2 Pages

summer 2009 schedule

Course: MAIL 1151, Fall 2009
School: Campbell
Rating:
 
 
 
 
 

Word Count: 1257

Document Preview

UNIVERSITY CAMPBELL SCHOOL OF EDUCATION *****GRADUATE SCHEDULE, SUMMER 2009**** Summer Session I and II Tuesday May 26, 2009 Friday, July 31, 2009 Education 641 Lifespan Development This class runs 10 weeks. This is a blended class format. Much of the class will be done online, independent of a normal class meeting. Tuesdays 4:30-5:30p.m. will be reserved for class meetings, individual conferences, etc. , Taylor...

Register Now

Unformatted Document Excerpt

Coursehero >> North Carolina >> Campbell >> MAIL 1151

Course Hero has millions of student submitted documents similar to the one
below including study guides, practice problems, reference materials, practice exams, textbook help and tutor support.

Course Hero has millions of student submitted documents similar to the one below including study guides, practice problems, reference materials, practice exams, textbook help and tutor support.
UNIVERSITY CAMPBELL SCHOOL OF EDUCATION *****GRADUATE SCHEDULE, SUMMER 2009**** Summer Session I and II Tuesday May 26, 2009 Friday, July 31, 2009 Education 641 Lifespan Development This class runs 10 weeks. This is a blended class format. Much of the class will be done online, independent of a normal class meeting. Tuesdays 4:30-5:30p.m. will be reserved for class meetings, individual conferences, etc. , Taylor 226, W. Hatcher Monday/Wednesday, 4:00-5:30p.m., Taylor 226, W. Hatcher Education 645 Counseling Skills This course runs 10 weeks. Students must have the approval of Dr. Hatcher prior to registering for this course. Contact him at 910-893-1645. Educ 688 Add-on MSA Internship Education 694 Internship in Administration I ** Education 695 Counseling Internship ** - This course runs 10 weeks Education 696 Internship in Administration II ** Internship Only No Seminars Internship Only - No Seminars Monday, 5:30-9:00p.m., TBA, Counseling Faculty Internship Only No Seminars Summer Session I Tuesday May 26, 2009 -Thursday June 25, 2009 Education 510 Introduction to Gifted Children Education 553 Effective Teaching Strategies Education 600 Advanced Foundations of Education Education 620 Advanced Educational Psychology Education 638 Assessment in Counseling Education 644 Career Counseling Education 651 Content Area Reading Education 662 The Teaching of Social Studies Education 670 Teaching of Science Tuesday/Thursday, 5:30-9:00p.m., Taylor 227, C. Godwin Tuesday/Thursday, 4:30-8:00p.m., Taylor 218, B. Greene Monday/Wednesday, 5:30-9:00p.m., Taylor 219, M. Houser Monday/Wednesday, 5:30-9:00p.m., Taylor 218, A. Carper Monday/Wednesday, 5:30-9:00p.m., Taylor B-11, R. Kendrick Monday/Wednesday, 5:30-8:30p.m., B-24, H. Jackson Monday/Wednesday, 4:30-8:00p.m., Taylor 227, O. Graham Tuesday/Thursday, 5:00-8:30p.m., Taylor 219, R. Peterson Monday, 5:30-9:00p.m., Taylor B-11, C. Godwin ***Class will also meet on two Saturdays during the term June 6 and June 20 9am-4pm*** Education 672 Educational Leadership: Theory and Practice Education 683 Substance Abuse Education 684 Crisis Intervention Exercise Science 611 Issues in PE and Athletics Social Science 538 Public Administration Monday/Wednesday, 5:00-8:30p.m., TBA, P. Smith Tuesday/Thursday, 5:30-9:00p.m., Taylor B-24, R. Kendrick Tuesday/Thursday, 4:00-7:30p.m., Taylor B-19, H. Enzor Tuesday/Thursday 6:00-9:30p.m., Pope Convocation Center, Room 156G, D. Woolard Tuesday/Thursday, 6:00-9:30p.m., D. Rich 224, J. Mero Summer Session II Monday, June 29, 2009 - Friday, July 31, 2009 Education 504 Grant Writing (online component) Education 504, Grant Writing, is a one hour course that may be substituted for EDUC 601 or EDUC 678. Education 512-Problems and Issues in Gifted Education Education 610 Child Development Education 624-Counseling Theories and Techniques Education 650 The Teaching of Reading Education 663-Exceptional Children Education 673- School Law Education 675 - Instructional Improvement and Supervision Education 685 - Spirituality, Religion, and Diversity in the Helping Professions English 502 Advanced Writing Exercise Science 553 Biomechanics for Coaches and Physical Educators Social Science 590 School Violence Math 535 Probability and Statistics Monday/Wednesday, 5:30-9:00p.m., Taylor 218, C. Godwin Monday/Wednesday, 5:00-8:30p.m. Taylor 219, J. Street Tuesday/Thursday, 5:30-8:30p.m., Taylor B-24, H. Jackson Tuesday/Thursday, 4:00-7:30p.m., Taylor B-11, R. Peterson Tuesday/Thursday, 4:30-8:00p.m., Taylor 219, D. Dennis Monday/Wednesday, 1:00-4:30p.m., Taylor 219, S. Engel Tuesday/Thursday, 5:00-8:30p.m., Taylor 218, P. Smith Tuesday/Thursday, 5:30-9:00p.m., Taylor 227, W. Hatcher Monday through Friday, 12:00-2:00p.m., D. Rich, 220, A. Davy Note: This class meets every day of the week, Monday through Friday Tuesday/Thursday, 6:00-9:30p.m., Pope Convocation Center, Room 156G, D. Woolard Monday/Wednesday, 6:00-9:30p.m., D. Rich 223, C. Starita Tuesday/Thursday, 1:00-4:30p.m., Lundy Fetterman, 146, L. Norwood Tuesday/Thursday,12:45-1:45p.m., Taylor 218, L. Roukema 3/10/2009ls CREDIT All courses carry three semester hours of credit with the exceptions of Education 694, 695, and which 696 are 6 credit hour courses and marked with a double asterisk (**). At all locations: 500 and 600 Level Courses: $310.00 per credit hour. Students taking Practicum or Internship will be charged a fee of $35.00 per semester hour in addition to regular tuition. TUITION PRACTICUM AND INTERNSHIP INFORMATION PRE-REGISTRATION Placement requests for EDUC 557, 558, and 693 for Fall Semester are due by May 26, 2009 to Kelly nd Ashworth in Room 230 (910-893-1630). The forms are available on the 2 floor of Taylor Hall. Currently enrolled students who have the permission of their advisor may register online at http://wa.Campbell.edu. Students must speak with their advisor prior to registering online. The advisor or their designee must enter the advisement code to officially complete the registration. If you have questions accessing the site, please call the help desk at 893-1208. The deadline to pre-register is Wednesday, May 20, 2009. Confirmation of registration is not sent unless requested by the student with a self-addressed envelope. If there is a problem with your registration then the School of Education will contact you. REMINDER: Most of the faculty will not have normal office hours during the month of May. Students should contact their advisor by email to schedule an appointment. REGISTRATION MAIN CAMPUS: Registration for new students and those who have not registered will be held from 10:00-5:30 p.m. on Tuesday, May 26, 2009 for Summer Session I and Summer Session II in Taylor Hall, room 208. Faculty members will be available at that time for advisement. It is recommended that appointments be made for advising to avoid long waits. Please note: Graduate students may register for classes up to the 2nd class meeting. Students who attend classes without being officially registered for the course will not be given credit for the course. If you are not on the roll for the class you are taking, you must see Lou Sherman in room 208. A student must be fully admitted to a program before registering for a third course. If you have any questions on admission status, please contact the School of Education, Graduate Admissions office at 1800-334-4111 ext. 5515 or direct at 910-814-5515. Campbell University reserves the right to limit enrollment and to cancel classes with insufficient enrollment. GRADUATE CREDIT Courses may apply toward a graduate degree upon official admission to the graduate program at Campbell University. A student must hold a baccalaureate degree to be e...

Find millions of documents on Course Hero - Study Guides, Lecture Notes, Reference Materials, Practice Exams and more. Course Hero has millions of course specific materials providing students with the best way to expand their education.

Below is a small sample set of documents:

Rutgers - CHEM - 542
Special Topics in Physical Chemistry: Computational Chemistry.Course 16:160:542, Section 01. Index No: 49242Course also offered to Advanced Undergraduates as 01:160:438, Intro to Comp. Chem. Index No: 51444; Special Permission required. Time and Pl
Rutgers - CHEM - 542
Introduction to Computational ChemistryKarsten Krogh-Jespersen(krogh@rutchem.rutgers.edu) Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology Rutgers, the State University of New Jersey New Brunswick, NJ 08903O H 3C N O N CH3CH3 NN. .Spring 2005
Rutgers - CHEM - 542
Intro to Computational Chemistry 01:160:438 and 16:160:542 Spring 2005FacultyProfessor Karsten Krogh-Jespersen E-mail: krogh@rutchem.rutgers.edu Office: Wright-Rieman Labs, Room A206; Phone: 732-445-4241 Office Hours: All day Thursdays, WR A206, BU
Campbell - MAIL - 1170
College for a Day, Success. for TomorrowDirections to Barker Residence Hall:From Lillington, US 421/NC27: Turn left on W. Leslie Campbell Memorial Avenue. Barker Residence Hall is the brick V-shaped building on your right. From Dunn, US 421/NC27:
Rutgers - CHEM - 327
EXAM 2 EXAM2 will be held Wednesday, June 15, 9:00 -10:15 AM. The EXAM Questions will be taken from the material covered in Chapter 18, Sections 6-14. You should know and be able to use what is in Section 18.16 up to "Complete Sets of Eigenfunctions
Rutgers - CHEM - 327
Chem 327/Summer 2005/KK-J "The Postulates"Postulate 1. The state of a one-particle quantum mechanical system is completely specified by a wavefunction (wavefunction := state function). is a function of the spatial coordinates of the particle, =
Rutgers - CHEM - 327
PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY I, 01:160:327, SUMMER 2005 SYLLABUSLect 1, 2 3,4 5,6 7,8 9,10 11,12 13,14 15,16 17,18 19,20 21,22 23 Date(s) Day(s) 5/31, 6/1 Tu, W 6/2, 6/6 Th, M 6/7, 6/8 Tu, W 6/9, 6/13 Th, M 6/14, 6/15 Tu, W 6/16, 6/20 Th, M 6/21, 6/22 Tu, W 6
Rutgers - CHEM - 327
PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY I, 01-160:327, SUMMER 2004 EXAM IIIInstructions: This exam contains xx pages (incl. cover) with questions; one blank page for scrap usage; and two pages with information likely to be useful (formulas, conversion factors, integral
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 367
UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL BIOL367MERCURY CONTAMINATION PROBLEMS: IMPACT ON AQUATIC SYSTEMSDr R T Leah Jones Building, Biological SciencesFurther Reading Clark, R.B. 1989 (1992 or 2001 3rd, 4th or 5th Edns) Marine Pollution. Oxford : Clarendon Pres
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 367
University of LiverpoolBIOL367The State of the Baltic SeaA lecture by Rick Leah The Baltic Sea is a relatively small area of sea that only has one small opening to the oceans of the world. This makes it vulnerable to anthropogenic influences in
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 202
BIOL202 1 A. B. C. D.Review ExerciseWhich of the following metals is methylated by biological activity? Mercury Lead Chromium Copper2 Which cod fishery could be most accurately described as sustainably managed? A. B. C. D. 3 A. B. C. D. The Gra
East Los Angeles College - ENVS - 211
ENVS211University of LiverpoolEnvironmental Assessment Relevant Books in Liverpool LibrariesEIAPetts. Judith (Ed) 1999 Handbook of environmental impact assessment Oxford ; Malden, MA : Blackwell Science,. Harrop, D. Owen and J. Ashley Nixon. 1
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 367
BIOL367University of LiverpoolPollutants in food chains: impacts on birdsA lecture by Dr Rick LeahIntroductionAs you should have started to appreciate, the determination of cause and effect of adverse environmental impacts from specific toxin
Campbell - MAIL - 1015
BACHELOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION / MASTER OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (BBA/MBA) PGA GOLF MANAGEMENT MAJOR GENERAL COLLEGE CORE (48 - 57 hrs.)Fine Arts (3 hrs.)Art / Music / Theatre 131 3NAME -ID# -ELECTIVES (6 hrs.)Elective (_) Elective (_
Campbell - MAIL - 1012
PGA Golf Management Program @ Campbell University Curriculum OutlineYear 1Fall Semester BADM 100 - New Student Forum ENGL 101 - Composition 1 HIST 111 - Western Civilization 1 MATH 111 - College Algebra PGM 150 - Intro to Golf Management PGM 170 -
Campbell - MAIL - 1011
BACHELOR OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION (BBA) PGA GOLF MANAGEMENT MAJOR ACADEMIC CHECKLIST GENERAL COLLEGE CORE (48 - 57 hrs.)Fine Arts (3 hrs.)Art / Music / Theatre 131 3NAME -ID# -BUSINESS CORE (43 hrs.)ACCT 213 - Principles of Accounting BADM
Campbell - MAIL - 1023
Print FormSubmit by EmailPGA Golf Management Program at Campbell University Supervising Professional Internship Agreement - PGM 390As the supervising professional, I recognize and agree that an internship is an extension of the learning environ
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 213
BIOL213University of LiverpoolMan-made LakesA lecture by Dr Rick Leah Jones Building School of Biological Sciences In the last 50 years or so many artificial lakes have been created. Despite their potential to improve the human condition, initia
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
A 9 8 3 "67 65"31 @! 1 4 1 2 (0) (' & % #" 1 ) $ ! uo o lz kg lz k o ko p o qdidqqdeofqdfjddddroq}ddeorlrfjd3qdq jdidxdroFfjidqd#qdqfzfledrfjddqqd y g kz p goz o lo ko p p kz un dqzq l{q dqejdqd" z fq
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
1 8 1 "@A @9"71 6 4 3 5! 2 (0) (' & % #" 1 ) $ ! tn n ky jf ky j n jn o n phpvpdnepdeidqnp|ddnqkqei7pp ihxqnFeihpd#ppeyekdqeippd x f jy o fny n kn jn o o jy tm pyp kzp ~ pdiq" ~y 6eqdpdpqhzpp p| m fn
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
1 8 1 "@A @9"71 6 4 3 5! 2 (0) (' & % #" 1 ) $ ! tn n ky jf ky j n jn o n phpvpdnepdeidqnp|ddnqkqei7pp ihxqnFeihpd#ppeyekdqeippd x f jy o fny n kn jn o o jy tm pyp kzp ~ pdiq" ~y 6eqdpdpqhzpp p| m fn
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
1 8 1 "@A @9"71 6 4 3 5! 2 (0) (' & % #" 1 ) $ ! tn n ky jf ky j n jn o n phpvpdnepdeidqnp|ddnqkqei7pp ihxqnFeihpd#ppeyekdqeippd x f jy o fny n kn jn o o jy tm pyp kzp ~ pdiq" ~y 6eqdpdpqhzpp p| m fny n
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
1 8 1 "@A @9"71 6 4 3 5! 2 (0) (' & % #" 1 ) $ ! tn n ky jf ky j n jn o n phpvpdnepdeidqnp|ddnqkqei7pp ihxqnFeihpd#ppeyekdqeippd x f jy o fny n kn jn o o jy tm pyp kzp ~ pdiq" ~y 6eqdpdpqhzpp p| m fn
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
1 8 1 "@A @9"71 6 4 3 5! 2 (0) (' & % #" 1 ) $ ! tn n ky jf ky j n jn o n phpvpdnepdeidqnp|ddnqkqei7pp ihxqnFeihpd#ppeyekdqeippd x f jy o fny n kn jn o o jy tm pyp kzp ~ pdiq" ~y 6eqdpdpqhzpp p| m fn
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
Q 9 6 6 @875P %H IE %G% B' DFE 3 ' (DCB' A3 0 421(")' % ! (&$#" d z l} n e} l es z l} x l g g} g x l j l z} z} p z l} ~rf~rr~2v2qq2~2qh"1~ x l g e z} n d} n p g z d z z l}
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
' PQ 9 6 6 @875B 3 ' (PIH'GE F%C DB %A 3 0 421(")' % ! (&$#" ~ y k| m d| k dr y k| w k f f| f w k i k y| y| o y k| }qe}qq}2v2pp2}2ph"1} w k f d y| m | m o f y y y k| w k f
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
' PQ 9 6 6 @875B 3 ' (PIH'GE F%C DB %A 3 0 421(")' % ! (&$#" ~ y k| m d| k dr y k| w k f f| f w k i k y| y| o y k| }qe}qq}2v2pp2}2ph"1} w k f d y| m | m o f y y y k| w k f
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
z w fv wg XYl UtqpgwvIxGtWcgvA"dtsgGtiCw k x U w ` q ge Ub Qw ~ | g kE}Izl ykkw"gk p ~| g l uog t g ck}Iz!ykw"gukg t pdsarq gb d p o!ykipg9e i l 9w vx w ` q ge Ub Ixwgw k IXk Y Upgtq wwgU wvIxGtWcgvA"dtsgGtiCw k g k w k tw9wG
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
' PQ 9 6 6 @875B 3 ' (PIH'GE F%C DB %A 3 0 421(")' % ! (&$#" ~ y k| m d| k dr y k| w k f f| f w k i k y| y| o y k| }qe}qq}2v2pp2}2ph"1} w k f d y| m | m o f y y y k| w k f
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
' PQ 9 6 6 @875B 3 ' (PIH'GE F%C DB %A 3 0 421(")' % ! (&$#" ~ y k| m d| k dr y k| w k f f| f w k i k y| y| o y k| }qe}qq}2v2pp2}2ph"1} w k f d y| m | m o f y y y k| w k f
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
' PQ 9 6 6 @875B 3 ' (PIH'GE F%C DB %A 3 0 421(")' % ! (&$#" ~ y k| m d| k dr y k| w k f f| f w k i k y| y| o y k| }qe}qq}2v2pp2}2ph"1} w k f d y| m | m o f y y y k| w k f
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
s hy ph iaivgbrwig c|WiawivgW}uc|}vab}|wip}aaig yiSrig c|c'}uh a h a e p p g b e h x p h g g g a f h a a a b a g }ai}iyU ph g b au t g f c i ij o i f g i fj 2f Sf f 4$f k f fj i $kf Sf g 2f kf c e f dc e
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 202
BIOL202University of LiverpoolVariation in Fish Biomass Coastal California from scales in sediments0ca76ab449d870606b7979e4c9019da72588f663.doc 07/06/20091BIOL202University of Liverpool0ca76ab449d870606b7979e4c9019da72588f663.doc 07/0
East Los Angeles College - ENVS - 211
ENVS211University of LiverpoolRisk Assessment & Environmental Decision MakingBy Dr Rick LeahWhat is Risk Assessment?Are there problems with it? Ethics?What are the alternatives?Hazard and risk: problems with terminologyOne of the diffic
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
u s u d s x u bwhvdhdku|w!wh(wewey"ddh9weeGud ux hweeuec sh d nU0I{ l U y s h s x u s d Ej!hdGudYd ux wh7dku"ddh7wgkd ux !whgkec pwxj!Yu"dhyd ux !whqwxGu"dh0Egd ux !hewpwu!dhwuGudwhxd ux !whqh"ddhbgyd ux !hyec u sh h s x u shdc u s s x u shd p s
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
r f w X V ~uhw 1h h h w uw uh~uhw f'q'aV F gvf h afV@h p da ieh f Y h a @p V dqV ~ e ec pe h e p f e h f qhh a @p c h baY 1h a if w1h e a ifa T y e}T V fry c Ye VF T g V T TP } h da`X fViFgV xd{wg dhh {uhdw }Wf "Th T e Pw Tg"
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
`wr u frq Vq ihf V Vf r r x ` b xh ` u j vpHaqeasra(pHYbeYHHpYhdVbeHyp`Hcvcaqph Bz Haq j 'z j HpYhdVbpoVynpl (ahr'poq H{dcl`yn ayhax qeriq poptnu yhj aYXWU f r z z j r h i bz u x l B` V x ph fr Haq n b` Q GECA 9 RPIHFDB@8 bq b V `
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
ryswt$yhtv~yx yv8ys}{UDypyss p shtvyzys v {syh{ by! yhDyyssp }ve{ x v s $ y vy { o i md i Umd x { s s Xs}v{8yE{}{yD{usy{ }EAyv{ywt xwut r ybv!sq r i 8 ii rrw s wvsX}s{k s rk s 8ysyv{ryywt s}v}wvt`
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
x f v p q p f v d axv p ar q f d a GteVmqGy9xd u qGp h gqxY U W Y U lki U XGhy)mGmtG 0ugf}fdXW0zGfmf$5 W | U k q f b uiGi0kG0za d| U z q b d Y k d U z a q b d Y q `{Q'ecba 9GmiGikGm0zyeba E dGdW XdUjmym d0U tsecba
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 202
BIOL202University of LiverpoolMarine Fisheries Over-exploitation and mis-management?Lecture by Dr Rick T Leah Introduction World fisheries remain very important for human food supply (and Britain's in particular). However, the industry is in cr
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 202
BIOL202University of LiverpoolVariation in Fish Biomass Coastal California from scales in sediments56f9e3eff0519fcef7b5084951ada6448f52afdb.doc 107/06/2009BIOL202University of Liverpool56f9e3eff0519fcef7b5084951ada6448f52afdb.doc 20
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
v e 8g"xifBkqxx"n n n v kihkYh wsBpup !WYggh i mnq qpyh 9w iSt mr un iY} Yw izgYhh Yiqpspn ivhYqy fq8sDqp2qh2ivYh wph x h t n e v z h v h g p u ~ y t eonYyq8q ihgi"xwpu ~ y t i spqihsqqx v e { n e fiBk qxx"nqhsWign w t igwuYYsivinn pi
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
Gwstlururvbwfdtdtyldt f tryp`wbx" dbbjxf r v r t o stbbwolr tt `1rv ustr wl ufurr 6ww xsdttbjr r b wourt bmse d1urvbl jbwx o kbrlsf xbttr ourtl dgjr w@jw%ft butvur srlypjtqfv j1str xbxtl l r f 1 l e r e lo r t r r t f l mdt'ft
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
d h xddvgt'ejgnx d v bth hdrIv fgrhIir ' Grv dth tdh v h f r t vv v v re} td%y x hv jrftq iyr svt x ebIuXihdyehd$gehd q vIdevrf ddteeddhdghd gh'gjfxd gvfrevd`Sx$iut'iwinek g 1ghe t y r t r xr tr h f h t d vq r j r t g caYW U hfedb`X
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
r w w Twxf o xeu r o xee r o xePEe k geeu yeykx fus eg{1 w w ui x " t yx v z Yvv xt s s y y g u u u k x u 9 AeiCsxihgeeeey1 s )1#flsxPf ks xHs xYxy e y vwu x h db`X V igfecaYWU u x w u mvsvks eyx s x )w s x
Pittsburgh - MATH - 082
s hy ph iaivgbrwig c|WiawivgW}uc|}vab}|wip}aaig yiSrig c|c'}uh a h a e p p g b e h x p h g g g a f h a a a b a g }ai}iyU ph g b au t g f c i ij o i f g i fj 2f Sf f 4$f k f fj i $kf Sf g 2f kf c e f dc e
East Los Angeles College - ENVS - 211
ENVS211University of LiverpoolEnvironmental Management SystemsHuman societies have long had a major impact on their environment, and their tendency to exploit it as if it were an inexhaustible resource has repeatedly led to disaster. Growth in w
East Los Angeles College - ENVS - 211
ENVS211University of LverpoolENVS211 Research Philosophy, Design and MethodsEnvironmental ManagementIntegrated ThinkingEnvironmental ManagementManagement IssuesOur industrial activities have polluted air, sea and land, and we are now left
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 202
The Consequences of the Pollution of FreshwatersWhy be concerned? Source of drinking water Water is used for disposal of effluents Land is used for the disposal of solid sludges (associated toxins)The consequences of Waste Disposal in Freshwat
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 468
Lect 10BIOL468 & ECOOL198UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOLInteractions of fish, environment and fishing:Considerations for Management Dr R.T.Leah School of Biological Sciences Status : v2 Introduction Fish populations are very important to human populat
East Los Angeles College - BIOL - 468
vti_encoding:SR|utf8-nl vti_author:SR|rickl vti_modifiedby:SR|RICK\rickl vti_timecreated:TR|20 Oct 2004 07:34:53 -0000 vti_timelastmodified:TR|07 Nov 2005 15:46:22 -0000 vti_title:SR|Fish Lect Fish&fishing v0.0 vti_extenderversion:SR|6.0.2.5516 vti_b
UPenn - CIS - 665
CIS 665 GPU Programming and ArchitectureHomework #2 Due: June 6/3/091) Bezier Curves & Color Shaping (30 points) Background: The concept of color shaping was introduced in Lecture 2 as a demonstration of shading that exceeds the capabilities of t
UPenn - CIS - 665
GPU Memory Model OverviewAaron Lefohn University of California, Davis With updates from slides by Suresh Venkatasubramanian, University of Pennsylvania Updates performed by Gary J. Katz, University of PennsylvaniaReview3D API: OpenGL or Direct3D
UPenn - CIS - 665
Skin RenderingGPU GraphicsGary J. Katz University of Pennsylvania CIS 665Adapted from David Gosselins Power Point and article, Real-time skin rendering, ShaderX articleOverview Background Offline rendering Texture space lighting Blur and
UPenn - CIS - 665
Morphing and AnimationGPU GraphicsGary J. Katz University of Pennsylvania CIS 665Adapted from articles taken from ShaderX 3, 4 and 5 And GPU Gems 1MorphingVertex Tweening two key meshes are blended varying by time. Morph Targets vertex twe
UPenn - CIS - 665
Havok FX Physics on NVIDIA GPUsWhat is Effects Physics?Physics-based effects on a massive scale10,000s of objects Rigid bodies Particles Fluids Cloth and moreTightly coupled with renderingPhysics on this scale requires simulation to be done cl
UPenn - CIS - 665
CIS 665: GPU Programming and ArchitectureGary Katz and Joseph Kider February 12, 20071Project GuidlinesThe idea of this project is to take on a more intricate problem involving computations on the GPU, and demonstrate a plausible, efficient im
UPenn - CIS - 665
CIS 665: GPU Programming and ArchitectureOriginal Slides by: Suresh Venkatasubramanian Updates by Joseph KiderAdministriviaInstructor Joseph Kider (kiderj _at_ seas.upenn.edu) Office Hours: Tuesdays 3-5pm Office Location: Moore 103 HMS LabM
UPenn - CIS - 665
CG Programming TutorialCIS 665 GPU Programming and Architecture Joseph KiderCG Tutorialhttp:/www.seas.upenn.edu/~cis665/Schedule and resource pagesSlides, links, more details of what I am talking about today.CG Tutorial (thanks too.)Slide i
UPenn - CIS - 665
CG Programming TutorialCIS 665 GPU Programming and Architecture Joseph KiderCG Tutorialhttp:/www.seas.upenn.edu/~cis665/Schedule and resource pagesSlides, links, more details of what I am talking about today.CG Tutorial (thanks too.)
UPenn - CIS - 665
Functional Simulation of the nVidia G80 GPGPU pipelineCIS 665 PROJECT DESIGN DOCUMENTArun Raghavan University of PennsylvaniaPROJECT ABSTRACTFunctional simulation has long been used by CPU architects to study the effects of architectural and mic