Current Courses

  • Introduction to Animal Science course photo of cows

    Introduction to Animal Science

    ANSC 1101, 4 credits, 36 class limit

    Cover fundamental concepts of animal breeding, physiology, nutrition, and management as they apply to the production of beef, dairy, horses, poultry, sheep, swine, and other livestock.

  • Human Physiology, Technology, and Medical Devices course photo

    Human Physiology, Technology, and Medical Devices

    BIOL 1015, 4 credits, class limit: capacity of lab

    Build your knowledge in this course organized around homeostasis, information flow, and other concepts in physiology. Active learning format. Participate in labs focused on data collection and simple organ dissections.

  • Physics by Inquiry course photo

    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.

  • Introduction to Computing Systems course photo

    Introduction to Computing Systems

    EE 1301, 4 credits, 25 class limit

    Learn about C/C++ programming and the Internet of Things (IoT) through an interactive text, labs, and a student-drive open-ended project. Topics include binary arithmetic, bit manipulation, data types/structures, arrays, pointer addressing, control flow, iteration, recursion, file I/O, basics of object-oriented programming.

  • Climate Crisis: Implementing Solutions course photo

    Climate Crisis: Implementing Solutions

    EE 1701/EE 1703, 4 credits, 30 class limit

    Learn about energy from renewables such as solar and wind to combat potentially catastrophic climate change. Also cover electrifying our transportation; ways to increase energy efficiency and energy conservation; the need for energy storage to increase the penetration of renewables; and the role of technology. Discuss societal benefits and ethics.

  • Introductory College Physics course photo

    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.