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    Indiana University-Purdue University Fort Wayne
   
 
  May 13, 2015
 
 
    
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  Part 1: IPFW Profile
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  Part 6: Course Descriptions
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2012-2013 Undergraduate Bulletin [Archived Catalog]

Part 6: Course Descriptions

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Part 6 contains course descriptions in alphabetical order.

Standard information for each course includes the number, title, and credits (sometimes called credit hours or semester hours). For some courses, you will find information on the hours of class, laboratory, or studio for which the course is scheduled in each week of a regular semester; these weekly hours are expanded during summer sessions. Fees for courses are assessed on the basis of credits and other factors.

The course-numbering system generally suggests levels of difficulty and appropriateness. Courses at the 100 and 200 levels comprise introductory offerings and those are most commonly taken by freshmen and sophomores. Courses at the 300 and 400 levels are primarily for juniors and seniors. In some Purdue programs, undergraduates take courses at the 500 level, but generally courses numbered 500 and above are for graduate students.

Preparation for courses is indicated as follows:

P: indicates a prerequisite that must precede your enrollment in the course described. You may find one or more specific course numbers, the number of credits you should already have in a subject, a placement-test level, or other conditions.

C: indicates a corequisite that must be taken no later than the same semester in which you take the course described.

R: indicates a recommendation concerning conditions to be met for enrollment in the course.

When no subject code is shown for prerequisites, corequisites, and recommended courses, they are in the same subject area as the course being described. If you lack a prerequisite or corequisite, or if you wish to take a course numbered at a higher level than your present status, you should seek the department’s or instructor’s consent to enroll in the course.

V.T. means Variable Title and is shown for courses for which the title may be changed to specify the topic or other special focus of each offering.

Session indicators (fall, spring, summer) suggest the times at which courses are generally offered. Scheduling patterns may, however, vary.

IPFW reserves the right to add, withdraw, or change courses without notice.

 

Course Filter  
Filter this list of courses using course prefix, course code, keywords or any combination.
Prefix: Code or Number: Type Keyword or Phrase:  
 
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   •  ACS 52100 - Topics in Computer Graphics
   •  ACS 54400 - Performance Modeling and Evaluation of Computer Systems
   •  ACS 54500 - Cryptography and Network Security
   •  ACS 56000 - Software Engineering
   •  ACS 56200 - Systems Analysis and Design
   •  ACS 56400 - Human-Computer Interaction
   •  ACS 56600 - The Strategic Role of Information Systems
   •  ACS 56700 - Software Project Management
   •  ACS 56800 - Object-Oriented Systems Development
   •  ACS 57400 - Advanced Computer Networks
   •  ACS 57500 - Database Systems
   •  ACS 57600 - Distributed Database Systems
   •  ACS 57700 - Knowledge Discovery and Data Mining
   •  ACS 58200 - Expert Systems
   •  AFRO A210 - The Black Woman in America
   •  AGR 10100 - Introduction to Agriculture and Purdue
   •  AMST A200 - Comparative American Identities
   •  AMST A301 - The Question of American Identity
   •  AMST A440 - Senior Seminar in American Studies
   •  AMST A441 - America in Global Perspective
   •  ANSC 10100 - Animal Agriculture
   •  ANSC 22100 - Principles of Animal Nutrition
   •  ANTH A200 - Topics In Anthropology Of Culture And Society
   •  ANTH A460 - Topics in Anthropology
   •  ANTH A495 - Individual Readings in Anthropology
   •  ANTH A496 - Field Study in Anthropology
   •  ANTH B200 - Bioanthropology
   •  ANTH B400 - Undergraduate Seminar
   •  ANTH B426 - Human Osteology
   •  ANTH E102 - Anthropology of America
   •  ANTH E105 - Culture and Society
   •  ANTH E200 - Social and Cultural Anthropology
   •  ANTH E301 - Plain People of Indiana
   •  ANTH E310 - Introduction to the Cultures of Africa
   •  ANTH E313 - Anthropology of the Muslim World
   •  ANTH E320 - Indians of North America
   •  ANTH E321 - Peoples of Mexico
   •  ANTH E330 - Indians of South America
   •  ANTH E335 - Ancient Civilizations of Mesoamerica
   •  ANTH E341 - Culture of China
   •  ANTH E350 - European Ethnography
   • 
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