COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
This course provides an introduction to single machine organization, architecture and operation. Upon successful completion of the class, students learn how to demonstrably understand how instructions get executed in a sequential processor; be able to perform arithmetic operations in binary and conversions between number systems; be able to compose and analyze small assembly-language programs; explain and illustrate memory concepts and performance improvement measures.
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
This course broadens students' knowledge of physiology. Students make comparisons between the physiology of man and other vertebrates and compare the physiological strategies used by man and animals, evaluating their effectiveness in producing the specific functions or responses to challenges studied. Students explore experimental approaches used in studying physiology and learn how to describe the physiological mechanisms exploited by animals to achieve the specific functions or responses to challenges that are studied.
COURSE DETAIL
The course helps students understand, through ethnographic, political, documentary, and historical material (written and film), key themes of the past 150 years in the former Soviet empire, including revolution, collectivization, socialism, Cold War, gender, art, propaganda, lifestyle, religion, nationalism and identity, and more.
COURSE DETAIL
COURSE DETAIL
This course critically explores the history and current state of political geography and geopolitics and examines empirical issues from the vantage point of the spatiality and materiality of politics and power. The course develops the complementary insights that politics and power are fundamentally spatial, that geographical phenomena have political dimensions and implications, and that geographic space is infused with both power and political potential.
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