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From French and creative problem solving, to physics, psychology, and history there's a wealth of U of M courses to feed your curiosity and interests. Browse below or filter by topic area.
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Introductory College Physics
PHYS 1101W, 4 credits, 25 class limit
Study the fundamental principles of physics in the context of the everyday world. Use of kinematics/dynamics principles and quantitative/qualitative problem solving techniques to understand natural phenomena.
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Physics by Inquiry
CI 1563, 4 credits, 24 class limit
In this laboratory-based introductory class, you learn by experimenting and model building and testing. Topics include electric circuits, light and color, and observational astronomy.
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Principles of Macroeconomics
APEC 1102, 3 credits, 27 class limit
Study unemployment/inflation, measures of national income, macro models, fiscal policy/problems. Topics include: taxes and the national debt; money/banking; monetary policy/problems; poverty and income distribution; international trade and exchange rates; economic growth/development.
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Principles of Microeconomics
APEC 1101, 4 credits, 27 class limit
Study economic behavior of consumers/firms in domestic/international markets. Topics: Demand, supply, competition; efficiency; invisible hand; monopoly; imperfect competition; externalities; property rights; economics of public policy in environment/health/safety; public goods; tax policy.
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University Writing
WRIT 1301, 4 credits, 24 class limit
Learn about rhetorical principles that provide a framework for successful written communication in college and beyond. Study and write in a variety of genres and disciplines and in multimodal forms.
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Writing Studio
WRIT 1201, 4 credits, 22 class limit
Enhance your writing in college and beyond by building a foundation in the study and practice of the writing process and rhetorical frameworks for a variety of genres.