May 27, 2024  
2017-2018 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2017-2018 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


 

Art

  
  • ART 389 - Topics in Animation and Interactive Media

    (3.00)
    This course offers an investigation of current directions in animation and interactive media. Topics to be announced. This course is repeatable up to 9 credits or 3 attempts.

    Course ID: 52385
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory, Lecture
    Topics: Top:Advanced Imaging, Synethesia, Art And The Internet, Words In Light Dig Dom, Word & Image, Virtual Space&Narrative, Real Time 3D Animation, Expr.Motion/Char.Animatn, Sound Design, Solid Image Modeling, Image, Time & Projection, Advanced Digital Video, Interactive Sound Art, Imaging/Writing Environ, Real Time 3D, Wireframe Modeling, Topics In Computer Art, Digitial Cinema, Expressions In Motion, Art On Internet, Primitive Cave Art, Comp Art:Landscape Cubed, Digital Composition, Top In Comp Art:3D Anima, Advanced Animation, Art On The Internet, 3d Animation, Networked Video, Expr. In Time & Motion, Algorithmic Art, Digital Cinema II, Multimedia On Internet, Mixing Phys And Dig Proc, Word And Image, Adv Art On The Internet, Landscrape Cubed, Visual Symphony, Anatomy Of A Video Game, Imaging In C, Interactive Cd-Rom, Interactive Multi-Media, Hist Of Graphic Design, Text,Time & Multi-Media, Imaging And Writing Env, Games And Interaction, Digital Cinema, Digital Cinema I, Interactive Multimedia, The Body & Technology, Expression In Motion, Art & Sci In Computer An, Experimental Interfaces, Interactive Art, Computer Art, Youth,Media,Am Politics, Art/Sci Comp Animation, Digital Video, Animation, Imaging Writing Environ, On-line Content
    Requirement Group: You must have completed the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) in order to take this class.
  
  • ART 390 - IRC Fellows Topics in Art and Technology

    (3.00)
    This seminar style course focuses on aspects of emerging technologies, media criticism and related themes. Topics are offered on a rotating basis, once every four semesters and are developed exclusively for students selected as Fellows in the Visual Arts IRC Fellows Program. This course is repeatable up to 12 credits or 4 attempts.

    Course ID: 52386
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Preserving Place, Renewable Energy
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 212  and ART 213  with a grade of “C” or better and complete the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 392 - Topics in Art or Media I

    (1.00 - 3.00)
    Topics for this course concern major current and stylistic directions in art and media. Variable credit course repeatable up to 12 credits.

    Course ID: 52387
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Top: Typography, Top: Art Since 1945, History Of Animation, Image,Light & Dimension, Top: Art Analysis, Audio In Media, Amer Dreams/Nightmares, Hollywood Films, Listening Space, Top: Visual Thinking, Top: Watercolor, Phil Aspects:Phys Space, Topics: Typography, Topic: Screenwriting, Top: 1945 To Present, Top:Phot Proc Printmkg, Postmod Cncpts/Cmptr Art, Top:Analysis Feat Film, Topics In Art, Top:Computers In Design, Images & Curatorship, Image Sequencing, Life And Films Of Welles, Attack Of The B-Movies, Amer Film/The Amer Dream, Book Arts, Mixed Media Book Arts, Silkscreen Printing I, Technology & Perception, American Life In Film, Topics In Art Or Media, Print Media Digital, Top: Computers In Design, Topics In Art Or Media I, Top:Offset Lithography, Spec Topics: Art History, Top:Studio Lgtng Technqs, Travel/Study To Florence, Florentine Illusions, Sound And Image, Time-Based Design, Time Based Media, Performance & Install, Intro To Env Graphic Des, Topics: Figure Drawing, Top: Computer In Design, Visual Theory, Conjunction/Fusion, Art In Space, Tao Of Intermedia, Web Design, Screenwriting For Film, Creative Thinking Humans, Algorithmic Art, Post-Modernism, Top:Watercolor Painting, Top:Analys/Feature Film, Women & Contemporary Art, Artist Books & Net Cult, Innovation And Design, Topics: The Portrait, Motion Graphics In Film, Conceptual Design, Tpcs: Figure Drawing, Adv Animation, Topic: Film Programming, Experimental Film Adapt, Art, Culture, Technology, Painting On Film & Photo, Sound: Fusion/Conjuction, Cult Films, Amer Mythmakers-Films, Topics: Watercolor, Alogrithmic Art, Top:History Of Animation, Top:Screenwriting For Tv, Top:Studio Lighting Tech, Top:Scifi In Art/Lit/Flm, Dev Ideas For Short Film, Amer Life In Films, Mixed-Media Book Arts, Fusion Sound Conjuncture, Design And Marketing, Design And Innovation, Basic Watercolor, Watercolor/Landscape Pnt, Top:Computers In Illust., Spec Topic:Sound & Image, Non-Trad Install&Struct, Banned Films, Conj/Fusion Sound/Image, The Nature Of Design, Web Interface Design, Designing Web Interfaces, 3d Hiv Animation Collab, Desktop Publishing & the Web, Type in Motion:Adobe After Effect for Graph Design, Still Life in Platinum, Art and Community, Translocal Artmaking: Holding a Faraway Camera, PROGRAMMING FOR ARTISTS
    Requirement Group: You must have completed the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) in order to take this class.
  
  • ART 395 - Television Production Techniques I

    (3.00)
    Development of skills pertaining to the operation of cameras, recorders, control consoles, lighting instruments and general operating procedures. Each student gains experience as a team member of on-campus TV productions.

    Course ID: 52388
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Same as Offered: MCS 395 
  
  • ART 396 - Television Production Techniques II

    (3.00)
    See ART 395 .

    Course ID: 52389
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
  
  • ART 423 - Art Since 1945

    (3.00)
    In the post-World War II period, the center of avant-garde artistic activity shifted from Europe to the United States. The period witnessed the peak of Modernism - in movements such as abstract expressionism and color field painting - and Modernism’s almost simultaneous challenge in a host of movements in the USA, Europe and, increasingly, around the world. This new phase in art, that some historians termed Postmodernism, opened up the boundaries of the art world as never before to new practitioners, new media and new centers of contemporary art practice, while the term itself became the subject of great debate. This rich terrain will be traversed in a way that is particular to the instructor’s research specialization.

    Course ID: 52390
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 323  with a grade of “C” or better and complete the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 424 - Topics in Contemporary Art

    (3.00)
    The topics of this course will focus broadly on key developments in contemporary art. The course content will reflect the particular research expertise of the instructor teaching the course. Some seminars may examine current critical discourses. that shape and define a cultural practice or artistic medium (e.g. theories of race, gender and sexuality, postcoloniality or poststructuralism); others may survey the contemporary art of a specific geographical region (e.g. the Middle East, Asia, Latin America, Africa and their respective diasporas). The course will be conducted as a small seminar with weekly discussions and written assignments culminating in student presentations and research papers. Note: Repeatable for a maximum of 6 credits or 2 attempts.

    Course ID: 52391
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Contemp Art Non-Western World
    Attributes: Writing Intensive
    Prerequisite: You must have completed ART 318  or ART 319  or ART 321  or ART 323  or ART 328  or ART 329  or ART 349   all with a grade of C or better.
  
  • ART 425 - Writing By and For Artists, Curators & Critics Critics

    (3.00)
    How do artists engage in the practice of writing about their own and others’ artwork? What are the conventions curators follow in formulating theses statements for art exhibitions and in writing labels for the art objects on display in a show or a museum? What is entailed in producing an effective piece of art criticism? Students in this seminar grapple with these questions on a practical level by reading published works by artists, curators and critics, and by carrying out a range of weekly writing exercises. On a more philosophical level, the goal of the course is to become so comfortable with writing about art that to do so becomes more of a matter of desire than duress. The course will be conducted as a small seminar with weekly discussions and written assignments. Note: individual goals may be established with the instructor.

    Course ID: 52392
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Course Equivalents: ART 425H
    Attributes: Writing Intensive
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 321  or ART 323  or ART 328  or ART 329  with a C grade or better.
  
  • ART 425H - Honors Writing By & About Artists

    (3.00)
    How do those who practice artmaking engage in the practice of writing about their own and others artwork? What is entailed in shifting one’s point of view to carry out these different practices? Students in this seminar grapple with these questions on a practical level by reading published works by artists and by carrying out a range of weekly writing exercises. On a more philosophical level, the goal of the course is to become so comfortable with writing about art that to do so becomes more of a matter of desire than duress. This is an honors course.

    Course ID: 100114
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Course Equivalents:ART 425
    Attributes: Writing Intensive
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 323  and be admitted into Honors College
  
  • ART 427 - Museum Practice

    (3.00)
    This project-based course is designed to help students gain insight and expertise in key components of museum and gallery work (e.g. curating, exhibition design, collection management, and public programming). Students learn and train under the guidance of an instructor experienced and knowledgeable about the art museum world. By the end of the semester students will have gained an invaluable preparatory training for career opportunities with art museums, art galleries and like institutions involved with the public display of historical and cultural material.

    Course ID: 100296
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 321  or ART 323  or ART 328  or ART 329  with a C grade or better.
  
  • ART 428 - History & Theory of the Art Museum

    (3.00)
    The art museum is a key arbiter of culture in modern societies. This course will integrate historical and theoretical knowledge about the art museum with the practice of proposing and designing an innovative model exhibition. The course will have two components: a seminar component and a laboratory component. Seminar discussions will focus on the changing political and cultural histories, philosophies and practices that have dynamically molded the art museum since its inception. The laboratory component will experiment with theories of museum resource management, in other words, the mechanisms that “frame” the object or “stage” the show. This part of the instruction will be conducted through practical assignments in the Center for Art Design and Visual Culture (CADVC) as well as observation during field trips to museums in Baltimore and Washington, D.C. The course will be conducted as a small seminar with weekly discussions and written assignments culminating in student presentations and research papers. This course is repeatable. Co-requisite: Students will be required to sign up for one credit of ART 498  : CADVC Internship  to fulfill the laboratory component of the class.

    Course ID: 52395
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 321  or ART 323  or ART 328  or ART 329  with a C grade or better.
  
  • ART 429 - Seminar in Art History & Visual Culture

    (3.00)
    The topics of this course will be wide-ranging, reflecting the particular instructor’s research specialization. Some seminars will focus on a specific historical art period or movement; others will trace a prominent theme through several periods.Still others will examine key developments within current theoretical and critical discourses. The course will be conducted as a small seminar with weekly discussions and written assignments, culminating in student presentations and a research paper. This course is repeatable up to 6 credits or 2 attempts.

    Course ID: 52396
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: The Art & Cult Childhood, Museum Curatorship, Writing By/About Artists, Race, Tribe & Nation, Seminar:Art Hist & Theor, Hist Theory Underground, Hist Of Performance Art, Popular Art,Media & Pub, 20Th Cent Afric Amer Art, Insprtn: Visual Artists, Thinking About Art, Issues Black,Queer & Fem, Rep Race & Ethnicity, African American Art, Contemp Art & Theory, Black Visual Culture, Psyc Analytic Pers Art, Art & Culture Childhood, Blk,Queer & Feminist Flm, Race,Sexuality & Gender, Politics Of Art, Cultures of Display, CELEBRITY, ART & MEDIA. THE V, Art as Social Practice, Performance: History, Theory and Practice, The Politics of Space and Place in Public Art, History of Digital Art, Art as Illustration, Considerations Lang & Race, Re-writing Race, Temp of Art: Hist of Art & Arch, Vis Cult City & Cin in S Asia, 21st Century Art & Theory, Place and Space in Public Art, Women in Medieval Art, Temples of Art, Managing Museums/Nonprofits, Documentary Photography, Alternative Aesthetics, Intro Art Museum/Gallery, Cont. Asian Art & Culture
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 321  or ART 323  or ART 328  or ART 329  with a C grade or better.
  
  • ART 430 - Typography III

    (3.00)
    This course is an expoloration of advanced problems in visual communication that stresses the integration of typography with other two and three-dimensional imagery. Further emphasis is placed on the development of a rational design methodology through a consideration of form, utility and production limitations. Research, critical analysis and discussion are required. Recommended Preparation: ART 334 , ART 336 , ART 337 .

    Course ID: 52397
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 334 , ART 336 , and ART 337 , with a grade of “C” or better and complete the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 431 - Graphic Design III: Human Environmental Design

    (3.00)
    An exploration of advanced communication problems that require large-scale systems in built environments including way-finding systems and exhibit design. Issues of sustainability are discussed and explored. Recommended Preparation: ART 334 , ART 336 , ART 337 

    Course ID: 52398
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 334 , ART 336 , and ART 337 , with a grade of “C” or better and complete the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 432 - Graphic Design Practicum

    (3.00)
    Individual and collective problem-solving projects with university, nonprofit and local business organizations. This studio centers on problem analysis and definition, client consultation, design development, dealing with specialists and production processes. Additionally, this studio explores the future in professional design practice through a comprehensive introduction to design offices and studios and support systems that make up the world of professional design practice. Recommended Preparation: Permission of instructor and design faculty.

    Course ID: 52399
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 334 , ART 336 , and ART 337 , with a grade of “C” or better and complete the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 434 - Advanced Interface Design

    (3.00)
    ART 434 is the concluding course in the graphic design sequence. It is an advanced exploration of interaction and information design focusing on user interfaces for interactive platforms, from mobile devices to larger dynamic informatics and interpretive media installations. Via hands-on, collaborative problem-solving, students will gain skills needed to work in contemporary digital environments. Topics covered include human-computer interaction (HCI) and user-experience design (UXD) principles. Students will design and build interactive prototypes, while continuing to build a strong foundation of graphic design fundamentals through practical application.

    Course ID: 100497
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 334 , ART 336 , and ART 337 , with a grade of “C” or better and complete the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 435 - Topics in Film/Video

    (3.00)
    In this course students create an individual film or video project developed from a detailed study of a central theme in experimental, narrative or documentary work. Screenings, readings and discussions will present students with models. Topics will vary each semester and include: film/video landscapes, performance and installation, autobiography, surface tensions, collaboration, representation, technology and perception. This course is repeatable up to 12 credits.

    Course ID: 52400
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Exprmntl Narrative Film, Perception, Doc. Cinema In 21St Cent, Discover Hi-Def, Collaborative Cinema, Experimental Film & Vid, Topics In Film/Video, Tech And Perception, Representation, Experimental Film/Video, Film/Video Landscape, Film In Art, Adaptation, Documentary, Real/Illus In Con Cinema, Art and Community, HD Video: Iconography and Cons, Words+Moving Images, 16mm Filmmaking, Art and Entertainment, Advanced Script Writing, Producing a Web Series
    Attributes: Course Fee = $40.00
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 345  or ART 346  with a grade of “C” or better and complete the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 441 - Advanced Video Art

    (3.00)
    This course is repeatable up to 12 credits.
     

    Course ID: 52402
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
  
  • ART 447 - Motion Graphics and Compositing

    (3.00)
    This course explores the creation of cinematic effects and motion graphics utilizing advanced techniques in multilayered, time-based compositions as it relates to both 2-D and 3-D applications. The conceptual process and content incorporating these techniques are studied through screenings of contemporary works and critiques of student class work.

    Course ID: 52406
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Course Fee = $40.00
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 213  and one of the following ART 305 , ART 315 , ART 331 , ART 341  or ART 365  with a grade of “C” or better and complete the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 460 - Installation Art

    (3.00)
    This advanced studio-seminar studies the ways in which artists have defined and utilized space. An interdisciplinary approach to installation allows students to integrate a variety of materials, methods and concerns into their studio projects. Modes of exhibition and display are examined both within gallery/museum spaces and alternative settings. A variety of approaches may be explored, including performance and documentation, memory, alternative narratives, textual strategies, materiality, real and recorded time, site specificity and spatial interventions. This course is repeatable up to 6 credits or 2 attempts.

    Course ID: 52412
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete two 300-level studio courses each with a minimum grade of C.
  
  • ART 461 - Advanced Photographic Compositing

    (3.00)
    This course concentrates on the seamlessly montaged photograph, from conception to completion, shifting the formation of the photograph from shutter to post-shutter. This course will examine related conceptual issues through readings and observations, as well as contemporary and historic composited photographs. Students will learn principles of light and shadow, composition, and compositing techniques. Past instruction in two-dimensional design, previsualization, and interpreting and discussing photographs will be reinforced and extended

    Course ID: 102441
    Consent: NO Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must completeART 361   with a B or better.
  
  • ART 462 - Entrepreneurial Practices in Photograph y

    (3.00)


    This course examines what it means to be an entrepreneur in photography. Case studies of and visits with successful alumni will be used to demonstrate the inventiveness and discipline necessary to move innovation to implementation. The ability to find and to create opportunity is a central to this course. Students work collaboratively to develop and refine this ability, while learning to build the underlying business structure necessary to succeed.

    Course ID: 102442
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
     

    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 361   with a grade of C or better.

  
  • ART 465 - Intermedia Studio

    (3.00)
    This advanced studio course integrates the multiple possibilities of mark-making and form. Emphasis is on the development of a student’s individual direction in the theoretical and conceptual framework of contemporary art. Specific topics will be announced each semester. Art 465 facilitates the independent thesis work of Senior Projects and may be taken concurrently. This course is repeatable up to 6 credits or 2 attempts. Recommended Preparation: Permission of instructor.

    Course ID: 52413
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: The Tao of Intermedia
    Requirement Group: You must have completed the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) in order to take this class.
  
  • ART 480 - History and Theory of Imaging and digital Arts

    (3.00)
    Course ID: 52418
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
  
  • ART 484 - Advanced 3D Animation

    (3.00)
    This course will continue a student’s exploration of 3-D computer animation. Advanced techniques for modeling and procedural rendering will be introduced, as well as animation techniques that utilize scripts, expressions, deformations and inverse kinematics. Students will utilize these skills in the context of strengthening their own artistic voice.

    Course ID: 52420
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must have completed ART 384  with a grade of C or better and the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 485 - Team-based Game Development

    (3.00)
    In this class students will learn to apply their talents towards developing computer games. They will learn the processes, techniques, and toolsets used in game development from industry professionals. Students will also learn how to function in an interdisciplinary team on challenging and complex projects. Recommended Preparation:ART 486  

    Course ID: 102567
    Consent: No Special consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group:You must have completed ART 341  with a grade of C or better and the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) before taking this class.
  
  • ART 486 - Real Time Animation

    (3.00)
    This studio course explores the creation of visual media for interactive applications. Student will gain a foundational understanding of the concepts and techniques involved with art production for real time graphics and animation.

    Course ID: 52421
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 341  before taking this class.
  
  • ART 487 - Pre-production for Animation Senior Projects

    (3.00)
    This course prepares Animation students for their capstone ART 489  Senior Projects course. Students will develop individual project ideas and prepare for production using traditional and/or non-traditional pre-production practices. Emphasis will be on class presentations, discussion, critiques, and screenings.

    Course ID: 52422
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: Students must complete 2 of the following ( ART 384 , ART 387 , ART 447 , ART 486  )before taking this course.
  
  • ART 488 - Advanced Topics in Animation

    (3.00)
    This course offers an investigation of current directions in Animation and Interactive Media. Topics to be announced. This course is repeatable up to 9 credits or 3 attempts.

    Course ID: 52423
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Adv Computer Art, Visual Symphony, Landscape Cubed, The 4D Landscape, Experimental Processes in Anim, Team-Based Game Development, Live-Action Role-Playing Games and Improvisation, VJing: Performance Animation, Writing, Producing and Promoting a Web Series
    Requirement Group: You must complete ART 341   before taking this class.
  
  • ART 489 - Senior Projects

    (3.00)
    An advanced course that focuses on the production of individual and collaborative projects, emphasizing class discussion and critique. This course constitutes the capstone experience and should be taken in the student’s final semester. This course is repeatable.

    Course ID: 52424
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Time-Based, Photography, Print Media, Senior Projects, Print Media, Photography, Time-Based Media
    Attributes: Course Fee = $40.00
    Requirement Group: You must have completed the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) in order to take this class.
  
  • ART 490 - Senior Art History Thesis or Curatorial Project

    (3.00)
    The student undertakes advanced individual work in history, theory or criticism under the direction of a member of the art history faculty. The project is finished during the last semester of a student’s senior year. The student may choose to submit a research paper and to deliver an accompanying oral presentation at the Senior Thesis show held annually in the month of May at the Center for Art Design and Visual Culture. Alternatively the student may choose to conduct a curatorial project (in conjunction with the Senior Thesis show) with an accompanying exhibition thesis.

    Course ID: 52425
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
  
  • ART 491 - Special Studies

    (1.00 - 6.00)
    Advanced individual work in history, theory or criticism under the direction of a member of the visual arts faculty. Variable credit course repeatable up to 12 credits.

    Course ID: 52426
    Consent: Department Consent Required
    Components: Independent Study
    Requirement Group: You must have completed the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) in order to take this class.
  
  • ART 492 - Topics in Art or Media II

    (1.00 - 6.00)
    The topics of this course concern major current and stylistic directions in art and media. Variable credit course repeatable up to 12 credits.

    Course ID: 52427
    Consent: Department Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Aesthetics, Ethical Val, Fulcrum Editing Software, Aesthetics New Media Val, Aesthetics & Ethical, Topics:Art Or Media II, Theory/Prac Art Museum, Web Interface Design, Motion Design, Introduction to Arduino and Basic Electronics
    Requirement Group: You must have completed the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) in order to take this class.
  
  • ART 493 - Senior Thesis Project

    (6.00)
    This project is finished during the last semester of a student’s senior year and must culminate in a presentation of finished work.

    Course ID: 52428
    Consent: Department Consent Required
    Components: Independent Study
    Requirement Group: You must have completed the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) in order to take this class.
  
  • ART 494 - Internship

    (1.00 - 6.00)
    An internship inside or outside the university, related to the student’s focus, to be taken under the supervision of a visual arts faculty member or advisor. If a student works six hours per week, the student is eligible to enroll for three credits. Hence, 12 hours per week equals six credits. Note that 12 hours for six credits is the maximum allowed. Students will work in a professional environment and perform a range of tasks. The circumstances of the internship experience will be evaluated before both the student and supervising firm proceed. This ensures that both parties will benefit mutually from the association. Variable credit course repeatable up to 12 credits.

    Course ID: 52429
    Consent: Department Consent Required
    Components: Field Studies
    Requirement Group: You must have completed the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) in order to take this class.
  
  • ART 495 - Independent Studio Research

    (1.00 - 6.00)
    This course may be taken when a student indicates strong interest and a faculty member suggests that a student’s progress would be enhanced measurably by further work in specific areas or through a collaborative endeavor with a student in the department or another discipline in the University System of Maryland. Students must submit a written proposal stating the reason for and parameters of the project, as well as a comprehensive schedule for its completion within the semester format. All proposals must be submitted 10 weeks into the preceding semester and will be reviewed and approved on the basis of merit. Variable credit course repeatable up to 12 credits.

    Course ID: 52430
    Consent: Department Consent Required
    Components: Independent Study
    Requirement Group: You must have completed the Visual Arts Milestone (portfolio review process) in order to take this class.
  
  • ART 496 - Imaging Research Center Internship

    (3.00 - 6.00)
    This course is designed to acquaint students with the processes of professional animation, graphics and multimedia production in a professional work environment. Students work under the guidance of the IRC directors, usually in teams, on client-based or research projects. The focus of the internship is on the development of ideas, working collaboratively in teams and utilizing evolving technologies. IRC productions vary on a semester basis and demand different skills from interns. This internship opportunity is considered a senior-level course. This course is repeatable up to 6 credits or 2 attempts. Recommended Preparation: Permission of the instructor.

    Course ID: 52431
    Consent: Department Consent Required
    Components: Research
  
  • ART 497 - Seminars and Lectures

    (1.00 - 3.00)
    This course will be offered periodically. It will present topics in contemporary design practice and history, designer/professional presentations and related issues relevant to the theory and practice of design. Recommended Preparation: ART 331  - ART 335  and permission of the instructor.

    Course ID: 52432
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Graphic Design Seminar
  
  • ART 498 - Internship/Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture

    (1.00 - 6.00)
    ART 498 exposes the student to all aspects of exhibition organization, design, installation, and presentation on a professional level. Working closely with Center for Art, Design and Visual Culture staff, each student will assist with the coordination of exhibitions and accompanying publications and educational outreach initiatives. Areas of concentration include curatorial research, collection management, exhibition and publication design, K-12 educational outreach, public programming events, and grant writing. Variable credit course repeatable up to 12 credits. Recommended Preparation: Permission of instructor

    Course ID: 52433
    Consent: Department Consent Required
    Components: Research

Asian Studies

  
  • ASIA 100 - Introduction to Asian Studies

    (3.00)
    This course introduces students to the field of Asian Studies. Topics such as the concept of Asia, the historiography of the study of Asia (how Asia has been viewed in academic scholarship and popular culture), the debate about ‘Asian values’ and democracy, and contemporary Asian culture will be explored. Guest speakers will introduce the study of Asia from the perspective of their particular disciplines, such as economics, music, history, gender and women’s studies, visual arts, and literature.

    Course ID: 100491
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
  
  • ASIA 207 - Asian Diasporas

    (3.00)
    The story of human migration within and from Asia is at the heart of world history, touching upon every aspect of the human experience. As Asian migrants move within countries, within continents, and across oceans, they have faced many unique challenges and created profoundly complex networks of communication. This course will focus on the history of the global Chinese and Indian diasporas, comparing and contrasting them where appropriate with similar, though smaller-scale, networks of Koreans, Vietnamese, Pakistani, and other Asian groups abroad in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.

    Course ID: 102139
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Same as Offered: HIST 207  
  
  • ASIA 214 - Focused Cultural Study: South Asia

    (3.00)
    This course examines how people are making – and making sense of – their lives in a changing South Asia. Students will read ethnographic accounts from different parts of South Asia, each with their own particular histories, languages, and religious and ethnic identities. Students will use these readings and other material to examine how people in these communities draw on cultural beliefs and practices in the context of social change and globalization. These accounts will allow students to investigate key concepts in anthropology, as well as to learn about contemporary South Asia.

    Course ID: 102449
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Culture (GEP)
    Same as Offered: ANTH 214  
  
  • ASIA 300 - Topics in Asian Studies

    (3.00)
    Topics vary, depending on the instructor. This course is repeatable for credit.

    Course ID: 100607
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Previous topics: Art and Power in Japan; 1600 to the Present; Early Chinese Poetry & Prose; Arts of Japan; Sex and Terror in Modern Japanese Literature; Classics of Japanese Literature Past and Present; Japanese Performance Arts; Korean Politics and International Relations; A Tale of 2 Koreas: Korean Perceptions of the Past; Changing Power Configurations in the 21st Century, Everyday Lives in a Changing South Asia; The Tao of Intermedia; Victorian India; Comparative Asian Politics; Philosophy of Buddhism; Introduction to Indian Dance; and Drama Seminar: Japanese Performance: Dao of Intermedia, Chinese Politics, Chinese Philosophy, Contemporary Asian Art and Culture, Gamelan
  
  • ASIA 318 - Visual Culture of City and Cinema in South Asia

    (3.00)
    South Asian cities are loci of culture, commerce, religion, politics, crime and poverty. This course studies urbanism in contemporary South Asia from two perspectives: through the influential lens of Indian entertainment or ‘Bollywood’ cinema and through an examination of visual cultural forms, derived from the cinema, that pervade urban public spaces in South Asia. Examples include street murals, commercial signage, haute couture, wedding festivities and even the addition of new deities to the Hindu pantheon.

    Course ID: 102279
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Same as Offered: ART 318   
    Prerequisite: You must complete ART 216  or ASIA 100  
  
  • ASIA 329 - Early and Medieval Chinese Literature

    (3.00)
    This course is an introduction to important works of the classical literary tradition of China from the Zhou Dynasty (1045-221 BCE) through the Northern Song dynasty (976-1127 CE). In a chronological survey of the important writers of the early and medieval periods, the course tackles some fundamental questions of the Chinese literary tradition, including the meanings of the word that came to mean literary writing, wen, and the place of wen in traditional Chinese culture; which genres of writing became the most prominent in the early tradition, and why; and the ways in which the scope of Chinese literature broaden and changed. The course is taught in English, with no knowledge of Chinese language required. Recommended Course Preparation: MLL 301  or ASIA 100  or HIST 103  (any one of these three)

    Course ID: 101870
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Same as Offered: MLL 329 
  
  • ASIA 399 - Internship in Asian Studies

    (1.00 - 3.00)
    Field work related to Asian Studies. Course requires permission of the Program Director. To receive that permission the student must complete the Asian Studies Program Internship Contract form and have it signed by the Asian Studies Program Director. Note:  Open to junior/senior Asian Studies majors with special study projects and at least a B average in Asian Studies.  In extraordinary circumstances, exceptions may be made with permission of the instructor.

    Course ID: 100608
    Consent: Department Consent Required
    Components: Independent Study
  
  • ASIA 400 - Special Projects in Asian Studies

    (1.00 - 3.00)
    Variable credit course repeatable up to 3 credits. Note: Open to junior/senior Asian Studies majors with special study projects and at least a 3.0 average in Asian Studies. In extraordinary circumstances, exceptions may be made with permission of the instructor.

    Course ID: 101760
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture

Biology

  
  • BIOL 100 - Concepts of Biology

    (4.00)
    A broad overview of contemporary biological science. Major areas include the biochemistry of energy transformation, cell structure and function, Mendelian, molecular and population genetics, development and differentiation, plant and animal physiology, evolution, and ecology.

    Course ID: 52466
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Discussion, Lecture
    Course Equivalents: BIOL 141 , BIOL 141H  
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP), Science (non-lab) (GFR)
  
  • BIOL 100L - Concepts of Experimental Biology

    (2.00)
    The laboratory exercises are designed to provide the student experience with essential laboratory equipment and techniques.

    Course ID: 52468
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory, Lecture
    Attributes: Course Fee = $50.00, Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GEP), Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GFR)
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 100  with a grade of C or better or have BIOL 141  or BIOL 142  as a co-requisite or pre-requisite.
  
  • BIOL 101 - Concepts Of Biology

    (3.00)
    A broad overview of contemporary biological science. Major areas include the biochemistry of energy transformation, cell structure and function, Mendelian, molecular and population genetics, development and differentiation, plant and animal physiology, evolution, and ecology. This introductory Biology course is designed for non-majors and may not be used towards the BIOL, BIOC or BINF degrees. Prerequisite: High School Biology and Chemistry

    Course ID: 100369
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP), Science (non-lab) (GFR)
  
  • BIOL 106 - The Human Organism

    (3.00)
    This course is designed to introduce the non-science student to science and its methods and provide a basic understanding of some body functions and dysfunctions. Topics include genes and DNA, cells and cancer, immune system and HIV, metabolism and nutrition, muscles and exercise, nervous system and drugs, etc.

    Course ID: 52473
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP), Science (non-lab) (GFR)
  
  • BIOL 107 - Biology of Cancer

    (3.00)
    A major killer disease in Western countries will be examined from the biological perspective. This course will evaluate current epidemiologic, clinical and experimental research and assess the relative importance of environmental and genetic factors as they relate to the causes and prevention of this disease. Particular emphasis will be given to unraveling the links between dietary and nutritional factors and this “disease of affluence”. Recommended Preparation: Some background in the natural sciences, preferably one year in both high school biology and chemistry

    Course ID: 52474
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GFR)
  
  • BIOL 108 - Biology of Heart Disease

    (3.00)
    This course will develop, from a biological perspective, the nature of heart disease and the complex connections between environmental factors and this life-threatening illness. We specifically will consider the current, often conflicting, evidence that links dietary factors with the onset of the disease.

    Course ID: 52475
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GFR)
  
  • BIOL 109 - Life: Introduction to Modern Biology

    (3.00)
    This is a lab-driven course designed to fulfill the university graduation requirement of a science lab. Topics covered will include basic biological concepts such as the nature of DNA, heredity, human genetics and the process of mutation, as well as modern issues such as forensic analysis of DNA and blood, the biology behind cancer and genetic diseases, and others as determined by current events and interest. The course includes a 75-minute lecture and 120-minute lab.

    Course ID: 52476
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory, Lecture
    Attributes: Course Fee = $50.00, Science Plus Lab (GEP), Science Plus Lab (GFR)
  
  • BIOL 123 - Human Genetics

    (3.00)
    A course designed for non–biology majors. Topics will include the fundamental rules of heredity, gene structure and function, human genetic diseases and genetic engineering. Particular emphasis will be placed on the application of the new genetic technology to the human condition.

    Course ID: 52477
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP), Science (non-lab) (GFR)
  
  • BIOL 123L - Basics Genetic Laboratory

    (1.00)
    Course ID: 52478
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory, Lecture
    Attributes: Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GEP), Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GFR)
  
  • BIOL 141 - Foundations of Biology: Cells, Energy and Organisms

    (4.00)
    This course for majors provides a broad overview of contemporary biological concepts. Major topics include structure and synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins, molecular genetics, prokaryotic and eukaryotic cell structure and function, biochemistry of energy transformation, and animal and plant development and physiology. This course is designed to prepare students for upper level biology core and elective courses. It is one of two introductory courses (BIOL 141 and BIOL 142 ) designed exclusively for BIOL, BIOC and BINF majors.

    Course ID: 100315
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Discussion, Lecture
    Course Equivalents: BIOL 100 , BIOL 141H  
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP), Science (non-lab) (GFR)
    Prerequisite: You must have completed MATH 150  or MATH 151  or MATH 155  or equivalent with a `C’ or better, or have Math test placement into MATH 151  .
  
  • BIOL 141H - Foundations of Biology: Cells, Energy and Organisms - Honors

    (4.00)
    This course for majors provides a broad overview of contemporary biological concepts. Major topics include structure and synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins, molecular genetics, prokaryotic and eukaryotic cell structure and function, biochemistry of energy transformation, and animal and plant development and physiology. This course is designed to prepare students for upper level biology core and elective courses. It is one of two introductory courses (BIOL 141   and BIOL 142  ) designed exclusively for BIOL, BIOC and BINF majors.

    Course ID: 100339
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Discussion, Lecture
    Course Equivalents: BIOL 100 , BIOL 100H, BIOL 141  
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP), Science (non-lab) (GFR)
    Requirement Group:You must have completed MATH 150  or MATH 151  or MATH 155  or equivalent with a `C’ or better, or have MATH test placement into MATH 151  . You must also be admitted to the Honors College.
  
  • BIOL 142 - Foundations of Biology: Ecology and Evolution

    (4.00)
    This course provides a broad overview of contemporary biological concepts. Major topics include fundamental concepts in ecology and evolution and emphasizes the fundamental interrelationship between these two fields of study. Concepts in evolution include a general description of the diversity of life, a review of Mendelian genetics, the causes and consequences of speciation, natural selection and genetic drift. Concepts in ecology will focus on ecological and evolutionary factors that govern population growth and regulation, species distributions, community and ecosystem ecology. This course is designed to prepare students for upper level biology core and elective courses. It is one of two introductory courses (BIOL 141  &  BIOL 142) designed for BIOL, BIOC and BINF majors.

    Course ID: 100316
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Discussion, Lecture
    Course Equivalents: BIOL 301  
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP) as of Fall 2017
    Requirement Group:You must complete BIOL 141   and either MATH 150   or MATH 151   or MATH 155   or equivalent with a C or better or have MATH test placement into MATH 151  .
  
  • BIOL 233 - Nutrition and Health

    (3.00)
    Basic principles of normal human nutrition. Topics include: nutrient classification; digestion, assimilation, and metabolic functions of the major nutrients; energy balance; metabolic regulation; dietary guidelines and standards; nutrient composition of foods and diet selection; nutritional considerations in pregnancy, childhood, adulthood, and later years. This course provides an introduction to nutrition for students pursuing careers in health-related fields. 

    Course ID: 52483
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 100  or BIOL 101  or BIOL 141  or BIOL 141H  and CHEM 102  or CHEM 102H   or CHEM 124  all of which has to have a grade of C or better
  
  • BIOL 251 - Human Anatomy and Physiology I

    (3.00)
    The first semester of a two-semester lecture course covering the structure and function of the organs of the human body. An integrated approach permits concurrent presentation of the anatomy and physiology of each organ system.

    Course ID: 52484
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GFR)
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 101   or BIOL 141   or BIOL 141H   and CHEM 102   or CHEM 102H   or CHEM 124   all of which has to have a grade of C or better.
  
  • BIOL 251L - Human Anatomy and Physiology I Laboratory

    (1.00)
    Laboratory course to accompany BIOL 251  . The laboratory includes dissections, work with skeletons, models of body parts and experimental studies of physiological processes. Required for most allied health programs.  Recommended Preparation: Permission only. A form is available inthe Biological Sciences office. 

    Course ID: 52485
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory
    Attributes: Course Fee = $50.00, Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GEP), Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GFR)
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 251  or CHEM 124L  or CHEM 102L  with a grade of C or better. BIOL 251  can be taken concurrently with BIOL 251L  
  
  • BIOL 252 - Human Anatomy and Physiology II

    (3.00)
    Continuation of BIOL 251 . When Offered: (Spring)

    Course ID: 52486
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GFR)
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 251  with a grade of C or better.
  
  • BIOL 252L - Human Anatomy and Physiology II Laboratory.

    (1.00)
    Continuation of BIOL 251L   Recommended Preparation: Permission only. A form is available in the Biological Sciences office.

    Course ID: 52487
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory
    Attributes: Course Fee = $50.00, Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GEP), Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GFR)
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 251L  with a grade of C or better and be enrolled in or have successfully completed BIOL 252  with a ‘C’ or better
  
  • BIOL 275 - Microbiology

    (3.00)
    Introductory course describing the fundamental properties of micro-organisms and viruses and their relationships to other life forms. Topics include the structure and function of bacteria, mode of action of antibiotics, genetics of bacteria and the role of bacteria in disease. The structure, replication and pathology of viruses are discussed, including the response of hosts to viral infection and the fundamental concepts of the immune response.

    Course ID: 52488
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP), Science (non-lab) (GFR)
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 100  or BIOL 100H or BIOL 101  or BIOL 141  or BIOL 141H  with a “C” or better.
  
  • BIOL 275L - Microbiology Laboratory

    (2.00)
    This laboratory course consists of a series of exercises designed to familiarize the student with microbiological techniques. Experiments are performed in basic bacteriology, applied bacteriology, virology and immunology. Students will be expected to work independently, spending brief periods of time other than the scheduled lab period collecting data.

    Course ID: 52489
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory, Lecture
    Attributes: Course Fee = $50.00, Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GEP), Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GFR)
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 275  with a “C” or be concurrently enrolled in BIOL 275 .
  
  • BIOL 295 - Introduction to Bioinformatics and Computational Biology

    (3.00)
    This is an introductory course to the field of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, an emerging interdisciplinary field dealing with the application of computing methods in biology. The course will provide a brief introduction to contemporary molecular biology and evolutionary theory. It will introduce the concept of bioinformatics, its applications and its career opportunities. Applying a question-answer approach, it will then explore some of the main problems faced by biology in the last decades, such as genome sequencing and annotation, sequence-based search, structure or function prediction, and some of the computational methods and answers provided by the emerging field of Bioinformatics. Lecture content will be complemented with paper discussion sessions and home-based lab assignments. No prior programming/biology skills required. The course is intended for a multi-disciplinary audience with an emphasis on BINF, CMSC, BIOL, MATH, STAT and IS majors.

    Course ID: 100281
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Course Equivalents: BIOL 313  
    Requirement Group: You must have completed MATH 151  with a “C” or better.
  
  • BIOL 300L - Experimental Biology Laboratory

    (2.00)


    An upper level course of experiments designed to give students the essential laboratory and critical thinking skills in experimental design, implementation and analysis that every biologist should know. This knowledge base is required for succeeding in further BIOL laboratory courses and for working in a research laboratory. Required of all BIOL majors and a prerequisite for all upper level BIOL laboratory courses.  

     

    Course ID: 100317
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory
    Requirement Group: You must have completed CHEM 102   or CHEM 102H  , and CHEM 102L  , and BIOL 302  . You must have completed either MATH 150   or MATH 151  or MATH 155  , or have equivalent AP credit, or have Math test placement into MATH 151  . All prerequisites must have a C or better.

  
  • BIOL 301 - Ecology and Evolution

    (3.00)
    An introduction to the processes of evolution, the outcomes of evolution, and the field of ecology. Processes of evolution include understanding natural selection, genetic drift, molecular evolution and general evolution theory. Outcomes of evolution includes speciation hybridization, building phylogenetic trees, and using trees to understand the diversity of life, especially vertebrate evolution. Ecology topics include population growth and regulation, competition, predator/prey interactions, symbiosis, community structure and food webs, and energy flow and nutrient cylcing within ecosystems.

    Course ID: 52493
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Course Equivalents: BIOL 142  
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP), Science (non-lab) (GFR)
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 100  or BIOL 100H or BIOL 141  or BIOL 141H  with a grade of C or better.
  
  • BIOL 302 - Molecular and General Genetics

    (4.00)


    Modern principles of heredity have been established through studies at the molecular, cellular and organismic levels. This course explores the fundamental biology of gene structure, organization, expression, and function as deduced from analyses of viral, prokaryotic, and eukaryotic systems and the gene interactions that underlie them. Fundamental genetic principles are applied to the understanding of human heredity and disease, and molecular genetic manipulations are discussed in the context of biotechnology applications. 

    Course ID: 52494
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Discussion, Lecture
    Attributes: Science (non-lab) (GEP), Science (non-lab) (GFR)
    Requirement Group:  You must complete BIOL 100  or BIOL100H or BIOL 141  or BIOL 141H   and BIOL 142  or BIOL 142H and MATH 150   or MATH 151  or MATH 155  , or have equivalent AP credit or MATH placement into MATH 151 . You must complete or be concurrently enrolled in CHEM 102  or CHEM 102H  or CHEM 124  . All prerequisites must be completed with a grade of C or better

     

                    Normal                     

     

  
  • BIOL 302L - Molecular and General Genetics Laboratory

    (2.00)
    A laboratory course designed to illustrate fundamental genetic principles by experimentation. Such principles include the nature of genetic material, transfer of genetic information in prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems, organization and regulation of gene expression, Mendel’s rules of heredity, linkage and crossing over, and genetic variation. Students will be expected to work independently, spending periods of time outside the scheduled lab period collecting data.

    Course ID: 52495
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory, Lecture
    Attributes: Course Fee = $50.00, Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GEP), Lab Component (must be paired with S course) (GFR)
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 300L  and BIOL 302  with a grade of a C or better
  
  • BIOL 303 - Cell Biology

    (4.00)
    A modern treatment of cell structure and function, with emphasis on the molecular architecture, biochemistry and regulatory mechanisms common to all cells. Topics include membrane structure, function and transport; molecular mechanisms of energy metabolism and its associated organelles; the structural and molecular basis for the expression of genetic information; the organelles involved in the regulation of cell shape and motility; and selected cell functions, growth, reproduction and their control. This course is designed for students interested in the biological sciences, biochemistry and the allied health professions.

    Course ID: 52496
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Discussion, Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 302  and CHEM 102  . You must have completed either MATH 150  or MATH 151  or MATH 155  , or have equivalent AP credit, or have Math test placement into MATH 151  . All prerequisites must be completed with a “C” or better.
  
  • BIOL 303L - Cell Biology Laboratory

    (2.00)
    You must complete BIOL 302 and BIOL 300L with a grade of ‘C’ or better. Pre/Corequisite: BIOL 303 with a C or better.This laboratory course is designed to introduce students to the principles of experimental design and the analysis and interpretation of data in modern cell biology.   During the course of the semester students will be using the techniques of white light and fluorescence microscopy, electrophoresis, protein purification, and tissue culture and other cell based assays.   These techniques will allow students to better understand the mechanisms of cell adhesion, the cytoskeleton, exocytosis and other cell biological processes.  

    Course ID: 52498
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory, Lecture
    Attributes: Course Fee = $50.00
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 302   and BIOL 300L  and BIOL 303  with a grade of ‘C’ or better. BIOL 303   can be taken concurrently. 
  
  • BIOL 304 - Plant Biology

    (3.00)


    A modern treatment of the basic physiology and development of plants. Topics include special features of plant cells, patterns and regulations of growth and development, hormone function and regulation, photosynthesis, and stress responses. Discussions are also made on plant-produced useful products, such as secondary metabolites, and how to use genetic engineering to modify plants to achieve better traits. The goals of thecourse are to enhance students’ understanding of concepts related to Genetics, Molecular Biology, and Cell biology in addition to provide students with a greater appreciation for plants.

     

    Course ID: 52499
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 303  with a grade of “C” or better

  
  • BIOL 304L - Plant Biology Laboratory

    (2.00)
    A course of laboratory experiments designed to enhance student abilities in experimental design, hypothesis testing, and analysis and interpretation of data using plant systems. Students are required to present and interpret experimental results in oral and written form. An introduction to reading and understanding of primary scientific literature is presented. Experiments include photosynthesis, water relations, growth regulator effects and hostpathogen interactions.

    Course ID: 52500
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory, Lecture
    Attributes: Course Fee = $50.00
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 300L  or  BIOL 303L  and BIOL 304  with a grade of C or better. BIOL 304  can be taken concurrently.
  
  • BIOL 305 - Comparative Animal Physiology

    (3.00)
    Functional features of whole organisms and their component organs and organ systems will be studied. Emphasis will be on ways in which diverse organisms at various phylogenetic levels perform similar functions. Examples of topics include osmoregulation, gas exchange, control systems, sensors, effectors, brain and behavior.

    Course ID: 52501
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 303  In addition, you must be concurrently enrolled PHYS 112  or PHYS 122  or have completed those courses in a previous semester with a C or better.
  
  • BIOL 305L - Physiology Laboratory

    (2.00)
    A physiology laboratory in which we experimentally investigate both human and animal physiology, especially nervous, muscular, cardiovascular, and respiratory function.

    Course ID: 52502
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory
    Attributes: Course Fee = $50.00
    Prerequisite: You must complete BIOL 305   or BIOL 307   (pre or co) and BIOL 300L   with a grade of “C” or better.
  
  • BIOL 306 - Molecular Biology

    (4.00)
    This is an intermediate level course in molecular biology of prokaryotes, eukaryotes and their viruses. It will cover the principles governing the molecular mechanisms that occur in living cells including regulatory mechanisms. Topics will include the processing of genetic information through the central dogma (transcription, RNA processing and translation), DNA replication, mutation and DNA repair, and genomics. Recommended Course Preparation CHEM 351  and CHEM 352 .

    Course ID: 101750
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 302  and BIOL 303  with a grade of ‘C’ or better.
  
  • BIOL 306L - Projects in Molecular Biology

    (2.00)
    In this course students will conduct an open-ended investigation to discover the function of a gene. During the course of the investigation you will learn the basic techniques used to isolate a gene, move it into a suitable host organism, modify it and determine its function. All projects will give students experience with cell culture, cloning, PCR, DNA sequencing and computer-based DNA sequence analysis.

    Course ID: 100499
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory
    Requirement Group:You must complete BIOL 300L  and BIOL 302  and BIOL 303  with a C or better.
  
  • BIOL 307 - Human Physiology

    (3.00)
    This course covers the principles and mechanisms underlying human physiology. The relationships between structure and function are covered, with an emphasis on how cellular and organ systems function and how they are integrated and regulated to maintain homeostasis. Systems covered include cardiovascular, respiratory, renal, muscular, neural, endocrine, immune, reproductive, and gastrointestinal. Credit toward BIOL major requirements may not be received for both this course and either BIOL 252   or BIOL 305  .

    Course ID: 102138
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group:You must complete BIOL 303  with a “C” or better.
  
  • BIOL 312L - Modeling in the Life Sciences

    (2.00)
    Humans possess a superior ability to generate new knowledge by creating and manipulating abstract models of the world and by extrapolating from past experiences. This natural ability reaches its full potential when it is enhanced with the tools of experimental design, mathematics, logic, and computer simulation. BIOL 312L will be offered as a practical guide to creating and using models in the context of life sciences laboratory research. It will include classroom lectures, activities and computer applications intended to illustrate and implement the five basic elements of modeling: experimental design, data acquisition, analysis, model formulation, and simulation. Through the course, students will address a minimum of four concrete biological problems by defining key physical quantities to be measured, applying data visualization techniques to uncover trends, drawing statistically valid inferences, formulating algebraic and analytical models, and performing computer simulations.

    Course ID: 100628
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 300L   and STAT 350  or STAT 355  or MATH 151   or MATH 155   with a grade of ‘C’ or better.
  
  • BIOL 313 - Introduction to Bioinformatics and Computational Biology

    (3.00)


     

    This is an introductory course to the field of Bioinformatics and Computational Biology, an emerging interdisciplinary field dealing with the application of computing methods in biology. The course will provide a brief introduction to contemporary molecular biology and evolutionary theory. It will introduce the concept of bioinformatics, its applications and its career opportunities. Applying a question-answer approach, it will then explore some of the main problems faced by biology in the last decades (such as genome sequencing and annotation or sequence-based search) and it will analyze in depth some of the computational methods provided by the emerging field of Bioinformatics. Lecture content will be complemented with home based assignments. No prior programming skills or biology knowledge are strictly required, but students are expected to have basic knowledge in either molecular biology or algorithmic techniques, and to acquire complementary knowledge within the course. The course is intended for a multidisciplinary audience with an emphasis on BINF, CMSC, BIOL, MATH, STAT and IS majors.

     

    Course ID: 100232
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Course Equivalents: BIOL 295  
    Requirement Group: You must complete [MATH 151  or MATH 151H  ] and [BIOL 141  or CMSC 104  ] with a grade of ‘C’ or better.

  
  • BIOL 316L - Phage Hunters Genome Analysis

    (2.00)
    In Phage Hunters Genome Analysis, participants will utilize state of the art computer programs to annotate complete bacteriophage genome sequences generated in Genetics Lab ¿ Phage Hunters Edition (BIOL 302L ), and identify the unknown bacteriophages. The course includes a large degree of self-paced investigative work. Recommended Course Preparation: CMSC 104  and/or BIOL 313  

    Course ID: 101846
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 302  and BIOL 300L  with a C or better
  
  • BIOL 340L - Developmental Biology Laboratory

    (2.00)
    This is a laboratory course designed to give students exposure to the different techniques and organisms commonly used in Cell and Developmental Biology research. We will be working with a variety of embryos, such as Drosophila, zebrafish, C. elegans, chicken, and axolotl, as well as planarian and dictyostelium. The major concepts that we will focus on include: gene regulation, pattern formation and cell-signaling; cell migration and cell-cell adhesion; and cell fate determination. The laboratory exercises will allow students to observe normal early embryonic development as well as experimentally manipulate embryos at different stages of early development. The second half of the semester will be guided “independent projects” in which students formulate a cell/developmental question, and design and perform experiments that will provide answers to the proposed question. 

    Course ID: 52509
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 300L  or BIOL 303L  and BIOL 303  with a grade of ‘C’ or better.
  
  • BIOL 390 - Introduction to the Honors University for Transfer Students in the Life Sciences

    (1.00 - 3.00)
    Course ID: 52516
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
  
  • BIOL 395 - MARC U*STAR Writing in the Sciences

    (2.00)
    Students in this course will examine and produce the basic forms of professional writing encountered in science careers. They will critique the work of their peers, and learn to analyze scientific literature. Specific assignments include writing review articles, CVs and personal statements for graduate school and funding agencies. This course does not fulfill Writing Intensive (WI) requirements.

    Course ID: 100096
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
  
  • BIOL 396 - Undergraduate Teaching Assistantship

    (2.00)
    This service-learning course is designed for undergraduate teaching assistants in biology courses. Students must be recommended in writing by the faculty member teaching the course and be approved by the department. Student work must be performed in a course taught by a full-time member of the Biological Sciences department faculty and must have a significant learning component. To qualify, students must have a minimum 3.50 GPA in all biology courses taken (including repeated biology courses). In addition to their teaching responsibilities, students will attend a mandatory weekly session on effective teaching methods taught by a member of the biology faculty. P/F grading only, one credit will be earned for the mandatory weekly session and one credit for the teaching and teaching preparation hours of qualified work during an academic semester. A maximum of eight credits of BIOL 396 is allowed. Successful completion of the course for which they will be a teaching assistant and permission of the instructor are required. This course is repeatable up to 8 credits. Recommended Preparation: Passing the course in which they will serve as a teaching assistant

    Course ID: 52517
    Consent: Instructor Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
  
  • BIOL 397 - Ethics and Integrity in Scientific Research

    (1.00)
    Individuals involved in contemporary scientific research have ethical responsibilities for their conduct. The goal of this course is to provide students considering a career in scientific research with a framework for establishing appropriate scientific integrity. A variety of relevant topics will be discussed,including fraud and misconduct, peer review, obligations and rights of students and mentors, ethical conduct in animal and human experimentation, ownership of data, reagents, intellectual property, authorship and conflict of interest. This course is repeatable up to 12 credits.

    Course ID: 52518
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Ethics/Integ Scient Res, Scientific Writing, Scientific Writing: Art of Abstracts & Application
  
  • BIOL 398 - Co-op Internship in the Biological Sciences

    (1.00 - 4.00)
    This course is designed for UMBC degree-seeking students who are employed outside of the university as volunteers or for compensation, provided the following criteria are met. The work must be performed at an institution, agency or company that is a participating employer in UMBC’s Cooperative Education Program; and the work performed by the student must have a significant learning component in the biological sciences as judged by the biology internship coordinator in consultation with the faculty of the Department of Biological Sciences. P/F credit only, earned at the rate of one credit for every 50 hours of qualified work during an academic session. Variable credit course repeatable up to 4 credits. Recommended Preparation: 45 total credits earned, including BIOL 302  

    Course ID: 52520
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Field Studies
  
  • BIOL 399 - Tutorial Projects in Biological Sciences

    (1.00 - 3.00)
    Independent studies carried out with the supervision of a faculty member. Variable credit course repeatable up to 6 credits. Recommended Preparation: Upper class standing

    Course ID: 52521
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Independent Study
  
  • BIOL 405 - Advanced Topics in Comparative Physiology

    (8.00)
    This course takes a comparative approach to the study of how various selective pressures have resulted in the evolution of specific solutions to physiological problems. These solutions are viewed within the context of the fundamental limitations of biological evolution that are set by the physical and chemical properties of matter. The specific topic will change from semester to semester. Representative topics might include vision, temperature regulation and thermal tolerance, renal physiology or cognitive neurophysiology. Most of the material covered will be from original research reports that will be evaluated critically by each student. The course is repeatable for a maximum of 8 credits or 2 attempts  if different topics are covered.

    Course ID: 52522
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Adv Animal Physiology, Advanced Topics In Comp
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 302  and BIOL 303  and either [BIOL 305   or BIOL 307  ] and CHEM 351   and MATH 151   with a grade of “C” or better.
  
  • BIOL 410 - Modeling in the Life Sciences

    (4.00)
    Humans possess a superior ability to generate new knowledge by extrapolating from past experiences and creating and manipulating abstract models. This natural ability reaches its full potential when it is enhanced with the scientific tools of experimental design, mathematics, logic, and computer simulation. BIOL 410 will be offered as an introduction to the science (and art) of creating and using quantitative models. It will include classroom lectures, activities and computer-based exercises intended to illustrate and implement the five basic elements of scientific modeling: experimental design, data acquisition and analysis, model formulation, and simulation. The primary objective of this course will be to engage students in an environment structured to use quantitative models to solve practical problems in biology and biochemistry. This course will not have as objectives to teach formal mathematics, computer programming, or computer science.

    Course ID: 102053
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Writing Intensive (GEP)
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 142   and BIOL 302  and BIOL 303  and CHEM 101  or CHEM 101H  and either STAT 350  orMATH 151  or MATH 155  andENGL 100  or equivalent all with a C or better.
  
  • BIOL 411 - Bacterial Physiology

    (4.00)
    The combined approaches of bacterial genetics, molecular biology and biochemistry are applied to the study of bacterial physiological processes. An emphasis is placed on examining adaptation strategies used by bacteria upon encountering alterations in environment. Topics include mechanisms of transcriptional, translational and post-translational control; regulation of carbon and nitrogen metabolism; biosynthesis; energy transduction; signal transduction systems; and bacterial development.  Recommended Preparation: BIOL 275  

    Course ID: 52523
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 302  and BIOL 303  with a grade of ‘C’ or better.
  
  • BIOL 412 - Microbial Systems and Synthetic Biology

    (4.00)
    The approaches of molecular biology and modern cell biology as applied to the study of both normal and diseased human states. Where appropriate, the analysis of other model mammalian experimental systems may be included. The course will involve the critical reading and discussion of relevant research literature and the preparation of one or more papers on specific issues or topics. The precise topics covered in any one semester will depend on the interest of the faculty and students, and with current developments in the field. Possible topics include: the molecular and cellular basis for human diseases, human molecular genetics, the human genome and proteomic project, human genetic therapy and human evolution.

    Course ID: 102009
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Same as Offered: BIOL 612
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 302 and BIOL 303 with a grade of ‘C’ or better.
  
  • BIOL 414 - Eukaryotic Molecular Genetics

    (4.00)
    Genetics and molecular biology of lower and higher eukaryotes and their viruses. The course will focus on the maintenance and expression of genetic material as it relates to cell growth and development. It will cover current topics in the molecular genetics of lower and higher eukaryotes at an advanced level, including mechanisms of genetic control that operate at the level of DNA replication, transcription and translation. Topics to include the molecular basis of phenomena such as regulation at transcription and post transcriptional levels (including mRNA and protein stability), chromosome structure, gene silencing, and formation the translation apparatus. Examples of the importance of these basic molecular processes for understanding disease will also be discussed. 

    Course ID: 52524
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Attributes: Writing Intensive
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 302  and BIOL 303  with a grade of ‘C’ or better.
  
  • BIOL 415 - Systems Biology

    (4.00)
    This course introduces the fundamentals of Systems Biology from an interdisciplinary perspective. Topics include the design of biological systems, network structures and motifs, their dynamic and emergent properties, and
    methods to infer them from experimental data. The course will study biological systems and their control mechanisms at all levels from gene to population networks, and will cover recent applications in science and medicine that allows us to predict cellular behaviors and design optimal drug responses.

    Course ID: 102457
    Consent: NO Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Same as Offered: BIOL 615
    Requirement Group: You must complete BIOL 303   and (BIOL 313   or CMSC 201   or MATH 152  ) all with a C or better
  
  • BIOL 418 - Human Molecular Biology

    (4.00)
    The approaches of molecular biology and modern cell biology as applied to the study of both normal and diseased human states. Where appropriate, the analysis of other model mammalian experimental systems may be included. The course will involve the critical reading and discussion of relevant research literature and the preparation of one or more papers on specific issues or topics. The precise topics covered in any one semester will depend on the interest of the faculty and students, and with current developments in the field. Possible topics include: the molecular and cellular basis for human diseases, human molecular genetics, the human genome and proteomic project, human genetic therapy and human evolution. This course is repeatable for credit. Recommended Preparation: BIOL 302  and BIOL 303  

    Course ID: 52527
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
  
  • BIOL 420 - Advanced Topics in Cell Biology

    (4.00)
    Contemporary problems of structure and function at the cellular level through a critical examination of the current literature. The course includes some lecture, with an emphasis on the experimental basis of current knowledge, but primarily emphasizes discussion and/or presentations by students on selected topics. The subtopics covered during Contemporary problems of structure and function at the cellular level through a critical examination of the current literature. The course includes some lecture, with an emphasis on the experimental basis of current knowledge, but primarily emphasizes discussion and/or presentations by students on selected topics. The subtopics covered during any semester vary according to recent developments in the field and according to the interests of the students and faculty. General topic areas might include: structure and function of biomembranes; composition, structure and replication of chromosomes; assembly, growth and reproduction of cytoplasmic organelles; cellular growth and division; regulation of cellular function; nuclear-cytoplasmic interactions; cytoskeletal structure and assembly; role of epigenetics and/or small RNAs in regulating cell function; virology; cellular aging.   Note: May be repeated for credit with different topic. [4] 

    Course ID: 52528
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Topics: Epigenetics, Small RNAs in Gene Regulation, Virology, Cellular Aging
    Attributes: Writing Intensive
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 303  with a grade of ‘C’ or better.
  
  • BIOL 422L - Microscopy and Imaging Techniques

    (2.00)
    Theory and practice of the study of biological materials, using a variety of contemporary microscopic techniques. These include scanning and transmission electron microscopy and laser confocal scanning light microscopy. Specimens will be prepared for examination by each of these instruments; both group and individual projects will be pursued to develop confidence in applying the many specimen preparation procedures available and use of the appropriate instrumentation. Procedures required for production of finished micrographs are included.

    Course ID: 52529
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Laboratory, Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 300L   or CHEM 311L   with grade of ‘C’ or better
  
  • BIOL 425 - Immunology

    (4.00)
    This course pursues in depth the rapidly expanding areas of cellular, humoral and tumor immunology. Following a brief overview of the immune system’s response to exogenous antigen, the course concentrates on such topics as antibody production and structure, lymphocyte subpopulations, cell-cell interactions, cell-mediated immune responses, cell surface alloantigens, histocompatibility immungenetics,transplantation and tumor immunology. The exact content of the course varies from year to year depending on the status of research in the field.

    Course ID: 52532
    Consent: No Special Consent Required
    Components: Lecture
    Requirement Group: You must have completed BIOL 302  and BIOL 303  with a grade of ‘C’ or better.
 

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