Engineering Outreach Spring 2014 Course Catalog

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Engineering Outreach UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO CATALOG SPRING 2014

Professional Online Education


Engineering Spring 2014 September 1

Spring 2014 priority deadline for graduate admission; see www.uidaho.edu/graduateadmissions

November 11

Spring 2014 registration opens; see www.uidaho.edu/registrar/registration/schedule

December 20

Last day to apply for spring 2014 graduation without a late fee; see www.uidaho.edu/registrar/graduation

January 15

Spring 2014 classes begin

Last day to register for spring 2014 EO courses (without a late fee)

View online sessions and course materials at the EO Portal: eo.uidaho.edu/portal

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Late payment fees begin

20

Martin Luther King/Human Rights Day — University closed

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Last day to register or change a spring 2014 course on VandalWeb

29

Last day to change to pass/fail grading option

Contact us!

Last day to drop or audit without receiving a “W”

eo.uidaho.edu

Last day to register or add without a petition

Last day to receive 100 percent refund of course fees

No refunds after January 29

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Late payment fees increase; see eo.uidaho.edu/fees

Quality Programs. Innovative Delivery!

Local: (208) 885-6373 Toll-free: (800) 824-2889 Email: outreach@uidaho.edu

On the cover photo description: University of Idaho Administration Building University of Idaho Catalog, Vol. 109, No. 5 — November 2013 The University of Idaho Catalog (USPS 651-360) is published five times per year. Published twice in April, once in June, October and November by the University of Idaho Registrar’s Office, Engineering Outreach and Independent Study in Idaho, 875 Perimeter Dr MS 4260, Moscow, Idaho 83844-4260. Periodicals postage paid at Moscow Idaho 83843. Postmaster: Send address changes to: University of Idaho, Engineering Outreach, 875 Perimeter Dr MS 1014, Moscow, ID 83844-1014.

February 1

Fall 2014 priority deadline for graduate admission; see www.uidaho.edu/graduateadmissions

17

Presidents’ Day — University closed


Outreach Calendar

SPRING 2014 CONTENTS Calendar..............................................................(inside front cover) Why Choose Our Program? ............................................................2 Engineering Outreach.......................................................................3

March 17–21

31

Master’s Degree Programs...............................................................3

Spring Recess — no classes all week; University remains open

Focus Areas.........................................................................................3 Academic Certificates.......................................................................3

Summer 2014 registration opens; see www.uidaho.edu/registrar/registration/schedule

Admission............................................................................................4 New EO Student Checklist..............................................................4

April 3

Last day to withdraw or change to audit

Registration and Fees........................................................................5

21

Fall 2014 registration opens; see www.uidaho.edu/registrar/registration

Course Delivery .................................................................................6 NetID Account...................................................................................7 Course Completion...........................................................................8

May 16

Spring 2014 semester ends

Academic Departments....................................................................9

Course completion deadline for spring 2014 EO courses, 3 p.m. Pacific Standard Time

Exam Process....................................................................................10

Last day to apply for fall 2014 graduation without a late fee; see www.uidaho.edu/registrar/graduation

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Spring Commencement

Spring 2014 Courses.......................................................................13

26

Memorial Day — University closed

Accounting................................................................................13

29

EO Portal closes — download any sessions and graded materials by end of the day

Academic Certificate Courses....................................................... 11 Finding the CRN...............................................................................12

Business.....................................................................................13

Civil Engineering......................................................................14

Computer Science...................................................................15

Electrical and Computer Engineering..................................16

Engineering Management......................................................19

August

Engineering — General...........................................................19

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Geological Engineering...........................................................19

June 16

Last day to register for summer 2014 EO courses (without a late fee)

Last day to register for fall 2014 EO courses (without a late fee)

Mathematics.............................................................................19

Mechanical Engineering......................................................... 22

Psychology............................................................................... 23 Statistics................................................................................... 23 EO Contact Information................................................................ 24 List of Spring 2014 Courses............................. (inside back cover)

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Why Choose Our Program? Our Mission

Our Experience

The University of Idaho considers outreach an integral responsibility. Engineering Outreach’s mission is to serve off-campus students, business and industry by providing quality programs with innovative delivery.

• the University of Idaho is accredited by the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities (NWCCU) • an established distance education program with more than 35 years of experience delivering courses to off-campus students

Our Quality Programs

• recognized nationwide — Newsweek’s “Best Colleges for You 2012” ranked U-Idaho as the third most affordable public research university in the nation

Engineering Outreach (EO) delivers courses online appealing to a variety of students in both technical and non-technical fields. Students may consider us if they are seeking the following:

• a top provider of online engineering master’s degrees — one of the most extensive programs in the country

• a complete master’s degree at a distance in a selected engineering discipline, statistical science or a Master of Arts in teaching mathematics

• campuswide program delivering courses in business, computer science, engineering, engineering and technology management, mathematics, psychology, statistics and water resources

• course credits to complete a degree at the University of Idaho or to transfer to another institution

• more than 95 percent of EO students complete their courses, and reenrollment rates each semester for graduate students are high

• an academic certificate in a concentrated area of study • courses for professional education or background study

• approved by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) for U.S. military students

Our Innovative Delivery

• engineering graduate programs are supported by undergraduate degree programs that are accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission of ABET, 111 Market Place, Suite 1050, Baltimore, MD 21202-4012, telephone: 410-347-7700

• course sessions delivered in a high-resolution proprietary online digital format • graded coursework accessible online through a secure portal • more than 70 continually updated courses delivered each fall and spring semester

Our Commitment to Student Support • consistent and personalized student support services — responsive staff committed to meeting the educational needs of students, accessible by toll-free telephone number and email

• sessions posted online within one hour of being recorded • secure online access for course-related communication

• university resources, student services and academic advising available

• one of the university’s most popular websites; easily navigated and updated on a daily basis 2


Engineering Outreach

eo.uidaho.edu

About Us

Focus Areas

Engineering Outreach is a University of Idaho College of Engineering distance education program, established in 1975. Created with the help of a Kellogg Foundation grant, EO’s first courses were delivered on videotape to regional corporations and libraries. Today, courses offered by a variety of academic departments are delivered online to hundreds of students worldwide each semester. EO students earn master’s degrees, academic certificates or transfer credits completely at a distance.

Selected academic departments offer courses through Engineering Outreach that may be applied toward degrees at the University of Idaho, used for transfer credit or taken for professional education. Specific courses are listed on the EO website.

The University of Idaho, located in Moscow, Idaho, was established in 1889 and currently has more than 11,000 students. The mascot for the university is a Vandal, a member in a Germanic tribe. The university is an internationally recognized land-grant institution that combines research, graduate and professional education with a strong undergraduate base in the liberal arts and sciences. Visit www.uidaho.edu for more information.

• Water Resources

• Business • Nuclear Engineering • Psychology — emphasis in Human Factors

Academic Certificates The University of Idaho offers certificates in various academic disciplines. An academic certificate is a coherent body of work designed to reflect specialized expertise. Earning a certificate may provide professional advancement opportunities and build a strong foundation for future graduate study. College of Engineering certificate courses already exist in the graduate curricula, and all required courses are delivered online by Engineering Outreach.

Accreditation/Affiliations The University of Idaho is a member of the Association of Public Land Grant Universities (APLU) and is regionally accredited by the Northwest Commission on Colleges and Universities (NWCCU).

Certificates require between 12 and 15 credits of coursework, up to 12 of which may be applied toward a degree at the University of Idaho with academic departmental approval.

College of Engineering graduate programs are supported by its undergraduate programs, which are accredited by the Engineering Accreditation Commission of ABET, 111 Market Place, Suite 1050, Baltimore, MD 21202-4012, telephone: 410-347-7700. These programs include Biological and Agricultural Engineering (B.S.B.A.E.), Chemical Engineering (B.S.Ch.E.), Civil Engineering (B.S.C.E.), Computer Engineering (B.S.Comp.E.), Electrical Engineering (B.S.E.E.), Materials Science Engineering (B.S.M.S.E.) and Mechanical Engineering (B.S.M.E.). The Computer Science degree (B.S.C.S.) program is accredited by the Computing Accreditation Commission of ABET.

Engineering Outreach delivers online courses for the following academic certificates. See the EO website for more details. • Analog Integrated Circuit Design • Applied Geotechnics • Communication and Control for Power Transmission and Distribution • Electric Machines and Drives • Power System Protection and Relaying

Master’s Degree Programs

• Process & Performance Excellence

Engineering Outreach delivers coursework required for the master’s degrees listed below. All required coursework may be completed online, and most students will visit campus near the end of their program to take a comprehensive exam or defend a thesis. These master’s degree programs require between 30 and 36 total credits.

• Secure and Dependable Computing Systems • Statistics • Structural Engineering

• Civil Engineering (M.Engr.) • Computer Engineering (M.S., M.Engr.) • Computer Science (M.S.) • Electrical Engineering (M.S., M.Engr.) • Engineering Management (M.Engr.) • Geological Engineering (M.S.) • Mechanical Engineering (M.Engr.) • Statistical Science (M.S.) • Teaching Mathematics (M.A.T.) • Technology Management (M.S.) 3


Admission Students taking courses delivered by Engineering Outreach must be admitted to the University of Idaho. They follow the same admission procedures as on-campus students, working with academic departments and the Admissions Office. Students may apply online or download application forms from the admissions website. Admission status options include nondegree, undergraduate and graduate.

Graduate Admission

www.uidaho.edu/graduateadmissions Priority application deadlines : • February 1 (summer and fall admission) • September 1 (spring admission) Applications received after the deadline but before the official start of the semester for which the applicant is seeking entry will be accepted only if additional students can be accommodated. If graduate admission is not granted prior to the EO registration deadline, students may apply for nondegree admission. Credits for classes taken by students with nondegree status are not automatically transferable into a master’s program, so students should work closely with a faculty adviser during this process.

New EO Student Checklist Access this list online at eo.uidaho.edu/checklist to use active links.

Nondegree Admission www.uidaho.edu/admissions Students apply for nondegree admission for some of the following reasons: • pursue studies for personal or professional advancement • meet the registration deadline while graduate admission application is in process

55 55 55 55

Apply for admission.

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Select a course, noting the course registration number (CRN).

• take prerequisites prior to graduate admission • earn credits to transfer to another university • earn an academic certificate Nondegree students receive credit; with academic departmental approval, some of these credits may be applied toward a master’s degree at the University of Idaho if graduate admission is granted later.

Undergraduate Admission www.uidaho.edu/admissions Engineering Outreach delivers a wide variety of undergraduate courses, but it is not possible to earn a bachelor’s degree completely online through the program.

Non-U.S. Citizen and International Admission www.uidaho.edu/admissions/other-audience-requirements Non-U.S. citizens residing in the United States and other international students have additional admission requirements, which may include TOEFL scores or equivalent, and verification of current visa status or copy of passport.

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Review the Internet and email policies. Review information about registration and fees. Set up your NetID account. Check VandalMail daily for emails from instructors, EO staff or other U-Idaho offices. Contact academic departments for academic advising, course prerequisites and instructor permissions before registering.

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Register by the registration deadline using VandalWeb.

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Review EO’s registration confirmation email and contact EO if corrections are necessary.

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Find a proctor in your community willing to administer your exams; complete the EO Proctor form.

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Pay your course fees by the first day of the semester to avoid late fees.

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Read the information about course delivery to enhance your viewing experience.

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Visit EO’s course schedules to determine when your course sessions are available.

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Access online course sessions by logging into the EO Portal with your NetID username and password.

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Review EO’s calendar for add/drop, refund, course change and course completion deadlines.

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Questions? Contact us!

Look up or purchase your course textbooks on the VandalStore website.


Registration and Fees Register Early!

More information on the following payment options can be found on the EO website. Payment options:

University of Idaho courses have enrollment minimums, and registering early can help ensure that scheduled courses will not be cancelled. This is critical for graduate-level courses that are scheduled for production during the current semester. It is also important to register early because some courses have enrollment caps, which may be reached soon after registration opens. Refer to the EO Calendar on the inside front cover to determine when registration opens.

• Visa, MasterCard or Discover credit or debit card • check or money order (payable to “University of Idaho Bursar”) sent to Engineering Outreach • tuition voucher from U.S. military or corporations • electronic bank transfer (e-check) via VandalWeb • payment plan at www.uidaho.edu/controller/studentaccounts/ paymentplans

How to Register EO students register using VandalWeb; refer to the VandalWeb Registration Instructions on the EO website. Also refer to the example on page 10 that discusses registering with CRNs (Course Registration Numbers).

Refunds Registering for a course creates a financial obligation to the University of Idaho. If there is any doubt about a course meeting your needs, please contact the instructor with questions prior to registering. Students are responsible for dropping courses prior to the first day of the semester to avoid being billed and graded. To receive a 100 percent refund, the course(s) must be dropped within the first 10 days; there are no refunds after the 10th day. See the EO Calendar on the inside front cover for the refund deadline. Contact EO at eoreg@uidaho.edu for assistance with dropping courses and refunds.

Students are advised to resolve prerequisite and permission requirements prior to attempting to register on VandalWeb. If the course description lists a prerequisite or permission requirement, students must contact the instructor or department to discuss their academic background and to request removal of the hold. If students receive a hold while registering, they are required to take action in order to successfully register.

Textbooks

EO will send an email to the student’s VandalMail account confirming that the student’s registration information was received.

Textbooks and software are not included in the course materials supplied by EO, and the cost is not included with registration fees. Required textbooks are listed on the VandalStore’s website at www.vandalstore.com and may be ordered online by selecting Vandal Books; the EO section is typically section 10.

Fees Students registering for EO courses pay a per-credit fee, and out-ofstate residents pay the same fees as residents. Fees include registration and online course access, but do not include textbooks or software.

Financial Aid

Payment in full is expected at the time of registration and must be received by the first day of class to avoid late fees. If payment is not received by this time, the charges will remain outstanding on the student’s account, and late fees will accrue. EO will not release access to online sessions until payment has been received in full. Students are not automatically dropped due to non-payment, and must drop the course to avoid late fees either on VandalWeb or by contacting EO; see the EO Calendar on the inside front cover for deadlines.

Graduate and undergraduate students taking courses delivered by EO may be eligible for financial aid if they are enrolled at least half-time; nondegree students are not. Visit Student Financial Aid Services at www.uidaho.edu/financialaid for more information.

Military Benefits University of Idaho programs are approved by the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs (VA), and students may use tuition assistance to help pay their Engineering Outreach course fees. Visit www.uidaho.edu/dos/veteransaffairs for more information.

Spring 2014 EO Course Fees* Course Level

UI Undergraduate/Nondegree Admission

UI Graduate Admission

Courses numbered 100–499

$589.00/credit

$684.50/credit

Courses numbered 500–599

$648.00/credit

$684.50/credit

*Fees vary for directed study/research credits and for full time students at the University of Idaho or other Idaho universities. Fees are subject to change by the Board of Regents of the University of Idaho.

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Idaho Commons

Course Delivery Course Delivery EO recommends using VLC media player to view the downloaded sessions. Visit the EO website for more information about viewing options.

Courses delivered by Engineering Outreach are recorded in University of Idaho studio classrooms and produced for online delivery by EO; they are semester-based and have the same course completion date as oncampus classes. Internet access is required for all EO students to view and/or download course sessions and materials, access and manage Vandal Mail, and facilitate university services and processes.

If a student is viewing EO courses using a military computer or a restricted-access computer at a workplace and have security concerns about EO course delivery, contact Terri Gaffney, the EO associate director, to discuss delivery alternatives. She can be reached at 800-824-2889 or terrig@uidaho.edu.

Engineering Outreach Portal Students access online course sessions through the EO Portal. EO students receive online access on the first day of class, and course sessions are usually available within one hour of being encoded. Sessions may be viewed online or downloaded and saved. Students also access handouts and graded materials in the EO Portal.

Library Services University of Idaho Library services are available to Engineering Outreach students at www.lib.uidaho.edu, and video tutorials are provided for off-campus students. Many journal articles are accessible online or by email through interlibrary loan. Select the Distance Education link for information about services and how to obtain a library ID number.

Online Sessions In-class sessions are encoded in a high-resolution MP4 format. Broadband access (e.g., DSL, cable or wireless) and a PC or Mac are required for downloading sessions. Students may also view sessions using and Apple iOS or Android device, and may subscribe to their online course sessions using iTunes or via an RSS Feed. 6


NetID Account Every student receives a University of Idaho computer account, called NetID, at the time of admission. This account gives a student access to a wide range of services and remains active as long as the student is enrolled. To initially set up the account, the student will be required to set up a Security Profile and NetID password; follow the directions at http://vandalsetup.uidaho.edu.

NetID and Password

VandalMail

The NetID is provided in the admission letter and consists of four letters and four numbers, e.g., Joe Vandal’s NetID would be “vand1234.” A NetID password will be set up when the account is first accessed.

Students are required to use this email address, ending with (…@ vandals.uidaho.edu), to ensure receipt of important university communications in a timely and consistent manner. All students are required to use the University of Idaho’s VandalMail system and are responsible for all information sent to their VandalMail.

EO Portal eo.uidaho.edu/portal

EO sends all email communication to students’ VandalMail accounts, including messages about the following:

Students who have registered for Engineering Outreach courses access their course sessions, handouts and graded materials by logging into the EO Portal with their NetID and password.

• • • •

VandalWeb http://vandalweb.uidaho.edu VandalWeb allows students to access their personal universityrelated information through a secure website. It provides access to the following:

registration status updates exams that were sent or received graded course work being posted in the EO Portal daily class cancellations for live courses

Email addresses are considered “directory information” and will be kept confidential only if the student submits the Request to Prevent Disclosure of Directory Information form to the Registrar’s Office before the beginning of the semester. Download the form at www.uidaho.edu/registrar/forms and select Confidentiality Request form. If a student submits this form after the semester begins, notify the EO student services coordinator at eoreg@uidaho.edu as soon as possible.

• payment records, including e-check instructions and setting up direct deposit for financial aid purposes • personal contact information, such as mailing and email addresses • student records, including course registrations and degree audits • final grades and unofficial transcripts

BbLearn

Resetting Passwords

http://bblearn.uidaho.edu

If students cannot recall their passwords, they can log in to the ITS (Information Technology Services) Account Management website at http://help.uidaho.edu. Students should use their NetID username and password or their VandalMail email and password to update or change their passwords. If students cannot recall either accounts’ login information, they should follow the directions to reset their passwords on the Account Management website by using their Security Profile information.

Some instructors use the BbLearn course management system in addition to the EO Portal to provide supplementary course materials or other features such as online discussion groups and access to grades for individual exams and assignments. To determine if the course instructor uses BbLearn to supplement the EO Portal, log in to the EO Portal and refer to the course syllabus or course website by selecting the Course Links icon.

VLab http://vlab.uidaho.edu The university’s VLab (virtual computer lab) allows students to run university licensed software on their own computers from anywhere with an internet connection. After installing a software package called “Citrex Receiver,” select the program you would like to run in your browser, and it will open automatically. Some of the software programs available through VLab: • • • • •

MathCAD 15 Matlab 2012a Minitab 16 NIST Reference Fluid Properties Populus, and many more! Old Administration Building Steps 7


Administration Building

Course Completion Semester Deadline

Incompletes

The EO course completion deadline for spring 2014 is May 16, 2014, at 3 p.m. Pacific Time. Final exams for live courses will become available in the EO Portal for proctors to access during finals week on campus; all exams for pre-encoded courses will be available to proctors at the beginning of the semester. It is critical that the student coordinates closely with the proctor to ensure the final exam reaches EO by the deadline.

A grade of “Incomplete” can only be assigned if a student has done passing work, but extenuating circumstances make it impossible to complete the course on time. Both the student and course instructor must agree on the extended deadline. Prior to requesting a grade of Incomplete, refer to the most current University of Idaho General Catalog, at www.uidaho.edu/registrar/classes/catalogs, and select General Requirements and Academic Procedures > Section F – Grades of Incomplete for detailed information.

Final Course Grades and Transcripts

Students who receive a grade of Incomplete must visit the EO Portal by May 29, 2014, to download any sessions necessary to complete the course. EO will notify proctors regarding the exam process for students who have a grade of incomplete

Students may log in to VandalWeb to view final course grades and unofficial transcripts. Official transcripts may be ordered from the Registrar’s Office; visit www.uidaho.edu/registrar/transcripts for more information.

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Academic Departments Business and Economics

Geological Engineering

Statistical Science

875 Perimeter Dr MS 3161 Moscow, ID 83844-3161 www.uidaho.edu/cbe Contact: cbe@uidaho.edu Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 6478

875 Perimeter Dr MS 1022 Moscow, ID 83844-1022 www.uidaho.edu/engr/ce Chair: Richard Nielsen Contact: civilengr@uidaho.edu Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 6782

875 Perimeter Dr MS 1104 Moscow, ID 83844-1104 www.sci.uidaho.edu/stat Chair: Christopher Williams Contact: Sarah Morra (smorra@uidaho.edu) Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 2929

Mathematics

Technology Management

875 Perimeter Dr MS 1103 Moscow, ID 83844-1103 www.uidaho.edu/sci/math Chair: Monte Boisen Contact: Mark Nielsen (markn@uidaho.edu) Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 6742

UI Boise Engineering 322 E Front St, Ste 242 Boise, ID 83702 www.uidaho.edu/engr/ technologymanagement Program Director: Roger Scott Adviser: Denise Engebrecht (denisee@uidaho.edu) Phone: (208) 364-6123 (800) 824-2889 (ask to be transferred)

Civil Engineering 875 Perimeter Dr MS 1022 Moscow, ID 83844-1022 www.uidaho.edu/engr/ce Chair: Richard Nielsen Contact: civilengr@uidaho.edu Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 6782

Computer Science 875 Perimeter Dr MS 1010 Moscow, ID 83844-1010 www.uidaho.edu/engr/cs Chair: Greg Donohoe Adviser: Darby Baldwin (dsbaldwin@uidaho.edu) Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 6592

Electrical and Computer Engineering 875 Perimeter Dr MS 1023 Moscow, ID 83844-1023 www.uidaho.edu/engr/ece Chair: Fred Barlow Contact: info@ece.uidaho.edu Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 6554

Engineering Management UI Boise Engineering 322 E Front St, Ste 242 Boise, ID 83702 www.uidaho.edu/engr/ engineeringmanagement Program Coordinator: Sandy Lieske Adviser: Denise Engebrecht (denisee@uidaho.edu) Phone: (208) 364-6123 (800) 824-2889 (ask to be transferred)

Mechanical Engineering 875 Perimeter Dr MS 0902 Moscow, ID 83844-0902 www.uidaho.edu/engr/me Chair: John Crepeau Contact: medept@uidaho.edu Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 6579

Nuclear Engineering 875 Perimeter Dr MS 0902 Moscow, ID 83844-0902 www.uidaho.edu/engr/me Chair: John Crepeau Adviser: Akira Tokuhiro (tokuhiro@uidaho.edu) Phone: (208) 282-7714 (800) 824-2889 (ask to be transferred)

Water Resources 875 Perimeter Dr MS 3002 Moscow, ID 83844-3002 www.water.uidaho.edu Program Director: Jan Boll Contact: water@uidaho.edu Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 9694

Psychology and Communication Studies 875 Perimeter Dr MS 3043 Moscow, ID 83844-3043 www.class.uidaho.edu/psychcomm Chair: Traci Craig Contact: Sean McIlraith (seanm@uidaho.edu) Phone: (800) 824-2889, ext. 6324

The University of Idaho has a policy of nondiscrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, sex, age, sexual orientation, gender identity/expression, disability or status as a Vietnam era veteran. This policy applies to all programs, services, and facilities, and includes, but is not limited to, applications, admissions, access to programs and services, and employment. 9


Exam Process Selecting an Exam Proctor

Students submit their proctor information to EO each semester by using the Proctor Information Form on the EO website. Proctors must be impartial and cannot be students’ personal friends, family members, work subordinates or U-Idaho students. It is the student’s responsibility to pay for proctoring services if there is a charge. Proctors must be certified before exams will be released. Proctor selection is subject to approval, and is monitored throughout the semester.

Students are responsible for finding a qualified person to administer the exam process in compliance with Engineering Outreach policies. Qualified proctors must be able to read and comprehend English. Options for qualified proctors: • faculty or staff at local educational institutions • work supervisors, training coordinators, or human resources personnel • U.S. military education officers • public librarians

Visit the EO website for more information about the exam process, including contact information for the university centers that provide proctoring services in Coeur d’Alene, Boise and Idaho Falls.

Exam Process At the start of the semester, the approved proctor receives access to the EO Portal from EO to download and print the PDF exam files. EO notifies both the student and the proctor by email when exams are made available to proctors. Students are responsible for scheduling appointments with their proctors to take exams; refer to the course syllabus or course website for more information about exam deadlines. For security, proctors will verify students’ picture IDs before releasing exams. Proctors are required to return completed exams by email or fax to EO immediately after completion. EO notifies students by email when exams are received from their proctors and when graded exams are posted in the EO Portal. EO sends all email communication to the student’s VandalMail account. Proctors must store all exams in a secure file until the student receives a final grade for the course, then the exams are to be destroyed.

Instructor Contact Instructors can be reached by mail, email, fax or by calling Engineering Outreach at (800) 8242889. Select the Instructor Directory link on the EO home page to view contact information.

Disability Support Services University of Idaho’s Disability Support Services Office (DSS) provides academic support services to students with temporary or permanent disabilities. Students requesting accommodation may send an email to DSS at dss@uidaho.edu. Appropriate disability documentation must be provided and exam accommodation requests must be made each semester. Visit www.uidaho.edu/studentaffairs/asap/dss for more information.

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Administration Building Lawn

Spring 2014 Academic Certificate Courses Academic certificates require four or five courses, depending on the certificate. The following courses are scheduled for EO delivery this spring. Contact the Certificate Coordinator prior to registering.

Analog Integrated Circuit Design

Process and Performance Excellence

Suat Ay, Ph.D. (suatay@uidaho.edu) • No certificate courses offered this spring

Christopher Williams, Ph.D. (chrisw@uidaho.edu) • Stat 422 Sample Survey Methods • Stat 456/Bus 456 Quality Management • Stat 519 Multivariate Analysis

Applied Geotechnics Richard Nielsen, Ph.D., P.E. (rnielson@uidaho.edu) • GeoE 407 Rock Mechanics • GeoE 535/CE 563 Seepage and Slope Stability

Secure and Dependable Computing Systems James Alves-Foss, Ph.D. (jimaf@uidaho.edu) • CS 438/CS 538 Network Security • CS 441/CS 541 Advanced Operating Systems • CS 448/CS 548 Survivable Systems and Networks

Communication and Control for Power Transmission and Distribution Greg Donohoe, Ph.D., P.E. (gdonohoe@uidaho.edu) • CS 448/CS 548 Survivable Systems and Networks • ECE 422 Power Systems Analysis

Statistics Chris Williams, Ph.D. (chrisw@uidaho.edu) • Stat 431 Statistical Analysis • Stat 422 Sample Survey Methods • Stat 451 Probability Theory • Stat 452 Mathematical Statistics • Stat 519 Multivariate Analysis • Stat 565 Computer Intensive Statistics

Electric Machines and Drives Herbert Hess, Ph.D., P.E. (hhess@uidaho.edu) • ECE 427 Power Electronics

Power System Protection and Relaying Brian Johnson, Ph.D., P.E. (bjohnson@uidaho.edu) • ECE 422 Power Systems Analysis • ECE 476 Digital Filtering • ECE 524 Transients in Power Systems

Structural Engineering Richard Nielsen, Ph.D., P.E. (rnielsen@uidaho.edu) • CE 546/ME 549 Finite Element Analysis • CE 542 Advanced Design of Steel Structures • CE 575 Advanced Pavement Design and Analysis 11


Finding the CRN Every semester each course is given a specific Course Registration Number that corresponds with the section of the course. EO courses are typically section 10 and have different CRNs than the on-campus section of the same course. Below you will find where each CRN is located within the course description.

Course titles are listed with abbreviations from their department and lists the number of credits. Specifies if the course is being recorded in the current semester or if it is a pre-encoded course.

If you have further questions about the course, contact the instructor directly by email.

CS 451/551 Advanced Computer Architecture (3 cr) Same as ECE 541. Principles and alternatives in instruction set design; processor implementation techniques, pipelining, parallel processors, memory hierarchy, and input/output; measurement of performance and cost/performance trade-off. Additional work required for graduate credit. Prereq: CS 150, Stat 301 or Permission CS 451: CRN 36207 CS 551: CRN 28041 ECE 541: CRN 28043 Produced: Fall 2013 Instructor: Robert Rinker, Ph.D. rinker@uidaho.edu

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Course descriptions provide a short synopsis of the course. Note the required prerequisites and permissions prior to registering, and contact the instructor to remove the registration hold.

There are specific Course Registration Numbers (CRN) for each course, as well as for each level. You are required to use CRNs when registering in VandalWeb.


Panorama view of Moscow, Idaho

Spring 2014 Courses ACCOUNTING

BUSINESS

Acct 582 Enterprise Accounting (3 cr)

Bus 456 Quality Management (3 cr)

Carries no credit toward master's degree in accounting. Both business and non-business students will learn the critical role played by financial statements as entrepreneurs try to launch a new business. The trade-offs of various funding sources and their impacts on financial statements are also explored. Content will be presented in an integrated manner, rather than concept by concept, to emphasize the interrelatedness of forecasts and assumptions regarding revenues, costs, and financing on financial statements and thus, the resulting business model.

Same as Stat 456. Principles of total quality management, with emphasis on problem solving techniques to continually improve processes; customer-driven quality, management and employee participation, statistical process control, product/process design, and process capability. Prereq: Stat 251 or Stat 301 Note: When this course was produced in fall 2011, there was an additional prereq of Stat 271. Bus 456: 60119 Stat 456: 63065 Produced: Fall 2011 Instructor: Scott Metlen, M.B.A., Ph.D. metlen@uidaho.edu

CRN: 46361 Produced: Spring 2013 Instructor: Jason Porter, Ph.D. jporter@uidaho.edu

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CIVIL ENGINEERING

CE 445/545 Matrix Structural Analysis (3 cr) Formulation of the analysis of trusses, beams, and frames using the stiffness method of matrix structural analysis; development of element properties, coordinate transformations, and global analysis theory; special topics such as initial loads, member and joint constraints, and nonlinear analysis. Special project demonstrating mature understanding of materials reqd for grad cr. Prereq: CE 342 or Permission

CE 404-CL ST: Engineering Law and Contracts (3 cr) Project engineering techniques for planning, scheduling, and controlling typical engineering and construction projects. Contract law and application to: engineering services agreements and construction contracts; preparing technical specifications; torts, professional liability, and alternate dispute resolution. Prereq: Senior standing in Engineering CRN: 67393 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Eric Coats, Ph.D., P.E. ecoats@uidaho.edu

CE 445: CRN 69112 CE 545: CRN 62675 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Richard Nielsen, Ph.D., P.E. rnielsen@uidaho.edu

CE 411 Engineering Fundamentals (1 cr)

CE 542 Advanced Design of Steel Structures (3 cr) Plate girder design; local and global buckling; plastic collapse analysis; shear and moment-resisting connections; eccentrically-loaded connections. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: CE 444 or Permission

Review of basic engineering and science material covered in Fundamentals of Engineering exam. Offered for the nine to ten week period prior to the exam date. Graded P/F. Prereq: Senior standing or Permission CRN: 48317 Produced: Spring 2013 Instructor: Richard Nielsen, Ph.D., P.E. rnielsen@uidaho.edu

CRN: 67253 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: An Chen, Ph.D. achen@uidaho.edu

CE 428 Open Channel Hydraulics (3 cr) Same as BAE 458. Hydraulics of uniform and varied flow in open channels with fixed and movable beds. Recommended Preparation: CE 322. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students.

CE 545 Matrix Structural Analysis (3 cr)

CRN: 69110 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Jim Liou, Ph.D., P.E. liou@uidaho.edu

Same as ME 549. Formulation of theory from basic consideration of mechanics; applications to structural engineering, solid mechanics, soil and rock mechanics; fluid flow. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: ME 341 or CE 342

CE 431 Design of Water and Wastewater Systems I (3 cr)

CE 546: CRN 69113 ME 549: CRN 69137 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Gabriel Potirniche, Ph.D. gabrielp@uidaho.edu

See CE 445.

CE 546 Finite Element Analysis (3 cr)

Application of fundamental engineering science to the design of systems for the treatment of domestic and industrial water supplies; treatment and re-use of domestic sewage and industrial wastes. Three lec a wk. Prereq: CE 322, 330, or Permission

CE 563 Seepage and Slope Stability (3 cr)

CRN: 62208 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Eric Coats, Ph.D., P.E. ecoats@uidaho.edu

Same as GeoE 535. Principles governing the flow of water through soils; mechanics of stability analysis of slopes, landslides, and embankments for soil and rock masses; probabilistic analyses; stabilization methods. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: CE 360 or GeoE 436; or Permission CE 563: CRN 62215 GeoE 535: CRN 62214 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Sunil Sharma, Ph.D., P.E. ssharma@uidaho.edu

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CE 575 Advanced Pavement Design and Analysis (3 cr)

CS 472/572 Evolutionary Computation (3 cr)

Design of new and rehabilitated asphalt and Portland cement concrete pavements; mechanistic-empirical design procedures; performance models; deflection-based structural analysis, overlay design, environmental effects; long-term pavement performance (LTPP), and introduction to research topics in pavement engineering. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: CE 475 or Equivalent, or Permission

Solving computation problems by "growing" solutions; simulates natural evolution using analogues of mutation, crossover, and other generic transformations on representations of potential solutions; standard EC techniques such as genetic algorithms and evolutionary programming, mathematical explanations of why they work, and a survey of some applications; the focus is on solving real-world problems using projects. Graduate-level research and possible paper or presentation required for grad cr. Prereq: CS 210

CRN: 46373 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Fouad Bayomy, Ph.D., P.E. bayomy@uidaho.edu

CS 472: CRN 69075 CS 572: CRN 69076 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Terry Soule, Ph.D. tsoule@uidaho.edu

COMPUTER SCIENCE

CS 538 Network Security (3 cr)

CS 438/538 Network Security (3 cr)

See CS 438.

Practical topics in network security; policy and mechanism, malicious code; intrusion detection, prevention, response; cryptographic techniques for privacy and integrity; emphasis on tradeoffs between risk of misuse, cost of prevention, and societal issues; concepts implemented in programming assignments. Additional projects/assignments reqd for grad cr. Recommended Preparation: Knowledge of C or C++. CS 438 is a cooperative course available to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: CS 336

CS 541 Advanced Operating Systems (3 cr) See CS 441.

CS 548 Survivable Systems and Networks (3 cr) See CS 448.

CS 572 Evolutionary Computation (3 cr) See CS 472.

CS 438: CRN 63298 CS 538: CRN 63299 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: James Alves-Foss, Ph.D. jimaf@uidaho.edu

CS 578 Neural Network Design (3 cr) Same as ECE 578 and ME 578. Introduction to neural networks and problems that can be solved by their application; introduction of basic neural network architectures; learning rules are developed for training these architectures to perform useful functions; various training techniques employing the learning rules discussed and applied; neural networks used to solve pattern recognition and control system problems. Prereq: Permission

CS 441/541 Advanced Operating Systems (3 cr) Principles of contemporary operating systems for network and distributed computer systems; sequential processes, Scheduling, Process synchronization, device management, File systems, memory management, and protection and security. Additional work required for graduate credit. Prereq: CS 240

CS 578: CRN 62259 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Milos Manic, Ph.D. misko@uidaho.edu

CS 441: CRN 69091 CS 541: CRN 69092 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Robert Rinker, Ph.D. rinker@uidaho.edu

CS 448/548 Survivable Systems and Networks (3 cr) Computers and networks under malicious threat or attack. Attributes of survivability, trustworthiness, dependability and assurance. Threats to survivability, security, reliability and performance. Models and analytical methods to assess survivability, vulnerability, interdependence and risk. Systemic inadequacies and approaches for overcoming deficiencies. Literature review and case studies. Additional projects/assignments required for graduate credit. Recommended Preparation: CS J449/J549 or CS 438. CS 448: CRN 66230 CS 548: CRN 66234 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Axel Krings, Ph.D. krings@uidaho.edu

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Electrical And Computer Engineering

ECE 310 Fundamentals of Electronics (3 cr)

Intro to d.c. and transient electrical circuits; mesh and nodal analysis; dependent sources; circuit theorems; transient analysis with differential equations. Three lec and one recitation a wk. Prereq: Math 175 with a grade of 'C' or better; Coreq: ECE 211, Math 310 and Phys 212/212L

Operational amplifier fundamentals and applications, introduction to electronic devices such as diodes, bipolar junction and field effect transistors, large and small-signal modeling of non-linear electronic devices, DC and small-signal analysis of circuits with non-linear electronic devices, biasing of electronic circuits, introduction to the analysis, design, and applications of electronic circuits such as rectifiers, power supplies, and low-frequency single-stage amplifiers. Practical limitations of amplifiers of electronic circuits. Prereq: ECE 212 and ECE 213; Coreq: ECE 311

Department permission required, contact info@ece.uidaho.edu.

Department permission required, contact info@ece.uidaho.edu.

CRN: 69095 Produced: Fall 2013 Instructor: Michael Santora, Ph.D. mjsantora@uidaho.edu

CRN: 66367 Produced: Summer 2013 Instructor: Michael Santora, Ph.D. mjsantora@uidaho.edu

ECE 211 Electrical Circuits I Lab (1 cr)

ECE 311 Fundamentals of Electronics Lab (1 cr)

Also see Computer Science

ECE 210 Electrical Circuits I (3 cr)

Lab to accompany ECE 210. Lab experiments and computer simulations. One 3-hr lab a wk. Coreq: ECE 210 and Phys 212/212L

Lab to accompany ECE 310. Coreq: ECE 310 Department permission required, contact info@ece.uidaho.edu.

Department permission required, contact info@ece.uidaho.edu.

CRN: 68656 Produced: Summer 2013 Instructor: Michael Santora, Ph.D. mjsantora@uidaho.edu

CRN: 69096 Produced: Fall 2013 Instructor: Michael Santora, Ph.D. mjsantora@uidaho.edu

ECE 319 Background Study in Electronics (3 cr)

ECE 212 Electrical Circuits II (3 cr)

Not applicable toward any UI undergrad degree; valid only for removal of electronics (ECE 310) deficiency for graduate students who do not have BSEE background. See ECE 310 description below. Graded P/F based on comprehensive exam at completion of course. Prereq: Permission

Continuation of ECE 210. Intro to sinusoidal steady state circuits; time and frequency domain analysis; Laplace transforms; Fourier series; transfer functions; Bode plots, filters. Three lec and one recitation a wk. Prereq: ECE 210, Math 310, and Phys 212/212L; a grade of 'C' or better is required for all prerequisite courses; Coreq: ECE 213

ECE 310 Fundamentals of Electronics (3 cr). Operational amplifier fundamentals and applications, introduction to electronic devices such as diodes, bipolar junction and field effect transistors, large and small-signal modeling of non-linear electronic devices, DC and small- signal analysis of circuits with nonlinear electronic devices, biasing of electronic circuits, introduction to the analysis, design, and applications of electronic circuits such as rectifiers, power supplies, and low-frequency single-stage amplifiers. Practical limitations of amplifiers of electronic circuits. Prereq: ECE 212 and 213; Coreq: ECE 311

Department permission required, contact info@ece.uidaho.edu. CRN: 69097 Produced: Fall 2013 Instructor: Michael Santora, Ph.D. mjsantora@uidaho.edu

ECE 213 Electrical Circuits II Lab (1 cr) Lab to accompany ECE 212. Continuation of ECE 211. Lab experiments and computer simulations. One 3-hr lab a wk. Prereq: ECE 211 and Phys 212/212L; Coreq: ECE 212

CRN: 56436 Produced: Summer 2013 Instructor: Michael Santora, Ph.D. mjsantora@uidaho.edu

Department permission required, contact info@ece.uidaho.edu. CRN: 69098 Produced: Fall 2013 Instructor: Michael Santora, Ph.D. mjsantora@uidaho.edu

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ECE 349 Background Study in Digital Logic (was Digital Computer Fundamentals) (3 cr)

ECE 419/516 Image Sensors and Systems (3 cr) This course introduces various concepts and fundamentals related to semiconductor image sensors. Topics cover light production and detection, video image formats, image sensor characteristics and performance metrics, basic and advanced operation principals and types of semiconductor image sensors (CCD and CMOS), noise in imagers, image and color processing, and issues related to camera system design, integration and signal processing. Recommended preparation: ECE 410 or equivalent. Prereq: ECE 310

Not applicable toward any UI undergrad degree; valid only for removal of digital computer fundamentals (ECE 240) deficiency for grad students. See current ECE 240 description below. Graded P/F. ECE 240 Digital Logic (3 cr). Number systems, truth tables, logic gates, flip-flops, combinational and synchronous sequential circuits using SSI, MSI, and programmable devices; intro to digital systems and basic microprocessor architecture; certification exam not reqd. Prereq: Phys 212; Coreq: ECE 241

ECE 419: CRN 69099 ECE 516: CRN 69107 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Suat Ay, Ph.D. suatay@uidaho.edu

Note: When ECE 349 was produced, ECE 240 was numbered EE 243, and there were no prereqs; the description remains the same. CRN: 61385 Produced: Spring 1997 Instructor: Eugene Saghi, Ph.D. (lecturer) James F. Frenzel, Ph.D., P.E. (grader, contact) jfrenzel@uidaho.edu

ECE 420 Energy Systems II (3 cr) Three-phases, three-phase transformers, winding theory, rotating waves, steady state operation of three-phase synchronous and steady state operation of single and three-phase induction machines, and AC drives. Labs: three-phase measurements, three-phase transformers, synchronous machines, induction machines. ECE 420 cannot be counted as a graduate depth area course. Prereq: ECE 320 and ECE 321

ECE 359 Background Study in Signals and Systems Analysis (3 cr) Not applicable toward any UI undergrad degree; valid only for removal of signals and systems analysis (ECE 350) deficiency for grad students who do not have BSEE background. See ECE 350 description below. Graded P/F based on comprehensive exam at completion of course. Prereq: Permission

CRN: 56928 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Brian Johnson, Ph.D., P.E. bjohnson@uidaho.edu

ECE 350 Signals and Systems I (3 cr). Continuous and discrete, linear time invariant systems. Continuous and discrete linear time invariant systems. Differential and difference equations. Convolution integrals and sums. Fourier and Laplace transforms. Discrete time Fourier transforms and Z transforms. Emphasis on practical applications to engineering systems. Prereq: ECE 212 and Math 310; Coreq: ECE 351

ECE 422 Power Systems Analysis (3 cr) Balanced and unbalanced faults, Zbus methods, transient generator models, stability analysis, fault analysis using commercial software, and introduction to power system protection. (Spring only). Prereq: ECE 421 CRN: 62748 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Herbert Hess, Ph.D., P.E. hhess@uidaho.edu

CRN: 56442 Produced: Fall 2013 Instructor: Touraj Assefi, Ph.D. tassefi@uidaho.edu

ECE 427 Power Electronics (3 cr) Characteristics, limitations, and application of solid state power devices; practical aspects of power electronic converters, including rectifiers and inverters; choppers, AC phase control, and device gating techniques. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: ECE 420

ECE 410 Advanced Electronics (3 cr) Introduction to analog integrated circuit implementation and design, differential and common-mode signal concepts, differential amplifiers, multistage amplifiers, operational amplifier design, frequency response of electronic circuits, feedback in electronic circuits, large-signal amplifiers. Prereq: ECE 310 and 311

CRN: 56542 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Herbert Hess, Ph.D., P.E. hhess@uidaho.edu

CRN: 60237 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Suat Ay, Ph.D. suatay@uidaho.edu

ECE 434 Antenna Principles and Design (3 cr) Maxwell's equations, vector potential theory, radiation patterns, antenna efficiency and bandwidth, polarization, dipole and loop antennas, line sources, patch antennas, lineal arrays, antenna systems, radar equation. Prereq: ECE 330 or Permission CRN: 63184 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Jeff Young, Ph.D., P.E. jyoung@uidaho.edu 17


ECE 440 Digital Systems Engineering (3 cr)

ECE 476 Digital Filtering (3 cr)

Design of digital systems using a hardware description language and field-programmable gate arrays; projects emphasize a top-down design process using software tools; topics include datapath optimization, pipelining, static and dynamic memory, technology issues, intra-system communication, and design for testability. Prereq: ECE 240, 241, or Permission

Design methods for recursive and non-recursive filters; frequency domain characteristics; computer-aided design; applications. Prereq: ECE 450 CRN: 56934 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Richard Wall, Ph.D., P.E. rwall@uidaho.edu

CRN: 66373 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: James Frenzel, Ph.D., P.E. jfrenzel@uidaho.edu

ECE 516 Image Sensors and Systems (3 cr) See ECE 419.

ECE 524 Transients in Power Systems (3 cr) Analysis and simulation of electromagnetic transients on electric power systems; switching transients; lightning transients; mitigation of transient overvoltages; surge protection; modeling power systems apparatus for transient studies. Prereq: ECE 421

ECE 444/544 Supervisory Control and Critical Infrastructure Systems (3 cr) Principles of network-based distributed real-time control and critical infrastructure systems. Integration of dedicated control protocols with wide area networks (e.g. the Internet). Issues of reliability, cost, and security. Application to selected industries, such as electric power distribution and waste and water management. Recommended preparation: ECE 340, CS 240, ME 313, CE 330, or CE 372. Prereq: Senior or Graduate standing in the College of Engineering

CRN: 62236 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Brian Johnson, Ph.D., P.E. bjohnson@uidaho.edu

ECE 531 Advanced Electromagnetic Theory II (3 cr)

ECE 444: CRN 69220 ECE 544: CRN 69221 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Paul Oman, Ph.D. oman@uidaho.edu

Boundary value problems in non-Cartesian systems, diffraction, perturbation techniques, variational techniques, wave transformations. Prereq: ECE 530 or Permission CRN: 66384 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Jeff Young, Ph.D., P.E. jyoung@uidaho.edu

ECE 462/562 Semiconductor Theory (3 cr) Fundamental theory and behavior of modern semiconductor devices. Additional projects/assignments reqd for grad cr. Prereq for ECE 462: ECE 460; Prereq for ECE 562: Permission

ECE 544 Supervisory Control and Critical Infrastructure Systems (3 cr)

ECE 462: CRN 65272 ECE 562: CRN 58934 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Dennis Sullivan, Ph.D., P.E. dsulliva@uidaho.edu

See ECE 444.

ECE 562 Semiconductor Theory (3 cr) See ECE 462.

ECE 565 Introduction to Microelectronics Fabrication (3 cr)

ECE 465/565 Introduction to Microelectronics Fabrication (3 cr)

See ECE 465.

This course serves as an introduction to the fabrication of microelectronic devices. Topics include the basics of IC structures, clean room protocol, photolithography, film growth and deposition, as well as IC interconnect technologies. Additional projects/assignments required for graduate credit. Prereq: ECE 310

ECE 570 Random Signals (3 cr) Probability, random variables, and random signals in engineering systems; stochastic calculus, stationarity, ergodicity, correlation, and power spectra; propagation of random signals through linear systems; Kalman filter theory and applications. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: ECE 350, and Stat 301 or Stat 451, or Permission

ECE 465: CRN 69106 ECE 565: CRN 65276 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Aicha Elshabini, Ph.D. elshabini@uidaho.edu

CRN: 69108 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Touraj Assefi, Ph.D. tassefi@uidaho.edu

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ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT

GeoE 535 Seepage and Slope Stability (3 cr)

EM 486 Software-Assisted Project Management (3 cr)

MATHEMATICS

See CE 563.

Also see Accounting, Business and Statistics

Characteristics and features of project management; procedures and techniques used in identifying software features that are necessary for recording project plans and for reporting project progress; process of selecting project management software that is consistent with the organization's procedures and requirements; evaluation of the modeling capabilities of a system in estimating and scheduling specific case studies of engineering projects. Two lec and 3 hrs of lab a wk. Prereq: CE 482 or PMP Certification

Also see Statistics

Math 123 Mathematics Applied To The Modern World (3 cr) Discussion of some aspects of mathematical thought through the study of problems taken from areas such as logic, political science, management science, geometry, probability, and combinatorics; discussion of historical development and topics discovered in the past 100 years. Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu.

CRN: 68267 Produced: Fall 2012 Instructor: Cheryl Wilhelmsen, M.S. cherylw@if.uidaho.edu

CRN: 65255 Produced: Summer 2006 Instructor: Gary Peterson, M.S., J.D. gary@uidaho.edu

EM 504-EG ST: Effective Global Product Development (3 cr)

Math 130 Finite Mathematics (3 cr)

Discussion of topics related to enabling effective global product development spanning the entire product development cycle from strategy development, through project execution, and ultimately post release product support. Rather than presenting a fixed methodology, this course will provide a framework for global development that can be adapted to specific environments. Prereq: Graduate standing or Permission

Systems of linear equations and inequalities, matrices, linear programming, and probability. Prereq: Sufficient score on SAT, ACT, or COMPASS Math Test; or Math 108 with a C or better. Required test scores can be found here: http://www.uidaho.edu/registrar/registration/placement/math. Note: The prerequisites listed above were effective summer 2011. When the course was produced in spring 2008, the prereqs were 1 yr high school algebra, 1 yr plane geometry, and sufficient score on SAT, ACT, or COMPASS Math Test.

CRN: 69043 Produced: Fall 2013 Instructor: Sandy Lieske, M.S. lieske@uidaho.edu

Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu. CRN: 66298 Produced: Spring 2008 Instructor: Gary Peterson, M.S., J.D. gary@uidaho.edu

ENGINEERING — GENERAL Engr 210 Engineering Statics (3 cr) Principles of statics with engineering applications; addition and resolution of forces, vector algebra, moments and couples, resultants and static equilibrium, equivalent force systems, centroids, center of gravity, free body method of analysis, two and three dimensional equilibrium, trusses, frames, and friction. Prereq: Math 170

Math 160 Survey of Calculus (4 cr) Carries no credit after MATH 170. Functions, graphing, derivative, integral, exponential and logarithmic functions, functions of several variables. Primarily for students in business, life sciences or architecture who need only one semester of calculus. Prereq: Sufficient score on SAT, ACT, or COMPASS Math test; Math 137 with a C or better; or Math 143 with a C or better. Required test scores can be found here: http://www.uidaho.edu/ registrar/registration/placement/math.

CRN: 55194 Produced: Spring 2013 Instructor: Denise Bauer, Ph.D. dbauer@uidaho.edu

Note: The prerequisites listed above were effective summer 2011. When the course was produced in spring 2007, the prereqs were 1 yr of high school geometry and one of the following: (1) 1.5 yrs high school algebra and sufficiently high score on SAT, ACT, or COMPASS Math Test, (2) Math 137, or (3) Math 143.

GEOLOGICAL ENGINEERING GeoE 407 Rock Mechanics (3 cr) Mechanical properties of rocks and rock masses; lab and insitu techniques to estimate strength, stress distribution, and deformation behavior in rock masses; application of analytical tools such as the finite element method to design stable excavations and support systems in rock. Prereq: Engr 350

Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu. CRN: 61583 Produced: Spring 2007 Instructor: Gary Peterson, M.S., J.D. gary@uidaho.edu

CRN: 69111 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: S J Jung, Ph.D. sjung@uidaho.edu 19


Math 170 Analytic Geometry and Calculus I (4 cr)

Math 310 Ordinary Differential Equations (3 cr)

Carries 2 credits after Math 160. Functions, limits, continuity, differentiation, integration, applications, differentiation and integration of transcendental functions. Primarily for students in engineering, mathematics, science or computer science. Prereq: Math 143 (with a grade of C or better) and Math 144 (concurrent enrollment in Math 144 is allowed although it is recommended that students complete Math 144 before enrolling in Math 170); or demonstrated proficiency through a sufficiently high score on the ACT, SAT, or COMPASS tests

Classification, initial and boundary value problems of one variable, exact equations, methods of solving higher-order linear equations, second-order equations with constant coefficient, series solutions, systems of linear equations, Laplace transforms, and existence theorems. Recommended Preparation: Math 275. Prereq: Math 175 Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu. CRN: 46380 Produced: Spring 2011 Instructor: Mark Nielsen, Ph.D. markn@uidaho.edu

Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu. CRN: 51928 Produced: Summer 2012 Instructor: Cynthia Piez, M.S. cpiez@uidaho.edu

Math 330 Linear Algebra (3 cr) Linear equations, matrices, linear transformations, eigenvalues, diagonalization; applications. Recommended Preparation: Math 175. Prereq: Math 160 or Math 170

Math 175 Analytic Geometry and Calculus II (4 cr) Differentiation and integration of transcendental functions, integration techniques, general mean value theorem, numerical techniques, and series. Prereq: Math 170

Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu. CRN: 44402 Produced: Spring 2012 Instructor: Mark Nielsen, Ph.D. markn@uidaho.edu

Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu. CRN: 53279 Produced: Summer 2012 Instructor: Cynthia Piez, M.S. cpiez@uidaho.edu

Math 388 History of Mathematics (3 cr) History of the development of mathematical ideas from ancient cultures to the present, including the relationship of those ideas to the cultures that produced them as well as an understanding of the mathematics involved. Prereq: Math 175 and 330

Math 215 Introduction to Higher Mathematics (3 cr) Carries no credit after Math 461 or Math 471. The primary goal of this course is to teach students how to read and write mathematical proofs. Topics include logic and proof techniques, as well as fundamental mathematical structures such as sets, relations, functions, and number systems. Prereq: Math 175

Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu. CRN: 68089 Produced: Fall 2012 Instructor: Robert Ely, Ph.D. ely@uidaho.edu

Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu. CRN: 63060 Produced: Spring 2013 Instructor: Jennifer Johnson-Leung, Ph.D. jenfns@uidaho.edu

Math 390 Axiomatic Geometry (3 cr) Development of Euclidean and hyperbolic geometry using the axiomatic approach. Recommended Preparation: Math 215. Prereq: High school geometry and Math 330, or instructor permission

Math 275 Analytic Geometry and Calculus III (3 cr)

Note: When this course was produced, Math 215 was not listed as recommended preparation, and the prereqs were high school geometry and Math 215, or Permission.

Vectors, functions of several variables, and multiple integration. Prereq: Math 175 Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu.

Department permission required, contact math@uidaho.edu.

CRN: 55190 Produced: Spring 2008 Instructor: Paul Joyce, Ph.D. joyce@uidaho.edu

CRN: 49771 Produced: Spring 2008 Instructor: Mark Nielsen, Ph.D. markn@uidaho.edu

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Math 420 Complex Variables (3 cr)

Math 462 Abstract Algebra II (3 cr)

Complex numbers, elementary functions, derivatives, the residue theorem, conformal mappings, contour integration, infinite series, applications. Prereq: Math 275

Groups, rings, and fields. Prereq: Math 461 CRN: 46389 Produced: Spring 2010 Instructor: Hirotachi Abo, Ph.D. abo@uidaho.edu

CRN: 46381 Produced: Spring 2012 Instructor: Somantika Datta, Ph.D. sdatta@uidaho.edu

Math 471 Introduction to Analysis I (3 cr) Topology of Euclidean n-space, limit and continuity, differentiation, integration. Prereq: Math 275 and Math 215 or Permission

Math 426 Discrete Optimization (3 cr) Optimization on graphs, networks and flows, and related topics. Prereq: Math 175

CRN: 50087 Produced: Fall 2013 Instructor: Somantika Datta, Ph.D. sdatta@uidaho.edu

CRN: 48089 Produced: Fall 2004 Instructor: Mark Nielsen, Ph.D. markn@uidaho.edu

Math 472 Introduction to Analysis II (3 cr) Topology of Euclidean n-space, limit and continuity, differentiation, integration. (Spring only). Prereq: Math 471 or Permission

Math 430 Advanced Linear Algebra (3 cr) Vector spaces, linear transformations, characteristic polynomial, eigenvectors, Hermitian and unitary operators, inner products, quadratic forms, Jordan canonical form, applications. Recommended Preparation: Math 215. Prereq: Math 330 or Permission

CRN: 46391 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Somantika Datta, Ph.D. sdatta@uidaho.edu

CRN: 68090 Produced: Fall 2012 Instructor: Somantika Datta, Ph.D. sdatta@uidaho.edu

Math 513 Problem Solving Through History (3 cr) Historical study of approaches to solving problems in geometry, number theory, and set theory. This course is specifically designed for the MAT program, and will not satisfy the requirements of other mathematics degree programs.

Math 451 Probability Theory (3 cr) Same as Stat 451. Random variables, expectation, special distributions (normal, binomial, exponential, etc.), moment generating functions, law of large numbers, central limit theorem. Prereq or Coreq: Math 275, Graduate standing, or Permission

CRN: 51074 Produced: Fall 2002 Instructor: William Voxman, Ph.D. (lecturer) Cynthia Piez, M.S. (grader, contact) cpiez@uidaho.edu

Math 451: CRN 46502 Stat 451: CRN 48093 Produced: Fall 2008 Instructor: Paul Joyce, Ph.D. joyce@uidaho.edu

Math 516 Groups and Symmetry (3 cr) Exploration of groups, symmetry, and permutations. This course is specifically designed for the MAT program, and will not satisfy the requirements of other mathematics degree programs.

Math 452 Mathematical Statistics (3 cr)

CRN: 51076 Produced: Summer 2008 Instructor: Mark Nielsen, Ph.D. markn@uidaho.edu

Same as Stat 452. Estimation of parameters, confidence intervals, hypothesis testing, likelihood ratio test, sufficient statistics. Prereq: Math 451 or Permission Math 452: CRN 50177 Stat 452: CRN 50422 Produced: Spring 2012 Instructor: Paul Joyce, Ph.D. joyce@uidaho.edu

Math 461 Abstract Algebra I (3 cr) Groups, rings, and fields. Prereq: Math 215 and Math 330, or Permission CRN: 50243 Produced: Fall 2009 Instructor: Hirotachi Abo, Ph.D. abo@uidaho.edu

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MECHANICAL ENGINEERING

ME 450/550 Computational Fluid Dynamics (3 cr) Governing equations of fluid flow; fundamentals of turbulence modeling; accuracy and stability of discretization schemes; verification and validation; boundary and initial conditions; grid generation; CFD postprocessing. Application of CFD software (ANSYS FLUENT) through five hands-on CFD Labs including internal viscous pipe flows, external flows over a 2D airfoil and a circular cylinder, and flows in a 2D driven cavity. Additional projects/assignments required for graduate credits. Prereq: Engr 335 and Math 330

ME 404/504-HF ST: Human Factors in Engineering Design (3 cr) Introduction to and application of Human Factors and Ergonomics Engineering principles in product design. Engineers design systems (e.g., work environments or products) where the human is an integral component. Human Factors and Ergonomics Engineering puts emphasis on how products should be designed so that they are safe, comfortable, and efficient for the human user. This course will focus on how factors such as body characteristics, physical and cognitive abilities, and the environment affect how products should be designed to accommodate the intended user. Prereq for ME 404: senior standing in ME or instructor’s consent; Prereq for ME 504: graduate standing

ME 450: CRN 69134 ME 550: CRN 69133 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Tao Xing, Ph.D. xing@uidaho.edu

ME 404: CRN 68198 ME 504: CRN 66354 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Denise Bauer, Ph.D., P.E. dbauer@uidaho.edu

ME 472 Mechanical Vibrations (3 cr) Free and forced vibration of single and multiple degree of freedom systems; response of mechanical systems to inputs of varying complexity, ranging from single frequency to pseudo-random; applications to mechanical design and vibration control. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: ME 313

ME 412 Gas Dynamics (3 cr) Compressible flow in ducts and nozzles, shock waves and expansion waves, and adiabatic two-dimensional compressible flow. Prereq: Math 310, Engr 320, and Engr 335

CRN: 68216 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Michael Anderson, Ph.D., P.E. anderson@uidaho.edu

CRN: 48163 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: John Crepeau, Ph.D., P.E. crepeau@uidaho.edu

ME 504-HF ST: Human Factors in Engineering Design (3 cr) See ME 404.

ME 514 HVAC Systems (3 cr)

ME 414/514 HVAC Systems (3 cr)

See ME 414.

Application of thermodynamics, heat transfer, and fluid flow to understanding the psychrometric performance of systems and equipment; evaluating the performance characteristics, advantages, and disadvantages of the various types of HVAC systems including large tonnage refrigeration/chiller equipment, cooling coils, cooling towers, ducts, fans, and heat pump systems; economics of system and equipment selection. Recommended Preparation: ME 345, ME 444.

ME 540 Continuum Mechanics (3 cr) Stress and deformation of continua using tensor analysis; relationship between stress, strain, and strain rates in fluids and solids; applications. Prereq: Permission CRN: 46371 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Gabriel Potirniche, Ph.D. gabrielp@uidaho.edu

ME 414: CRN 69141 ME 514: CRN 60317 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Ralph Budwig, Ph.D., P.E. rbudwig@uidaho.edu

ME 547 Thermal Radiation Processes (3 cr) Thermal radiation; radiation interchange among surfaces; radiation in absorbing-emitting gases; combined modes of heat transfer. Prereq: ME 345 or Permission CRN: 65290 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Judi Steciak, Ph.D. P.E. jsteciak@uidaho.edu

ME 549 Finite Element Analysis (3 cr) See CE 546.

ME 550 Computational Fluid Dynamics (3 cr) See ME 450.

Order textbooks online: www.vandalstore.com 22


PSYCHOLOGY

Stat 431 Statistical Analysis (3 cr) Concepts and methods of statistical research including multiple regression, contingency tables and chi-square, experimental design, analysis of variance, multiple comparisons, and analysis of covariance. Prereq: Stat 251, Stat 301 or Stat 416

Psyc 513 Advanced Research Methods (3 cr) Types of research designs and data analyses; use of mainframe computer packages for data analysis. Prereq: Permission

Note: When this course was produced the title was Stat 401 and had prerequisites of Stat 251 and Stat 301.

CRN: 44396 Produced: Spring 2014 Instructor: Todd Thorsteinson, Ph.D. tthorste@uidaho.edu

STATISTICS

CRN: 68091 Produced: Summer 2009 Instructor: Christopher Williams, Ph.D. chrisw@uidaho.edu

Stat 251 Statistical Methods (3 cr)

Stat 451 Probability Theory (3 cr)

May be used as general education credit in J-3-c. Credit awarded for only one of Stat 251, Stat 301, and Stat 416. Intro to statistical methods including design of statistical studies, basic sampling methods, descriptive statistics, probability and sampling distributions; inference in surveys and experiments, regression, and analysis of variance. Prereq: Math 108, Math 137, Math 143, Math 160, Math 170, or 2 yrs of high school algebra and Permission

See Math 451.

Department permission required, contact stat@uidaho.edu.

The multivariate normal, Hotelling's T2, multivariate general linear model, discriminant analysis, covariance matrix tests, canonical correlation, and principle component analysis. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: Stat 431

Stat 452 Mathematical Statistics (3 cr) See Math 452.

Stat 456 Quality Management (3 cr) See Bus 456.

Stat 519 Multivariate Analysis (3 cr)

CRN: 46400 Produced: Summer 2012 Instructor: Stephen Lee, Ph.D. stevel@uidaho.edu

Note: When this course was produced, its prereq, Stat 431, was called Stat 401.

Stat 301 Probability and Statistics (3 cr) Credit awarded for only one of Stat 251, Stat 301, and Stat 416. Intended for engineers, mathematicians, and physical scientists. Intro to sample spaces, random variables, statistical distributions, hypothesis testing, basic experimental design, regression, and correlation. Prereq: Math 175

CRN: 63067 Produced: Spring 2009 Instructor: Stephen Lee, Ph.D. stevel@uidaho.edu

CRN: 48689 Produced: Summer 2005 Instructor: Stephen Lee, Ph.D. stevel@uidaho.edu

Stat 550 Regression (3 cr) Theory and application of regression models including linear, nonlinear, and generalized linear models. Topics include model specification, point and interval estimators, exact and asymptotic sampling distributions, tests of general linear hypotheses, prediction, influence, multicollinearity, assessment of model fit, and model selection. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: Math 330 and Stat 451; Coreq: Stat 452

Stat 422 Sample Survey Methods (3 cr) Simple random, systematic, stratified random, one and two stage cluster sampling; introduction to variable probability sampling and estimation of population size. Two lec and one 1-hr lab a wk. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: Stat 251 or Stat 301

CRN: 66305 Produced: Spring 2011 Instructor: Christopher Williams, Ph.D. chrisw@uidaho.edu

Note: When this course was produced, Stat 271 was one of its prereqs, but it is no longer required before taking Stat 422.

Stat 565 Computer Intensive Statistics (3 cr)

CRN: 63063 Produced: Spring 2009 Instructor: Christopher Williams, Ph.D. chrisw@uidaho.edu

Numerical stability, matrix decompositions for linear models, methods for generating pseudo-random variates, interactive estimation procedures (Fisher scoring and EM algorithm), bootstrapping, scatterplot smoothers, Monte Carlo techniques including Monte Carlo integration and Markov chain Monte Carlo. Cooperative: open to WSU degree-seeking students. Prereq: Stat 451, Stat 452, Math 330, and computer programming experience or Permission

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CRN: 68092 Produced: Fall 2012 Instructor: Stephen Lee, Ph.D. stevel@uidaho.edu


McClure Hall

Engineering Outreach eo.uidaho.edu Registration University of Idaho College of Engineering Engineering Physics Building, Room 312 875 Perimeter Drive MS 1014 Moscow, ID 83844-1014

Phone: (800) 824-2889, press 2 Local: (208) 885-4642 Fax: (208) 885-9249 eoreg@uidaho.edu

General Information

Course Materials and Exams

Phone: (800) 824-2889, press 0 Local: (208) 885-6373 Fax: (208) 885-9249 outreach@uidaho.edu

Phone: (800) 824-2889, press 4 Local: (208) 885-4644 Fax: (208) 885-6165 eoship@uidaho.edu eo.uidaho.edu/portal

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Spring 2014 Engineering Outreach Courses Registration deadline January 15, 2014. View updates at eo.uidaho.edu

ACCOUNTING

GEOLOGICAL ENGINEERING

Acct 582

Enterprise Accounting

GeoE 407 GeoE 535

Quality Management

MATHEMATICS

BUSINESS Bus 456

CIVIL ENGINEERING CE 404-CL CE 411 CE 428 CE 431 CE 4/545 CE 542 CE 546 CE 563 CE 575

ST: Engineering Law & Contracts Engineering Fundamentals Open Channel Hydraulics Design of Water and Wastewater Systems I Matrix Structural Analysis Advanced Design of Steel Structures Finite Element Analysis Seepage and Slope Stability Advanced Pavement Design and Analysis

COMPUTER SCIENCE CS 4/538 CS 4/541 CS 4/548 CS 4/572 CS 578

Network Security Advanced Operating Systems Survivable Systems and Networks Evolutionary Computation Neural Network Design

ELECTRICAL & COMPUTER ENGINEERING ECE 210 ECE 211 ECE 212 ECE 213 ECE 310 ECE 311 ECE 319 ECE 349 ECE 359 ECE 410 ECE 419/516 ECE 420 ECE 422 ECE 427 ECE 434 ECE 440 ECE 4/562 ECE 4/565 ECE 476 ECE 524 ECE 531 ECE 570

Electrical Circuits I Electrical Circuits I Lab Electrical Circuits II Electrical Circuits II Lab Fundamentals of Electronics Fundamentals of Electronics Lab Background Study in Electronics Background Study in Digital Logic Background Study in Signals and Systems Advanced Electronics Image Sensors and Systems Energy Systems II Power Systems Analysis Power Electronics Antenna Principles and Design Digital Systems Engineering Semiconductor Theory Introduction to Microelectronics Fabrication Digital Filtering Transients in Power Systems Advanced Electromagnetic Theory II Random Signals

ENGINEERING MANAGEMENT EM 486 EM 504-EG

Software- Assisted Project Management ST: Effective Global Product Development

ENGINEERING — GENERAL Engr 210

Engineering Statics

Math 123 Math 130 Math 160 Math 170 Math 175 Math 215 Math 275 Math 310 Math 330 Math 388 Math 390 Math 420 Math 426 Math 430 Math 451 Math 452 Math 461 Math 462 Math 471 Math 472 Math 513 Math 516

Rock Mechanics Seepage and Slope Stability

Mathematics Applied To The Modern World Finite Mathematics Survey of Calculus Analytic Geometry and Calculus I Analytic Geometry and Calculus II Introduction to Higher Mathematics Analytic Geometry and Calculus III Ordinary Differential Equations Linear Algebra History of Mathematics Axiomatic Geometry Complex Variables Discrete Optimization Advanced Linear Algebra Probability Theory Mathematical Statistics Abstract Algebra I Abstract Algebra II Introduction to Analysis I Introduction to Analysis II Problem Solving Through History Groups and Symmetry

MECHANICAL ENGINEERING ME 4/504-HF ME 412 ME 4/514 ME 4/550 ME 472 ME 540 ME 547 ME 549

ST: Human Factors in Engineering Design Gas Dynamics HVAC Systems Computational Fluid Dynamics Mechanical Vibrations Continuum Mechanics Thermal Radiation Processes Finite Element Analysis

PSYCHOLOGY Psyc 513

Advanced Research Methods

STATISTICS Stat 251 Stat 301 Stat 422 Stat 431 Stat 451 Stat 452 Stat 456 Stat 519 Stat 550 Stat 565

Statistical Methods Probability and Statistics Sample Survey Methods Statistical Analysis Probability Theory Mathematical Statistics Quality Management Multivariate Analysis Regression Computer Intensive Statistics


Periodicals POSTAGE PAID at Moscow ID 83843

Engineering Outreach College of Engineering 875 Perimeter Dr MS 1014 Moscow, ID 83844-1014

Engineering Outreach Gives You Options Master’s Degree Programs

Academic Certificates

n

Civil Engineering

n

Analog Integrated Circuit Design

n

Computer Engineering

n

Applied Geotechnics

n

Computer Science

n

n

Electrical Engineering

Communication and Control for Power Transmission and Distribution

n

Engineering Management

n

Electric Machines and Drives

n

Geological Engineering

n

Power System Protection and Relaying

n

Mechanical Engineering

n

Process & Performance Excellence

n

Statistical Science

n

Secure and Dependable Computing Systems

n

Teaching Mathematics

n

Statistics

n

Technology Management

Structural Engineering

n

Focus Areas n

Business

n

Nuclear Engineering

n

Psychology — emphasis in Human Factors

n

Water Resources

Nondegree Coursework n

Background Study

n

Professional Education

n

Transfer Credit

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