An advanced treatment involving integrated approaches to biological problems at the molecular level, encompassing biochemistry, cell biology and molecular genetics. This course, offered in Havana, Cuba, through the Study Abroad Office, examines Cuban political, social and economic dynamics through historical and sociopolitical perspectives. endobj Chemistry credit and placement information can be found in the chart below. The North Carolina State Testing Results, 2020-21 Table 1. As a distinct approach to historical study, world history focuses on dynamic connections and relationships among regions of the world and the variety of global processes - related to trade, religion, production, consumption, migration, imperialism, disease, and technologies - that connected them. Credit for both HI454 and HI554 is not allowed. stream r/appstate This is going to blow the minds of both underclassmen and alumni who haven't kept up with campus events. Sea power, national defense and foreign policy.
3.17 Grades < North Carolina State University Catalog Archives | Major themes in modern American history with an emphasis on diversity in the United States; focuses on aspects of race/ethnicity, gender, class, sexual orientation, disability, religious and/or age identities as it considers the impacts of industrialization and economic modernization; impact of war on American domestic and foreign policy; continuity and change in American institutions and values; problem solving in a pluralistic society. Impacts of new technological systems. The online Course Catalog lists every course that may be offered to you during your time at NC State. Unique cultural forms discussed include mummies, pyramids, military techniques, political propaganda, and agricultural innovation. This course provides a descriptive survey of the concepts of physical chemistry with emphasis on their use in applications designed to characterize and manipulate biological molecules and systems. Examination of contemporary opinions and historical interpretations of major problems in American life since 1939, including World War II, its social and economic consequences; Korea and the Cold War, big business and labor; civil rights and feminist movements; countercultures, Vietnam and Watergate. Enrollment requires a "Course Agreement for Students Enrolled in Non-Standard Courses" be completed by the student and instructor prior to registration by the department. Credit for both HI400 and HI500 is not allowed. The history of African-Americans from the Reconstruction era through the Civil Rights movement of the 1950s and 1960s to the present. Credit will not be given for both HI481 and HI581. Credit will not be given for both HI486 and HI586. CH201 (or CH203) is strongly recommended, but not required. Credit will not be given for both HI459 and HI559. 2601 Wolf Village Way Challenging popular assumptions about who migrates, where they move to, and why, it explores mobility as a fundamental element of how empires, states and societies came to be. Credit will not be given both for HI452 and HI552. Directed readings course covering the literature of a broad historiographical field, from which the student should ultimately draw a more specialized topic for an Honors Thesis (HI495 and HI496). Explores how "collective memory" develops. Changes in forms of entertainment (music, books, popular art, theater, film, television, etc. Graduate standing in History only. The course explores our evolving relationship with plants and animals, including the earliest experiments in domestication and husbandry, short- and long-term developmental trajectories, local- and global-scale patterns, and coverage of diverse places and times. Credit will not be given for both HI434 and HI534. Spring Late Registration Billing and Payment Policy, Summer Late Registration Billing and Payment Policy, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Certified Electronic Credential (CeDiploma/CeCertificate), Student Personal Identification Number (PIN), Office of Undergraduate Courses and Curricula. Themes in early American history: colonial clash and mix of cultures; generation of an American consciousness; federalism and democracy in national politics; expansion and immigration; racial and sectional division. Topics include ancient American cultures, conquest and settlement by Spain and Portugal, colonial rule in theory and practice, religious life and structures, the colonial economy and labor, and independence movements.
PDF MA114 - Introduction to Finite Mathematics with Applications Recent sub-Saharan African political history (excluding South Africa). It emphasizes biochemical structures, properties, and functions, including enzyme kinetics and major metabolic processes.
Biochemistry (BCH) < North Carolina State University Introduction to molecular biology for teachers. endstream A PDF of the entire 2021-2022 Undergraduate catalog. Credit for both HI450 and HI550 is not allowed. Suite 240 Prerequisite: BCH451 and BCH455/555 or equivalent. The Undergraduate Catalog is archived each year and may be useful if you wish to view past course offerings. It is not intended for graduate students. The course traces the degeneration of the 1917 socialist revolution into a hardened dictatorship which, forced by conditions outside its control, waged a destructive but victorious war, saving Europe from Nazism. A history of the American borderlands with emphasis on the trans-Mississippi West. Permission of the department is required. The making of the Asian region through the rise and fall of five great empires: the Tang, the Mongol, the Mughal, the Qing, and the British empires. When a redistribution is entered into the system after the 90-day period (three pay cycles for monthly employees and six pay cycles for biweekly employees), the user will receive a system-generated notification that the redistribution is out of compliance and requires additional justification and approval. Advanced historiographical readings on major topics in history. Major themes include US economic, political, and military influence, covert and overt US interventions, and response by Latin American governments. This class treats the major concepts, scholarship, and research methods shaping the Public History field; it is also an opportunity to test the fields theories in projects that will create new resources for historical learning in our community. << /Names 101 0 R /OpenAction 26 0 R /PageMode /UseOutlines /Pages 44 0 R /Type /Catalog >> If youre looking for a list of the most recent semesters graduates from your home county, for publication in a newspaper or otherwise, please view the table links below. An advanced laboratory to give students practical experiences in purification and quantitative characterization of enzymes and nucleic acids. The history of the Hellenes from the Minoan civilization through Alexander's legacy, with readings in Herodotus and Thucydides. Examination of the historical context of developments such as machine-making, new scientific ideas, patronage of science and technology, the formation of distinct technical and scientific fields, nation-building projects, and global ventures. Topics include hunter-gatherer societies, the environmental forces which fostered sedentary societies, the rise and fall of early civilizations, and the relationship of water, wind, coal, steam, petroleum and other energy forms to human development and environmental processes. Topics include nationalism, industrialism and the struggle of workers, imperialism, religious minorities and racial theories, sexual revolution, democratization, international relations and war, postwar occupation and reconstruction, and popular culture in music and film. Examines historical works drawn primarily from oral sources. Historical analysis of feminist thought and action during the Enlightenment of the 1700s. Navigate to your Student Homepage. Students cannot receive credit for both HI488 and HI588. Examining their histories outside of the U.S. gives us a window into global culture, values, and modes of everyday life, and into notions about "charity" and "public good" in a given society. Fall 2022 Graduates from the U.S. (Out-of-State), Spring Late Registration Billing and Payment Policy, Summer Late Registration Billing and Payment Policy, College of Humanities and Social Sciences, Certified Electronic Credential (CeDiploma/CeCertificate), Student Personal Identification Number (PIN). It treats the 1991 Soviet collapse and the challenges and failures of the post-Stalin and post-Soviet periods. Topic and procedures to be determined by the student and the supervising faculty member. North Carolina State University posts the grade distributions for its courses online.5 Stu- dents in Statistics 101 in a recent semester received 26% A's, 42% B's, 20% C's, 10% D's, and 2% F's. Choose a Statistics 101 student at random. It can serve as a prerequisite for BCH452 with permission of the department. Survey of Russian history since the advent of modern reform following the 1861 Serf Emancipation. Analysis of the historical context of developments, such as early contributions to science, natural history, and paleontology; the growth of professionalization of science; ideas about scientific management and social applications such as eugenics; and the creation of the atomic bomb and the rise of "Big Science" after WWII. Applicants should have completed high school courses in biology and chemistry. Please refer to the copy of your schedule in your MyPack Portal for the most accurate information: MyPack Portal > Student Homepage > Planning & Enrollment tile > Class Schedule, Harris Hall 2831 Thurman DriveRaleigh, North Carolina 27695. Introduction to the methods, themes, and narratives of world history. Offered as needed to present materials not normally available in regular BCH departmental courses or for new BCH courses on a trial basis. Major course topics include pre-Columbian indigeneity, colonization & imperialism, plantation slavery, abolition & emancipation, the Haitian and Cuban Revolutions, gender & migration, and decolonization & independence. Examination of changes in gender relations; ideas about the sexes, femininity, and masculinity; the roles of women and men in political, religious, economic, scientific, and family life in Europe between the late Middle Ages and the French Revolution. Study of hormonal, enzymatic and molecular-genetic regulation of carbohydrate and lipid metabolism; emphasis on mammalian species. stream Topics are drawn from thermodynamics (bonding, protein folding energies, linkage, specostropic and differential scanning calorimetric binding measurements), kinetics (enzymatic catalysis, perturbation techniques), statistical mechanics (distributions, ensembles, molecular mechanical & dynamics calculations), electrochemistry, hydrodynamics (diffusion, friction, electrophoresis, viscosity, sedimentation, organism size and shape), quantum mechanics (wave functions operators, uncertainty principle, dipoles, orbitals and resonance energy coupling), and spectroscopy (absorbance and light scattering, fluorescence, nuclear and electronic paramagnetic resonance, MR imaging and x-ray diffraction). Focus on political, economic and cultural change under the Mughal Empire and the British Raj; the problems of independent India, Pakistan and Bangladesh. Raleigh, NC 27607. Among the core topics examined are the social, economic and environmental impacts of sugar, tobacco and coffee cultivation, the relationships between animal husbandry and deforestation, and the history of foreign tourism and its environmental implications. This course is part of the Summer College in Biotechnology and Life Sciences (SCIBLS) as well as other pre-college, transitional and early-college programs and is offered as 4 week intensive course. Emphasis on conflicts concerning regional identity, race, class, gender, and sexuality in the history and memory of the Civil War era. Course requires 140 contact hours with the sponsoring organization. Contact and arrangements with prospective employers must be initiated by student and approved by a faculty adviser, the prospective employer, the departmental teaching coordinator and academic dean prior to the experience.