Mar 28, 2024  
2019-2020 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2019-2020 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


General Education Designations

Registration Notes

Academic Disciplines Chart

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 19-20 Academic Disciplines Chart  

 

(CLAS) Classics (257)

  
  • CLAS 405 - Selected Readings from Greek Literature

    3 Credit Hours
    For advanced students in Greek. The study of plays, historical writings, and poetry of ancient Greece in the original Greek.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 261.
  
  • CLAS 406 - Selected Readings from Greek Literature

    3 Credit Hours
    For advanced students in Greek. The study of plays, historical writings, and poetry of ancient Greece in the original Greek.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 261.
  
  • CLAS 414 - Cicero and Techniques of Latin Prose Composition

    3 Credit Hours
    For advanced students in Latin. Practice in prose composition, the writings of Cicero the model.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 351 or 352.
  
  • CLAS 431 - Selected Readings from Latin Literature

    3 Credit Hours
    For advanced students in Latin. Oratory, historical writings, and poetry of ancient Rome in the original Latin.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 252.
  
  • CLAS 432 - Selected Readings from Latin Literature

    3 Credit Hours
    For advanced students in Latin. Oratory, historical writings, and poetry of ancient Rome in the original Latin.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 252.
  
  • CLAS 435 - Medieval Latin

    3 Credit Hours
    Selected readings from the Latin prose and poetry of medieval Europe.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 252.
  
  • CLAS 436 - Cities and Sanctuaries of the Greek and Roman World

    3 Credit Hours
    Major cities and sanctuaries in Greece, the Greek colonies, and the Roman Empire. Approach is archaeological, focusing on physical evidence – landscape, architecture, and artifacts – as well as description by ancient authors. Cities include various types – planned and unplanned, seaports, caravan centers, government, and commercial centers. The sanctuaries also vary in function, including prophetic centers, athletic centers, theater centers, and healing centers. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Anthropology 436.)
  
  • CLAS 439 - Pompeii

    3 Credit Hours
    Study of Pompeii and adjacent archaeological sites buried during the eruption of Mt. Vesuvius in 79 CE. A combination of textual, visual, and archaeological approaches will be used to examine how ancient inhabitants of the region of Campania lived and died. Topics include the modern discovery of Pompeii and Herculaneum, ancient urbanism, domestic and public space, politics, entertainment, slavery, villas and the life of luxury on the Bay of Naples, and finally the catastrophic moment of the cities’ destruction. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • CLAS 441 - Special Topics in Classical Civilization

    3 Credit Hours
    Topics in art, literature, religion, and society of Greece and Rome.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • CLAS 442 - Archaeology of the Prehistoric Aegean

    3 Credit Hours
    Survey of the archaeology and art of the Aegean from the earliest human presence to the end of the Mycenaean civilization (ca. 3000000 - 1050 BCE). Highlights include Early Cycladic civilization with its abstract, almost “modern” art, the rise and decline of Minoan and Mycenaean complex societies, the wall paintings of Thera (the “Pompeii” of the Bronze Age), and Troy. Emphasis on anthropological and art-historical approaches. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Anthropology 442.)
  
  • CLAS 443 - Archaeology and Art of Ancient Greece

    3 Credit Hours
    Survey of the archaeology and art of Greece and the Greek-speaking areas from the period of Dark Age villages through the rise of the polis, the Golden Age of Pericles, and the establishment of powerful Hellenistic kingdoms after the conquests of Alexander the Great (c. 1050–30 BCE). Achievements in architecture, sculpture, vase painting, and minor arts seen in the context of changes in society as well as developments in Greek philosophy and thought. Archaeological evidence for daily life, economy, and political institutions. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Anthropology 443.)
  
  • CLAS 444 - Archaeology and Art of Ancient Italy and Rome

    3 Credit Hours
    Survey of the archaeology and art of ancient Italy and the Roman world from prehistoric times to the fall of the Roman Empire (ca. 1000 BCE – 476 CE). Highlights include Etruscan culture and multiculturalism in early Italy; the development of Roman architecture, art, and urban planning; art and architecture used for political propaganda; Roman cosmopolitan culture and imperialism; theory and method in Roman archaeology. Writing-emphasis course.

    (Same as Anthropology 444.)
  
  • CLAS 445 - Ancient and Medieval Seafaring

    3 Credit Hours
    Survey of seafaring in the Mediterranean and northern Europe from its very beginning, c. 11,000 BCE, until the late Middle Ages. Discussion of shipwrecks, iconographic evidence, and texts. Emphasis on ship construction and the evidence it provides about seafaring, naval warfare, technology, the exploitation of natural resources, levels of labor, social differences in society, and changes in the economy. Writing-emphasis course.

  
  • CLAS 446 - Archaeological Statistics

    3 Credit Hours
    Introduction to quantitative methods within the field of archaeology. Case studies are used to introduce students to basic statistical and computational concepts germane to archaeological problems and questions, involving active learning and problem solving. Topics include logic, probability, sampling, exploratory data analysis, modeling, inference, introductory linear algebra, and introductory multivariate statistics. Students will be trained in R as a programming language.

    (Same as Anthropology 446.)
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): Anthropology 120 or 127 or Classics 232.
  
  • CLAS 461 - Special Topics in Classical Archaeology

    3 Credit Hours
    Topics in the archaeology of Greece and Rome.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • CLAS 471 - Special Topics in Medieval Latin Literature

    3 Credit Hours
    Selected topics in Medieval Latin literature. Discussions, student presentations, examinations, papers. Writing-emphasis course.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 431, 432, or 435.
    Comment(s): Prior knowledge may satisfy prerequisite with consent of instructor.
  
  • CLAS 472 - Latin Paleography and Book Culture in the Middle Ages I

    3 Credit Hours
    Introduction to the Latin hands used in Western Europe from the Roman through the Humanistic period. Course focuses on identifying and dating hands and on transcribing them accurately. Writing-emphasis course.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 431, 432, or 435.
    Comment(s): Prior knowledge may satisfy prerequisite with consent of instructor.
  
  • CLAS 473 - Latin Paleography and Book Culture in the Middle Ages II

    3 Credit Hours
    Continuation of 472.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 472.
  
  • CLAS 491 - Foreign Study

    1-15 Credit Hours
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 15 hours.
  
  • CLAS 492 - Off-Campus Study

    1-15 Credit Hours
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 15 hours.
  
  • CLAS 493 - Independent Study

    1-15 Credit Hours
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 15 hours.
  
  • CLAS 498 - Honors Thesis

    3 Credit Hours
    Required thesis hours for all Classics honors concentrations.

    Registration Restriction(s): Declared Classics honors concentrations only.
    Registration Permission: Consent of department.

(CMST) Communication Studies (250)

  
  • CMST 201 - Introduction to Communication Studies

    3 Credit Hours
    Fundamental theories and practices with particular reference to interpersonal and organizational communication.

  
  • CMST 207 - Honors: Introduction to Communication Studies

    3 Credit Hours
    Analysis and exploration of fundamental theories and practices in communication studies with particular reference to interpersonal and organizational communication.

  
  • CMST 210 - Public Speaking

    3 Credit Hours
    Preparation and delivery of informative and persuasive speeches. Topics include research, organization, adapting to an audience, topic selection, reasoning, and evaluating the discourse of others.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (OC)
  
  • CMST 217 - Honors: Public Speaking

    3 Credit Hours
    Basic theory and principles of informative and persuasive public speaking.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (OC)
    Comment(s): ACT composite score above 30 or SAT composite score above 1300.
  
  • CMST 240 - Business and Professional Communication

    3 Credit Hours
    Basic principles of communication within organizations. Topics and activities may include organizational/communication theory, group problem solving, case studies, interviewing, and formal presentations.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (OC)
  
  • CMST 247 - Honors: Business and Professional Communication

    3 Credit Hours
    Basic theory and principles of effective workplace communication.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (OC)
    Comment(s): ACT composite score above 30 or SAT composite score above 1300.
  
  • CMST 250 - Advanced Public Speaking

    3 Credit Hours
    Theory and practice of informative and persuasive speaking.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 210, 217, 240, or 247.
  
  • CMST 312 - Survey of Interpersonal Communication

    3 Credit Hours
    Overview of how people interact in a variety of contexts.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 201 or 207.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 342 - Survey of Organizational Communication

    3 Credit Hours
    Overview of how people in for-profit and non-profit contexts interact both internally and externally.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 201 or 207.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 352 - Communication Theory

    3 Credit Hours
    Analysis and critique of fundamental theories with particular reference to interpersonal and organizational communication.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 201 or 207.
    (DE) Prerequisite(s): Junior level standing or completion of 60 hours when including courses in-progress. Enforced by department.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors.
  
  • CMST 354 - Research Methods in Communication Lab

    1 Credit Hours
    This lab focuses on the practice and application of common research methods in the field of Communication. Students will conduct quantitative and qualitative communication research, use communication laboratory resources, analyze data, and complete collaborative group projects.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 352.
    (DE) Prerequisite(s): (DE) Prerequisite(s): Junior level standing or completion of 60 credit hours when including courses in-progress. Enforced by department.
    (RE) Corequisite(s): 356.
    Comment(s): Only offered in fall and spring semesters.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors.
  
  • CMST 356 - Research Methods in Communication Studies

    3 Credit Hours
    Survey of contemporary methods used for research in communication studies. Emphasis on interpreting and evaluating communication research reports.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 352.
    (DE) Prerequisite(s): Junior level standing or completion of 60 credit hours when including courses in-progress. Enforced by department.
    (RE) Corequisite(s): 354; and one course from: Mathematics 115, 117, Statistics 201, or 207.
    Comment(s): Only offered in fall and spring semesters.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors.
  
  • CMST 360 - Professional Skills in Communication Lab

    2 Credit Hours
    This lab covers professional and general skills (e.g., writing a resume, interviewing) for success in the field of Communication.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 201 or 207.
    (DE) Prerequisite(s): Junior level standing or completion of 60 credit hours when including courses in-progress. Enforced by department.
    Comment(s): Only offered in fall and spring semesters.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors.
  
  • CMST 400 - Topics in Communication Studies

    3 Credit Hours
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 6 hours.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 312 or 342.
    Comment(s): Topics, scope of subject matter, and prerequisites to be determined by department.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 410 - Family Communication

    3 Credit Hours
    Dynamics of interactions within family systems, marriage, and parent-child relationships. Study of verbal and nonverbal communication processes, patterns, and problems.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 312.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 412 - Close Relationships

    3 Credit Hours
    Theory and research examining interactions in friendships, romantic relationships, and/or families.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 312.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 414 - Persuasion

    3 Credit Hours
    Methods that contribute to effective and ineffective persuasion. Topics include credibility, message construction, and receiver variables.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 312.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 416 - Interpersonal Health Communication

    3 Credit Hours
    Interpersonal communication in health care settings. Topics include provider-client interactions, social support groups, stigma and disease, and contemporary models explaining the use of health-related information.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 312.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 419 - Interpersonal Conflict

    3 Credit Hours
    Communication as a significant factor in the development, management, and resolution of conflict at the interpersonal, small group, organizational, or societal levels.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 312.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 442 - Organizational Communication Processes

    3 Credit Hours
    Theory and practice of how people in organizations interact.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 342.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 444 - Group Communication

    3 Credit Hours
    Small group decision-making. Evidence, argumentation, leadership, roles, and norms as they affect critical thinking in groups.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 342.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 446 - Leadership

    3 Credit Hours
    Examines theory and practice of leadership trends; focuses on interactive aspects of leading and following.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 342.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 449 - Political Persuasion

    3 Credit Hours
    Study of the communication processes utilized by political candidates, office holders, and social movement organizers.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 342.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors/minors or consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 487 - Honors Seminar

    3 Credit Hours
    In-depth survey of communication research topics. Topics rotate among health, interpersonal, and organizational/team communication.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 12 hours.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 312 or 342.
    (DE) Prerequisite(s): To be determined based upon topic.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies major – honors concentration.
  
  • CMST 491 - Foreign Study

    1-6 Credit Hours
    Participation in school-sponsored study-abroad program. Application forms and proposal deadlines available in school office.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 6 hours.
    Credit Restriction: Maximum of 3 hours may be applied toward the major.
    Comment(s): 2.75 GPA required; minimum student level ― junior.
  
  • CMST 492 - Internship

    1-6 Credit Hours
    Supervised career-related experiences using communication studies theories and techniques in government and for-profit or non-profit organizations, culminating in a written and oral report.

    Grading Restriction: Satisfactory/No Credit grading only.
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 6 hours.
    Credit Restriction: Does not count toward major requirements.
  
  • CMST 493 - Independent Study

    1-6 Credit Hours
    Selected readings/research in an area of communication studies to be determined by the student in consultation with supervising faculty member and, ordinarily, in an area of study not covered by school curriculum. Application forms and proposal deadlines available in school office.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 6 hours.
    Credit Restriction: Maximum of 3 hours may be applied toward the major.
    Comment(s): 3.0 GPA required; minimum student level ― junior.
  
  • CMST 497 - Senior Honors Thesis

    3 Credit Hours
    Required of students enrolled in the Honors program.

    Registration Permission: Consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 498 - Senior Honors Thesis

    3 Credit Hours
    Required of students enrolled in the Honors program.

    Registration Permission: Consent of instructor.
  
  • CMST 499 - Proseminar in Communication Studies

    3 Credit Hours
    Major theoretical perspectives in communication studies, their interrelationships and applications. Consideration of the significance and ethical implications of communication studies in modern society.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 356.
    (DE) Prerequisite(s): Completion of 6 hours of CMST 400-level courses. Enforced by department.
    Registration Restriction(s): Communication studies majors.

(CNST) Cinema Studies (251)

  
  • CNST 235 - Introduction to Digital Media and 16mm Film as Art

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Art Four-Dimensional Arts 235.)
  
  • CNST 236 - Introduction to Cinema and Video Art

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Art Four-Dimensional Arts 236.)
  
  • CNST 281 - Introduction to Film Studies

    3 Credit Hours
    (See English 281.)
  
  • CNST 301 - South Asian Cinema: Bollywood and Beyond

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Asian Studies 301.)
  
  • CNST 306 - Shakespeare and Film

    3 Credit Hours
    (See English 306.)
  
  • CNST 312 - Popular Culture and American Politics

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Political Science 312.)
  
  • CNST 314 - Food, Fiction, and Film in Modern Japan

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Japanese 314.)
  
  • CNST 315 - Asian Film

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Japanese 315.)
  
  • CNST 320 - Middle Eastern Film

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Arabic 320.)
  
  • CNST 321 - Japanese Graphic Novel/Anime

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Japanese 321.)
  
  • CNST 323 - German Film Survey

    3 Credit Hours
    (See German 323.)
  
  • CNST 325 - Russian Film

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Russian 325.)
  
  • CNST 326 - Brazilian Cinema

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Portuguese 326.)
  
  • CNST 334 - Film and American Culture

    3 Credit Hours
    (See English 334.)
  
  • CNST 365 - Writing the Screenplay

    3 Credit Hours
    (See English 365.)
  
  • CNST 366 - Hollywood and the 20th Century

    3 Credit Hours
    (See History – United States 366.)
  
  • CNST 400 - Special Topics

    3 Credit Hours
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 6 hours.
  
  • CNST 420 - French Cinema

    3 Credit Hours
    (See French 420.)
  
  • CNST 422 - Topics in Italian Cinema

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Italian 422.)
  
  • CNST 423 - Themes and Genres in German Cinema

    3 Credit Hours
    (See German 423.)
  
  • CNST 431 - The Business of Cinema

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Art Four-Dimensional Arts 431.)
  
  • CNST 433 - History of Film and Modern and Contemporary Art

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Art History 433.)
  
  • CNST 434 - Hispanic Culture Through Film

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Spanish 434.)
  
  • CNST 435 - Narrative Filmmaking

    4 Credit Hours
    (See Art Four-Dimensional Arts 435.)
  
  • CNST 436 - Video Art

    4 Credit Hours
    (See Art Four-Dimensional Arts 436.)
  
  • CNST 465 - Latin American Film and Culture

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Spanish 465.)
  
  • CNST 469 - Sexuality and Cinema

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Women, Gender, and Sexuality 469.)
  
  • CNST 482 - Special Topics in Global Cinema

    3 Credit Hours
    (See Modern Foreign Languages and Literatures 482.)
  
  • CNST 489 - Special Topics in Film

    3 Credit Hours
    (See English 489.)
  
  • CNST 490 - Internship

    1-9 Credit Hours
    Internship in Cinema Studies.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
    Credit Restriction: Maximum 3 hours may be applied toward the Cinema Studies major or minor.
    Registration Permission: Consent of Cinema Studies Internship Coordinator.
  
  • CNST 491 - Foreign Study

    1-15 Credit Hours
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 15 hours.
  
  • CNST 492 - Off-Campus Study

    1-15 Credit Hours
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 15 hours.
  
  • CNST 493 - Independent Study

    1-15 Credit Hours
    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 15 hours.
  
  • CNST 495 - Modern China in Film

    3 Credit Hours
    (See History – Asia 495.)

(COSC) Computer Science (266)

  
  • COSC 100 - Introduction to Computers and Computing

    3 Credit Hours
    Basic concepts of computer hardware and software. Microcomputer systems and workstations. Networking and the Internet. The interdisciplinary science of computing.

    Satisfies General Education Requirement: (QR)
    Credit Restriction: May not be applied toward the computer science major.
  
  • COSC 102 - Introduction to Computer Science

    4 Credit Hours
    Problem solving and algorithm development. Organization and characteristics of modern digital computers with emphasis on software engineering, building abstractions with procedures and data, and programming in a modern computer language. Includes Level 1 design projects, which require laboratory work.

    Contact Hour Distribution: 3 hours lecture and 1 lab.
    Grading Restriction: A, B, C, No Credit grading only.
    Credit Restriction: Students who have received credit for 140 or 160 may not receive subsequent credit for 102 without consent of instructor.
    (RE) Corequisite(s): Mathematics 141 or 147.
  
  • COSC 130 - Computer Organization

    4 Credit Hours
    Number systems, Boolean algebra, combinational and sequential circuits, registers, processor functional units and control, pipelining, memory and caching, stored program computing, memory management, computer system organization, and assembly language programming.

    Contact Hour Distribution: 3 hours lecture and 1 lab.
    Grading Restriction: A, B, C, No Credit grading only.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 102.
  
  • COSC 140 - Data Structures and Algorithms I

    4 Credit Hours
    Advanced problem solving and algorithm development, programming, data structures and applications, I/O techniques, lists, queues, stacks, hash tables, algorithms, files.

    Contact Hour Distribution: 3 hours lecture and 1 lab.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 130.
  
  • COSC 291 - Lower-Division Special Topics

    1-3 Credit Hours
    Topics vary. Programming languages, operating systems, and application software packages.

    Repeatability: May be repeated. Maximum 9 hours.
  
  • COSC 302 - Data Structures and Algorithms II

    4 Credit Hours
    Design, analysis, and implementation of fundamental algorithms and data structures, including trees and graphs.

    Contact Hour Distribution: 3 hours lecture and 1 lab.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 140.
  
  • COSC 307 - Honors: Data Structures and Algorithms II

    4 Credit Hours
    Same as 302 with additional honors project.

    Contact Hour Distribution: 3 hours lecture and 1 lab.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 140.
  
  • COSC 311 - Discrete Structures

    3 Credit Hours
    Sets, functions, relations, equivalence relations, partial orderings and proof techniques, especially mathematical induction. Application of proof techniques to prove correctness of algorithms. Introduction to basic counting and combinatorics.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 140 and either Mathematics 142 or 148.
  
  • COSC 312 - Algorithm Analysis and Automata

    3 Credit Hours
    Counting and combinatorics, with applications to the analysis of algorithms. Introduction to finite automata and regular languages, and to pushdown automata and context free grammars.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 311.
  
  • COSC 317 - Honors: Discrete Structures

    3 Credit Hours
    Same as 311 with additional honors project.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 140 and either Mathematics 142 or 148.
  
  • COSC 340 - Software Engineering

    3 Credit Hours
    Introduction to software processes that can be used on large projects to help design, manage, maintain, and test software.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 302.
  
  • COSC 360 - Systems Programming

    4 Credit Hours
    In-depth introduction to C and its use in system programming. Introduction to memory and process layout, system calls, buffering, file I/O, file systems, directories, metadata, assembly code, stack frames, memory management, process management, and interprocess communication.

    Contact Hour Distribution: 3 hours lecture and 1 lab.
    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 130 and 302.
  
  • COSC 361 - Operating Systems

    3 Credit Hours
    Threads, operating system structure, process management, scheduling, synchronization, deadlock, memory management, virtual memory and demand paging, file system management and implementation, mass storage structure, protection, security, and distributed systems.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 360 or 367.
  
  • COSC 365 - Programming Languages and Systems

    3 Credit Hours
    Language paradigms (procedural, functional, object-oriented, logic), language design and implementation issues, and language issues related to parallelism.

    (RE) Prerequisite(s): 302.
 

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