. Electricity/Electronics Fundamentals (3,0) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or 1066 or 1085 or 2119)
MATH 2121. Calculus for the Life Sciences I (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA)
MATH 2122. Calculus for the Life Sciences II (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 2121)
NEUR 4200. Literature in Neuroscience (1) (F)
PHIL 1262. Introduction to Philosophical Issues in Biology (3) (F,S) (FC:HU)
PHIL 2261. Introduction to Philosophy of Science (3) (FC:HU)
PSYC 2210. Research Methods in Psychology (4) (WI) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: MATH 1065 or MATH 1066; PSYC 2101)
PSYC 3225. Psychology of Learning (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
PSYC
3226. Cognitive Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P:
PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 3290. Comparative and Evolutionary Psychology (3)
(FC:SO)
PSYC 3311. Neuropsychology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)
PSYC 4340. Behavioral Pharmacology Seminar (3) (P: PSYC 3310, 3311; or consent of instructor)
Any course listed under 2., above, not used to meet lab requirement may be chosen as an elective.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
Psychology Minor
A minimum grade of “C” in PSYC 1000 or 1060 is required to declare a minor. Minimum requirement for psychology minor
is 24 s.h. of credit as follows:
1.
Core........................................................................................................................15
s.h.
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) or PSYC 1060. Honors Introduction to Psychology (3) (FC:SO)
PSYC 3225. Psychology of Learning (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3226. Cognitive Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 4333. Learning Theories and Applications (3) (F,S) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 3310. Introduction to Neuroscience (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3311. Neuropsychology (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060) or PSYC 3312. Sensation and Perception (3) (F,S) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
Choose two from:
PSYC 3206. Developmental Psychology (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 3221. Social Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 3300. Psychology of Personality (3) (F,S) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 4375. Abnormal Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 5325. Introduction to Psychological Testing (3) (P: Statistics course; PSYC 1000 or 1060)
2. PSYC
electives......................................................................................................
9 s.h.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/aa/upload/ugcat0910.pdf
Academic Concentrations
Psychology
(24-25 s.h.)
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
PSYC 2101. Psychological Statistics (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: MATH 1065 or MATH 1066) or MATH 2228.
Elementary Statistical Methods I (3) (F,S,SS) (P: MATH 1065 or equivalent)
PSYC 3206. Developmental Psychology (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC
3225. Psychology of Learning (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) or PSYC 3226. Cognitive
Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or
1060)
PSYC 4305. Educational Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: PSYC 2201 or 3206 or 3240 or equivalent)
PSYC 4333. Learning Theories and Applications (3) (P: PSYC 1000)
PSYC 5325. Introduction to Psychological Testing (3) (P: Statistics course; PSYC 1000 or 1060)
Choose 3 s.h. PSYC electives
Agenda Item VII
College of Health and Human Performance
Department of Health Education and Promotion
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/CoursesH.cfm#hlth
2009-2010 Undergraduate Catalog p. 419
HLTH: Health |
|
4000. Methods of Training and Staff Development (4)
4 lecture and skill demonstration hours per week. P: PSYC 3221 or consent of instructor. Group and training methodologies in health setting. Emphasis on need assessment, program implementation, and evaluation of workshops, conferences, and short courses.
4001. Stress
Management: Principles and Practices (3) (S) Same as RCTX 4001 Concepts
and theories of stress management in human health.
4010. Senior Seminar: Tutorial in Health Issues Research (3) (F,S)
2 1-hour lectures and 2 2-hour labs per week. P: Senior standing or school and community health majors; completion of all core courses; or consent of instructor. Guidance in development of investigative study appropriate to student’s needs and interests.
4100. Community Health Profile (3)
P: HLTH 4000 or consent of instructor. Basic concepts and tools for identifying community health education needs. Develop community health profile for county of internship (HLTH 4990).
4200. Planning and Evaluation in Worksite Health Promotion (3) (F,S,SS)
P: Completion of core courses. Role of evaluation. Emphasis on measuring instrument design, evaluation, planning, and interpretation of evaluation results.
4305. Class Management in Health Occupations (3) (F)
Strategies for managing behaviors in the health education classroom and related clinical settings.
4323. Methods of Teaching Health Education (3) (F,S)
P: Admission to upper division. Theory and application of content and methodologies to be utilized in secondary school health program.
4324. Internship in Health Education (10) (F,S)
Full-time, semester-long internship.
P: Admission to upper division; EDUC 3200; HLTH 2123; completion of HLTH 4323 with a minimum grade of C; PSYC 1000; C: HLTH 4326. Observation and supervised teaching in an assigned health education public school classroom.
4326. Internship Seminar: Issues in Health Education (1) (F,S)
P: Admission to upper division; C: HLTH 4324. Individualized study of problems or issues pertinent in school health education.
4348. Health Education Problems (3)
May receive credit for one of HLTH 3020, 4348. Current health problems in US with focus on nature of problems, including sociological conditions and cultural and governmental factors which contribute to their causes and solutions.
4500, 4501, 4502. Independent Study (1,2,3) (WI*) (F,S,SS)
P: Consent of instructor. Individualized program developed through student initiative in consultation with designated instructor as extension of formal course offerings.
4600. Data Analysis for Health Promotion Programming (3) (S)
C: HLTH 4700. Understanding of and skills in utilizing health-related data for planning worksite health promotion and cost-control programs.
4604. Applied Principles of Health Promotion (3) (F,S)
P: BIOL 2130 or 2140; NUTR 1000 or 2105; PSYC 1000; or consent of instructor. In-depth study of the health content areas most commonly addressed in health promotion programs. Emphasis on integration of current knowledge in context of contemporary educational strategies.
4605. Community Strategies for Health Education (3) (WI) (F,S,SS)
P: HLTH 3000 or consent of
instructor. Skills in community interventions for health educators based on
principles of community organization. Both classroom instruction and field
exposure will be utilized. Additionally, case studies and real life experiences
used to greatest extent possible.
4611. Planning and Evaluation of Community Health Education Programs (3) (F,S)
P: HLTH 3000, 4620, 4621. Planning theory and application for health education programs, including evaluation methodology. Applications for epidemiological and sociological diagnoses in program development.
4620. Group Strategies for Community Health Education (3) (S)
P: HLTH 3000; C: HLTH 4621 or consent of instructor. Group dynamics, effective communication and decision-making by groups in a variety of community and health settings. Emphasis on strategies for facilitating the effectiveness of group interaction, on identification of training needs, and on steps in planning, implementing, and evaluating group educational experiences such as workshops, conferences, short courses, and community meetings. Appropriate for any student preparing for a career in the health professions.
4621. Group Strategies Laboratory (0) (S)
2 lab hours per week. C: HLTH 4620. Design and deliver health education materials and educational activities.
4700. Practicum Seminar in Worksite Health Education (3) (S)
P: HLTH 4200. Private sector health promotion programs. Based on needs and operations of local sites, student will be assigned individual projects.
4910. Prehealth Professions Internship (6) (F,S,SS)
P: Completion of all major requirements or consent of program director. Supervised learning experience in an approved clinical setting.
4991. Health Education and Promotion Internship (12) (F,S,SS)
P: Completion of all other major requirements. Professionally-supervised learning experience.
5002. Maternal and Child Health Education (3)
P for undergraduate students: HLTH 3010 or consent of instructor; P for graduate students: BIOL 2130, 2131; HLTH 3010, 3020; or consent of instructor. Theoretical base and appropriate education strategies for delivery of community health education programs including basic population concepts and measures; epidemiological indicators of health and social status of women and children; analysis of prevailing social policies as related to maternal and child health; and federal policies affecting children and families.
5200. Health Education in the Workplace (3) (F)
P for undergraduate students: Consent of instructor. Focus on design, implementation, and evaluation. On-site health education needs assessment using appropriate instruments and development of health education plan responsive to identified needs and corporate operations of particular industry.
5310. Education for Human Sexuality (3) (S)
For school and community professionals working in or consulting with schools. P: Health education major or consent of instructor. Comprehensive knowledge and sex education methodology for effective communication with children and youth.
5345. Alcoholism in Health Education (3) (F)
P: HLTH 1000 or 1050. Effects of alcohol on human body with sociological, psychological, physiological, and economic implications as applicable to everyday living. Methods, procedures, and resource materials for alcohol education.
5900. Stress Management (3)
P: Undergraduate course in anatomy and physiology; graduate standing; or
consent of instructor. Positive and negative aspects of stress as related to
performance and health. Emphasis on sources and positive management of stress,
including lifestyle and life skills.
HLTH Banked Courses
3261. Administration of School and Community Health Programs (3)
4290, 4291, 4292. Work Experience in Health Education and Promotion (1,2,3)
4325. First Aid and CPR Instructor (3)
4340. Methods and Content in Health Education (3)
4610. Individual Strategies for Community Health Education (3)
4989. Seminar in Community Health Education Practice (1)
4990. Internship in Worksite Health Promotion (12)
4992. Internship in Community Health Education (12)
5313. School Health Education (3)
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/CoursesR.cfm#rctx
2009-2010 Undergraduate
Catalog p. 491
RCTX:
RECREATIONAL THERAPY
3240. Disability Survey for Recreational Therapy Services (3) (F,S) Formerly RCLS 3240 P: Declared RT major; BIOL 2130, 2131; RCLS 2000; or consent of instructor. Etiology, symptomatology, and characteristics of disabling conditions that limit individual’s independent functioning. Recreational therapy interventions essential to facilitating specific functional outcomes. Adaptive equipment, assistive devices, and programmatic considerations.
4001. Stress
Management: Principles and Practices (3) (S) Same as HLTH 4001 Concepts and theories of stress management in human
health.
4210. Introduction to Biofeedback (3) P: BIOL 2130, 2131 or equivalent; RCTX 3240. Basic principles, history, instrumentation, and intervention techniques, including assessment, treatment, and evaluation processes. Clinical and nonclinical applications.
Marked Catalog Copy
for Affected Units:
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/HealthEd.cfm
2009-2010 Undergraduate Catalog p. 253
|
|
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/RecLeisure.cfm
2009-2010 Undergraduate Catalog p. 261
BS in Recreational Therapy
Any student wishing to declare a major in recreational therapy must, at the time of entrance into the curriculum, possess a minimum 2.0 GPA; have no more than 10 s.h. of foundations curriculum remaining; have submitted a written application; have a personal interview with a faculty member; and have completed a sequencing form (timetable) in consultation with the RCTX advisor. Admission to recreational therapy is competitive and limited due to space availability. Majors must maintain a minimum cumulative 2.0 GPA and a minimum cumulative 2.0 GPA in all cognate courses to remain in good standing. Majors must earn a minimum grade of C in all required RCLS and RCTX courses. A student wishing to appeal should contact the RCLS department chair within two weeks of notification of academic deficiency. Graduates are eligible to apply to sit for the examination to become credentialed nationally as a Certified Therapeutic Recreation Specialist (CTRS) and Licensed Recreational Therapist (LRT) in North Carolina. Minimum degree requirement is 123 s.h. of credit as follows:
1. Foundations
curriculum requirements (See Section 4, Foundations Curriculum Requirements for
all Baccalaureate Degree Programs.) including those listed
below..................................42 s.h.
BIOL 1050, 1051. General Biology and Laboratory (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC), or BIOL 1100, 1101. Principles of Biology and Laboratory I (3,1) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P/C for 1101: BIOL 1100)
BIOL 2130. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy (4) (F,S,SS) (P: BIOL 1050, 1051; or 1100, 1101)
COMM 2420. Business and Professional Communication (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:FA)
MATH 1065. College Algebra (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test) or MATH 1066. Applied Mathematics for Decision Making (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test or approval of dept chair) or MATH 1067. Algebraic Concepts and Relationships (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test) or MATH 2127. Basic Concepts of Mathematics (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:MA) (P: Appropriate score on mathematics placement test)
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
PSYC 2275. Psychology of Adjustment (3) (F,S) (FC:SO)
SOCI 2110. Introduction to Sociology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
2. Core
..................................................................................................................................49
s.h.
RCLS 2000. Introduction to Leisure Services (3) (F,S,SS)
RCLS 3003, 3004. Leisure Programming and Laboratory (3,1) (F,S) (P: Declared RT major, or MRFS major or minor; P/C: RCLS 2000)
RCLS 4000. Research Methods and Techniques (3) (F,S) (P: Declared RT major or MRFS major or minor; RCLS 3003, 3004)
RCLS 4004. Philosophical and Current Issues in Leisure (3) (F,S) (WI*) (P: Declared RT major or MRFS major or minor; RCLS 3003, 3004)
RCLS 4990. Recreation Internship (12) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: Declared RT or MRFS major; RCLS 4901 or RCTX 4902; senior standing; minimum cumulative 2.0 GPA; minimum grade of C in all RCLS and RCTX courses; successful completion of all other degree requirements; current certification in first aid and CPR)
RCTX 2230. Recreational Therapy Foundations (3) (F,S) Formerly RCLS 2230 (P: RCLS 2000 or consent of instructor.)
RCTX 3240. Disability Survey for Recreational Therapy Services (3) (F,S) Formerly RCLS 3240 (P: Declared RT major; BIOL 2130, 2131 or BIOL 2140, 2141; RCLS 2000; or consent of instructor)
RCTX 4250. Recreational Therapy Program Design (3) (F,S) Formerly RCLS 4250 (P: Declared RT major; RCLS 3003, 3004; RCTX 2230, 3240; or consent of instructor)
RCTX 4252. Recreational Therapy Leadership and Group Dynamics (3) (S) Formerly RCLS 4252 (P: Declared RT major; RCLS 3003, 3004; RCTX 2230, 3240; or consent of instructor)
RCTX 4260. Recreational Therapy Senior Practicum (3) (F,S) Formerly RCLS 4260 (P: Declared RT major; RCLS 3003, 3004; RCTX 2230, 3240; or consent of instructor)
RCTX 4262. Recreational Therapy Interventions and Techniques (3) (F) Formerly RCLS 4262 (P: Declared RT major; RCLS 3003, 3004; RCTX 2230, 3240; or consent of instructor)
RCTX 4264. Recreational Therapy Assessment, Documentation, and Evaluation (3) (F) Formerly RCLS 4264 (P: Declared RT major; RCLS 3003, 3004; RCTX 2230, 3240; or consent of instructor)
RCTX 4266. Organization and Management of Recreational Therapy Services (3) (F,S) Formerly RCLS 4266 (P: Declared RT major; RCLS 3003, 3004; RCTX 2230, 3240; or consent of instructor)
RCTX 4902. Recreational Therapy Internship Pre-placement Seminar (2) (F,S) Formerly RCLS 4902 (P: Declared RT major; minimum cumulative 2.0 GPA; consent of RCTX advisor)
3.
Cognates.............................................................................................................................21
s.h.
BIOL 2131. Survey of Human Physiology and Anatomy Laboratory (1) (F,S,SS) (P/C: BIOL 2130)
HIMA 3000. Introduction to Medical Terminology (2) (F,S,SS)
PSYC 3206. Developmental Psychology (3) (WI*) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 4375. Abnormal Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
Choose 6 s.h. from:
ASLS 2020. Sign Language Studies I (3) (F,S,SS)
DNCE 2200. Creative Dance and Drama for the Elementary School (2) (S)
EXSS 5303. Physical Activity Programs for Individuals with Developmental, Emotional, and Learning Disabilities (3) (P: EXSS 3545; SPED 5101; or consent of instructor) or EXSS 5903. Physical Activity Programs for Individuals with Orthopedic, Neurologic, and Sensory Impairments (3) (P: BIOL 2130 or equivalent or consent of instructor) if not taken in concentration
RCTX 4001. Stress Management: Principles and Practices (3)
(S)
MUSC 2277. Orientation to Therapy (1) (S)
MUSC 2287. Orientation to Therapy Practicum (1) (S)
MUSC 3257. Music Therapy I: Introduction to Music in Therapy (3) (F)
MUSC 3357. Music Therapy Practicum I (1) (F)
RCLS 2400. Facilitation and Leadership of Adventure-Based Programs (3) (F,S)
RCTX 3202. Camping and Adventure Programming for Individuals with Disabilities (3) Formerly RCLS 3202 (P: Consent of instructor)
RCTX 5000. Theoretical Foundations of Aquatic Rehabilitation (3) Formerly RCLS 5000
RCTX 5001. Applied Techniques in Aquatic Rehabilitation (3) Formerly RCLS 5001 (P: RCTX 5000 or consent of instructor)
THEA 4030. Creative Dramatics (3) (S) (FC:FA)
Other courses as approved by the recreational therapy degree program director.
Choose 3 s.h. from:
COMM 3142. Small Group Communication (3) (P: COMM 1001, 1002)
EXSS 2202. Motor Learning and Performance (3)
GERO 2400. Introduction to Gerontology (3) (FC:SO)
PSYC 3225. Psychology of Learning (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
PSYC 3226. Human Learning and Cognition (3) (FC:SO) (P: PSYC 1000 or 1060)
REHB 2003. Alcohol and Drug Abuse: Health and Social Problem (3) (F,S)
SOCI 3220. Sociology of Deviant Behavior (3) (FC:SO) (F,S,SS) (P: SOCI 2110)
SOCI 3327. Introductory Medical Sociology (3) (FC:SO) (P: SOCI 2110 or consent of instructor)
Other courses as approved by the recreational therapy degree program director.
4. Electives to complete requirements for graduation.
http://www.ecu.edu/cs-acad/ugcat/Education.cfm
Academic Concentrations
2009-2010 Undergraduate Catalog, p. 184
Interdisciplinary
Human Studies (18 s.h.)
Choose 9 s.h. from the following:
EXSS 2900. Teaching Skillful Movement (3) (F,S,SS) (P: EXSS 2323; P/C: EXSS 2202)
EXSS 3300. Applied Sports Psychology (3) (F) (P: PSYC 1000)
EXSS 3301. Physical Education and Sport in Modern Society (3) (F,SS)
EXSS 3900. Elementary School Instruction in Physical Education (3) (F,S) (P: Upper division status; EXSS 2122, 2500, 2600, 2700, 2900)
HLTH 3020. Health Problems II (3) (S) (P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; HLTH 3010 or consent of instructor)
HLTH 3020. Health Problems II (3) (F,S,SS)
HLTH 3030. Health Behavior Theory (3) (WI) (S) (P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; PSYC 1000)
HLTH 4001. Stress Management: Principles and Practices (3)
(S)
HLTH 5310. Education for Human Sexuality (3)
HLTH 5900. Stress Management (3) (P:
Undergraduate course in anatomy and physiology; graduate standing; or consent
of instructor)
PSYC 1000. Introductory Psychology (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO)
PSYC 4350. Psychology of Sexual Behavior (3) (F,S) (P: 6 s.h. of PSYC to include PSYC 1000 or 1060)
REHB 2003. Alcohol and Drug Abuse: Health and Social Problems (3) (F,S)
SOCI 1025. Courtship and Marriage (3) (F,S)
SOCI 3325. Sociology of Human Sexuality (3) (F,S,SS) (FC:SO) (P: SOCI 2110 or consent of instructor)
Choose 9 s.h. from the following:
BIOL 2130. Human Anatomy and Physiology (4) (F,S,SS) (FC:SC) (P: BIOL 1050, 1051; or 1100, 1101)
EHST 2110. Introduction to Environmental Health Science (3) (F,S)
EXSS 2202. Motor Learning and Performance (3) (F,S,SS)
EXSS 3805. Exercise Physiology (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Health and human performance major or minor or consent of chair; BIOL 2130 or BIOL 2140, 2141, 2150, 2151; EXSS 2805)
EXSS 3850. Introduction to Biomechanics (3) (F, S, SS) (P: BIOL 2130 or BIOL 2140; EXSS 2850; PHYS 1250, 1251; or consent of instructor)
EXSS 3906. Physical Education for Special Populations (3) (F, S, SS) (P: Upper division status; EXSS 2323; SPED 2000; or consent of instructor)
EXSS 4804. Measurement and Evaluation in Exercise and Sport Science (3) (F,S,SS) (P: Upper division status; EXSS 2323; MATH 1065; health and human performance major or minor or consent of chair)
EXSS 4806. Exercise Evaluation and Prescription (4) (WI) (F,S,SS) (P: Health and human performance major or minor; EXSS 3805; or consent of chair)
HLTH 2125, 2126. First Aid and CPR (3,0) (F,S,SS) (P: HLTH 1000 or 1050; C for 2125: HLTH 2126; C for 2126: HLTH 2125)
HLTH 3010. Health Problems I (3) (S,SS) (P: BIOL 2130 or 2140; HLTH 1000 or 1050; or consent of instructor)
NUTR 1000. Contemporary Nutrition (3) (F,S,SS) or NUTR 2105. Nutrition (3) (F,S,SS)