May 07, 2024  
University of Alberta Calendar 2020-2021 
    
University of Alberta Calendar 2020-2021 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Listings


 

Details of Courses

Courses taught at the University of Alberta are listed alphabetically. All courses, except those taught by Faculté Saint-Jean, are described in English.

Each course is designated by its computer abbreviation and a number. Students should use this abbreviation and number when completing any form requiring this information.

Courses are numbered according to the following system:

000-099 Pre-University
100-199 Basic Undergraduate. Normally requires no university-level prerequisites. Designed typically for students in the first year of a program.
200-299 Undergraduate. Prerequisites, if any, are normally at the 100-level. Designed typically for students in the second year of a program.
300-399 Undergraduate. Prerequisites, if any, are normally at the 200-level. Designed typically for students in the third year of a program.
400-499 Advanced Undergraduate. Prerequisites, if any, are normally at the 300-level. Designed typically for students in the fourth year of a program.
500-599 Graduate. Designated for graduate students and certain advanced or honors undergraduate students in their final year.
600-799 Graduate Courses
800-899 Special Registrations
900-999 Graduate Thesis and Project Numbers

For the purposes of program descriptions and prerequisite designation, courses numbered 100-199 are designated as Junior Courses and courses numbered 200-499 are designated as Senior Courses.

Note: Some exceptions to the course number system described above have been granted to the Faculty of Law and the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry.

Course Description Symbols and Figures

Several symbols and figures are used to indicate the type, duration, and weight of courses.

  1. ★—Indicates “units of course weight,” and usually follows the course title. The accompanying number indicates the weight of the course as used in computing grade point averages and for meeting degree requirements.
    A course which runs throughout the Fall/Winter (i.e., from September through April) is usually weighted ★6. A course that runs for only one term (i.e., Fall: from September to December, or Winter: from January through April) is usually weighted ★3. Certain courses are offered over Fall/Winter or Spring/Summer, or in one term, with weights of ★1, ★2, and ★4. These are considered as one-sixth, one-third, and two-thirds of a Fall/Winter or Spring/Summer course, respectively. Some honors and graduate courses involving research may vary in weight according to the length and difficulty of the project. Some clinical courses may vary in weight according to the length of clinical experience. Some courses, not included in the computation of grade point averages, are offered for credit only and either carry a weight of ★0, or are marked as “Credit.”
    Undergraduate students who take courses offered by the Faculty of Engineering but are not registered in Engineering will have a course weight assigned for these courses according to the protocol of their home Faculty.
  2. fi—Denotes: “fee index,” the value used to calculate the instructional fees for each course. The fee index is multiplied by the fee index value (given in the appropriate subsection of Fees Payment Guide ) to give the dollar value of instructional fees for the course.
    For normal courses, the fee index is twice the value of the units of course weight; for example, a course with ★3 normally has fi 6. In cases where exceptional fees considerations need to be made, the fee index is set differently by the Board of Governors.
    Note that certain programs (e.g., MD, DDS, etc.) are assessed on a program fee basis for all or certain years. In these cases, the fee index calculation does not apply.
  3. (x term, a-b-c)—These figures in parentheses give information on when the course is offered and the hours of instruction required by the course in a week, or in some cases the total time in a term.
    In the case of a single-term course, the term in which the course is given is mentioned (item x). The designation “either term” means that the course may be offered either in the first term or in the second term or in each term, at the discretion of the department concerned. The designation “variable” means that the course may be taught either as a single-term or as a full-session course.
    Item a indicates lecture hours. Item b indicates seminar hour(s), demonstration hours (d), clinic hours (c), or lecture-laboratory hours (L). Item c indicates laboratory hours. For two-term courses, the hours of instruction are the same in both terms unless otherwise indicated. The expression 3/2 means 3 hours of instruction every second week; 2s/2 means 2 seminar hours every second week.
    Examples:
    (first term, 3-0-3): a course taught in first term with 3 hours lecture, no seminar, and 3 hours lab per week.
    (second term, 0-1s-2): a course taught in second term with no lectures, 1 seminar hour, and 2 hours of lab per week.
    (either term, 3-0-0): a course taught in either first or second term, or each term, with 3 lecture hours per week, no seminar, and no lab.
    (two-term, 3-0-3): a course taught over both first and second term with three lecture hours, no seminar, and three hours lab per week.
    (variable, 3-0-0): a course which may be taught in either first or second term or over two terms with three lecture hours per week, no seminar, and no lab.
  4. Prerequisite—This provides information on courses which must be successfully completed before registering in the more advanced course.
    Corequisite—This provides information on courses which must be taken before or at the same time as the course described in the listing.
    Note: Departments are authorized to cancel the registration of those students registered in a course offered by the department if they do not meet the prerequisite and/or corequisite requirements stated in the course description in this Calendar.
  5. [Department]— This indicates the department responsible for registration for interdepartmental courses. Normally, courses will be credited to the discipline listed in the square brackets.
  6. Open Studies Courses—Courses that are available to Open Studies students are designated in Bear Tracks Course Catalog by the  symbol.  indicates that a course is available to Open Studies students on a delayed registration basis only (see Registration  for complete details).  To browse courses that have been approved for Open Studies students, see Open Studies Course Listings on the Office of the Registrar website.
Important: Registration Procedures for Two-Term Courses

Students are strongly advised to refer to the Registration and Courses menu at www.registrarsoffice.ualberta.ca for details. Two-term courses are normally offered over two terms (either Fall/Winter or Spring/Summer). In a few instances, two-term courses are offered within a single term. In all cases these are identifiable in the Class Schedule because they consist of part A and part B (e.g., English 111A and 111B).

To successfully register in a two-term course, students, must do the following:

  • Register in both the part A and part B for all types of sections offered (Lectures, Labs, Seminars, etc.);
  • Register in the same section numbers for part A and part B of a course (e.g., Lecture A1 for both part A and part B, and Lab E3 for both part A and part B);
  • Register in all the appropriate sections on the same day.

All of the above must be done or the course registration is invalid and will be deleted. Invalid registrations will be deleted nightly. It is the student’s responsibility to attempt the course registration again, subject to availability.

Example: A student wishes to register in ABCD 101, a two-term course. It has a lecture and a lab section. Based on the student’s timetable planning, decides to take Lecture C3 and Lab C8. The student must add

In Fall Term ABCD 101A Lec C3 and ABCD 101A Lab C8,
and  
In Winter Term ABCD 101B Lec C3 and ABCD 101B Lab C8.

All these sections must be added on the same day to successfully register. Otherwise the registration in ABCD 101 will be deleted overnight and the student’s place in the course will be lost.

Course Renumbering

Over the years many courses have been renumbered. Old numbers can be found within individual course listings of previous Calendar editions.

Courses on Reserve

Courses not offered in the past four years are removed from this Calendar and placed on Reserve. These courses may be taught again in the future, in which case they would be brought back into the active Course Listings and placed in the Calendar. Information about Reserve Courses is available through the Registrar’s Office, the University Secretariat, and Faculty Offices.

Faculty Specific Regulations Regarding Courses

For specific Faculty regulations relating to courses and for a complete list of subjects taught by a Faculty, please consult the Undergraduate Programs section of the Calendar at the end of each Faculty section.

Physical Requirements for University Courses

The University has a commitment to the education of all academically qualified students and special services are frequently provided on campus to assist disabled students.

Nevertheless, some courses make certain unavoidable demands on students with respect to the possession of a certain level of physical skill or ability if the academic objectives of the course are to be realized. In case of doubt, students are advised to contact the Department concerned and Student Accessibility Disability Services (SAS), Office of the Dean of Students.

Because support services cannot be guaranteed for all off-campus courses, instructors may be obliged to refuse registration in such courses.

Course Availability

The following is a comprehensive course listing of all the approved courses that the University of Alberta may offer. The appearance of a course in this list does not guarantee that the course will actually be offered. The most current information on courses is available on Bear Tracks at https://www.beartracks.ualberta.ca

Course Listings

 

Civil Engineering: Graduate

  
  • CIV E 607 - Productivity Modeling and Analysis


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Planning for productivity improvement, work measurement techniques, data analysis and productivity evaluation techniques, work planning methods, lean concept, automation and robotics, human behaviour, safety, computer tools in productivity modeling and analysis.
  
  • CIV E 608 - Construction Engineering


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Introduction to the elements and methods of construction and principles of material handling on construction projects. Winter construction, dewatering, earthmoving and earthworks, concrete processes, building systems and lifting.
  
  • CIV E 609 - Underground Trenchless Construction


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Introduction to underground pipeline infrastructure. Focus on pipeline condition assessment. New construction such as horizontal directional drilling, pilot tube microtunneling, pipe bursting, and pipe jacking. Rehabilitation methods such as cured in place pipe lining, geotechnical consideration. Risk considerations for underground projects.
  
  • CIV E 612 - Transportation Planning: Methodology and Techniques


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Introduction and overview of transportation planning. Institutional framework of transportation planning. Characteristics of urban travel, trip generation, trip distribution, mode choice, trip assignment, urban activity system. Transportation supply, transportation system impact analysis, evaluation process and methods. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
  
  • CIV E 613 - Transportation Systems and Demand Analysis


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Microeconomic principles of production and consumer behaviour. Econometric modeling of demand: parameter estimation techniques, disaggregate choice theory, sampling and data preparation, evaluation. Networks, economic evaluations. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
  
  • CIV E 614 - Traffic Operation and Control


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Human factors, traffic control devices, signal warrants, principles of signalized intersections, signal timing, signal optimization and coordination, capacity, traffic delay, left turn, diamond interchange, unsignalized intersection, roundabouts, actuated control, incident management, freeway control.
  
  • CIV E 615 - Traffic Flow and Network Modeling


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Traffic flow stream characteristics, car following model, continuum flow model, fundamental diagram, microscopic traffic simulation, macroscopic traffic flow modeling, model parameter calibration, route choice concept and model, static traffic network modeling, dynamic traffic network modeling.
  
  • CIV E 616 - Traffic Safety


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (first term, 3-0-0) Introduction to traffic safety. Focus on collisions and exposure. Safety management process. Collision modeling, theory and applications. Safety evaluation techniques, challenges, opportunities, influence of confounding factors and regression to the mean bias.
  
  • CIV E 617 - Highway Geometric Design


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (second term, 3-0-0) Principles and process of highway geometric design. Alignment and cross section elements, design of at-grade intersection, local roads and roadside features. Application of current road geometric design guidelines in Canada and Alberta. Examination of trade-offs between performance, costs and impacts. Highlight new and evolving geometric design concepts and the latest research findings. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
  
  • CIV E 620 - Environmental Engineering Measurements I


    ★ 4.5 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-3) Theory and procedures for determining the quality of natural water, potable water, municipal and industrial wastes. Fundamental parameters and concepts for environmental quality evaluation.
  
  • CIV E 622 - Physical/Chemical Water and Wastewater Treatment


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Theory and design of chemical and physical unit processes utilized in the treatment of water and wastewater, sedimentation, flotation, coagulation, precipitation, filtration, disinfection, ion exchange, reverse osmosis, adsorption, and gas transfer.
  
  • CIV E 623 - Industrial Water and Wastewater Management


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Industrial water quantity and quality requirements. Characteristics of wastes, inplant controls, product recovery; effluent characteristics, chemical and toxic properties, pretreatment and treatment design theory and methodology, water reclamation and reuse regulations.
  
  • CIV E 624 - Biological Waste Treatment Processes


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Study of the theoretical and applied aspects of wastewater treatment by activated sludge, fixed and moving biological films, conventional and aerated lagoons, sludge digestion, septic tanks, land treatment, and nutrient removal. Guidelines, regulations and economics. System analysis and design of facilities.
  
  • CIV E 625 - Engineering Management of Water Quality


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Concepts, rationale, theory, institutions and engineering aspects of water quality management. Methods of water quality management; oxygen; chemical and microbial models, natural and induced re-aeration techniques; thermal pollution and ice cover considerations.
  
  • CIV E 627 - Environmental Engineering Measurements II


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 1-0-4) Laboratory experiments to present techniques for obtaining data and relationships needed for design of treatment facilities. Introduction to experimental design principles and their application. Statistical analysis of experimental data for data interpretation, presentation and design.
  
  • CIV E 628 - Municipal Solid Waste Management


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Principles of municipal waste management to protect public health, municipal waste streams, waste stream analysis and prediction. Refuse collection, storage and hauling methods, and facilities. Engineering design and operation of solid waste processing, treatment and disposal methods: resource recovery, recycling programs, incineration, composting, landfilling, and novel techniques. Solid waste legislation and policies. Environment impacts, impact management and facility siting of waste facilities.
  
  • CIV E 631 - Engineering Fluid Mechanics


    ★ 3.5 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-1) Navier-Stokes equations and viscous flow. Turbulence and Reynolds equations. Potential flow. Boundary layers. Flow around bodies. Jets and wakes. Related Lab experiments.
  
  • CIV E 632 - Hydraulic Structures


    ★ 3.5 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-1) Hydraulic design of water-handling structures used for extraction, retention, conveyance, control, regulation, energy dissipation, drainage, navigation, flood controls and other civil engineering schemes. Related Lab experiments.
  
  • CIV E 635 - Environmental Fluid Mechanics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Mixing processes and pollutant transport in rivers, lakes, estuaries, coastal waters, and the atmosphere. Prerequisite: CIV E 631.
  
  • CIV E 636 - Ice Engineering


    ★ 3.5 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-1) Elementary heat transfer analysis. Ice formation processes. Ice hydraulics. Ice mechanics. Interaction of ice and engineering structures.
  
  • CIV E 641 - Advanced Surface Water Hydrology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Precipitation, evaporation, infiltration. Streamflow and hydrograph analysis. Hydrologic systems. Hydrologic routing. Simulation models. Statistical methods.
  
  • CIV E 645 - Water Resources Planning and Management


    ★ 3.5 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-1) Systems concept on the planning and management of water resources systems. Engineering economics and economic theories. Evaluate and optimize the design and operations of water resources systems using Linear Programming, chance-constrained Linear Programming, Dynamic Programming, Stochastic Dynamic Programming, constrained and unconstrained nonlinear programming. Optimal sizing and operations of reservoir systems and hydropower using HEC5 and urban stormwater management system.
  
  • CIV E 649 - Natural Resources Management


    ★ 3.5 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-1) Related Lab experiments. The course focuses on key topics in natural resource management and modelling: sustainable development, systems thinking and modelling, and risk and reliability analysis. Specific applications may include examples from sustainable forestry, water resources management, mining, the energy sector (and particularly the petrochemical industry), and municipal infrastructure.
  
  • CIV E 652 - Environmental Impact Assessment


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Review of Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA) basics: role of EIA in project planning; screening, scoping, and baseline assessments; description of engineered activities; consultation and participation requirements; conflict management; impact predictions; monitoring; significance determination; decision making for engineering design; impact management; and cumulative effects. Emphasis is placed on principles and practice of impact assessment processes using case studies governed by Canadian and Albertan guidelines and legislation.
  
  • CIV E 654 - Artificial Intelligence and Automation in Construction


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prototyping techniques applied to the design and development of systems based on artificial intelligence techniques for use in construction.
  
  • CIV E 657 - Air Pollution Control


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (first term, 3-0-0) Overview of air quality regulations. Overview of fundamental principles in air quality engineering. Theory and application of processes for gaseous and particulate pollutants control, including incineration, adsorption, absorption, biofiltration, cyclonic separation, electrostatic precipitation, filtration, and scrubbing. Special applications may include the control of sulfur dioxide, nitrogen oxides, volatile organic compounds, and mobile/automotive emissions.
  
  • CIV E 660 - Advanced Structural Analysis


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Direct stiffness theory and modeling of three dimensional framed structures. Linear and nonlinear stability concepts. Approximate and Direct stiffness formulation of geometric nonlinear problems.
  
  • CIV E 661 - Dynamics of Structures


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Dynamics of single and multiple degree of freedom systems. Time step methods. Modal and response spectrum analysis for earthquake loading. Random vibration analysis. Dynamic wind loading analysis. Dynamics of foundations.
  
  • CIV E 664 - Introduction to Solid Mechanics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Formulation of basic equations of elasticity in solid mechanics. Cartesian tensor notation. Variational principles.
  
  • CIV E 665 - Introduction to the Finite Element Method


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Fundamentals of the formulation and application of the finite element method to problems of continuum mechanics, with special reference to civil engineering, including problems in solid mechanics and soil mechanics. Prerequisite: CIV E 664 or consent of Instructor.
  
  • CIV E 670 - Behaviour and Design of Steel Members


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Material properties of structural steels and limit states design concepts. Behaviour and design of steel tension and compression members, beams, and beam-columns. Torsion of members with open cross-sections and plate buckling problems. This course is designed to give the student an advanced understanding of the behaviour of individual members that form the steel structure.
  
  • CIV E 672 - Behavior and Design of Concrete Members


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Strength and behavior of simple reinforced concrete members. Relation between results of research and current design specifications. Material properties. Members subjected to flexure, axial compression, combined flexure and axial load, combined flexure and shear, torsion.
  
  • CIV E 674 - Behavior and Design of Prestressed Concrete Structures


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) (Offered alternate years.) Principles and methods of prestressing. Service load design and analysis. Behavior and strength design. Losses in prestress and anchorage zone stresses. Continuous beams and slabs. Discussion of design specifications.
  
  • CIV E 676 - Behavior and Design of Masonry Structures


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) (Offered alternate years.) Historical developments. Masonry units, mortars and grouts. Behavior, strength and stability of masonry under axial compression. Reinforced masonry in bending and combined axial load and bending. Ductility and joint control. Design application including discussion of code requirements.
  
  • CIV E 678 - Behaviour and Design of Steel Seismic Force Resisting Systems


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) General earthquake engineering concepts and associated requirements of the National Building Code of Canada. Pushover analysis of steel frames. Capacity design philosophy. Seismic behaviour and design of moment-resisting frames, concentrically and eccentrically braced frames, and steel plate shear walls.
  
  • CIV E 680 - Engineering Properties of Soils


    ★ 4 (fi 6) (first term, 3-1s-1) Principle of effective stress, clay-water systems, soil compressibility and theories of consolidation. Pore pressure parameters. Strength of granular and cohesive media. Anisotropy of soils. Laboratory measurement of strength and deformation properties. Stress-strain relations.
  
  • CIV E 681 - Seepage and Drainage


    ★ 4 (fi 6) (first term, 3-1s-1) Elements of hydrogeology; regional groundwater flow, borehole logging methods. Theory of groundwater flow through soils and rocks, permeability, Darcy’s law, field governing equations and their solution by approximate methods, finite difference and finite element methods, unsaturated flow. Civil engineering applications, seepage in earth structures, design of dewatering systems for excavations and slopes, field testing, grouting.
  
  • CIV E 682 - Environmental Geotechnics and Geochemistry


    ★ 3.5 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-1) Environmental laws and regulatory processes; geotechnical characterization for environmental problems; transfer processes; concepts in thermodynamic equilibrium chemistry; geochemical processes in groundwater and mineral-water-atmosphere interaction; geotechnical and geochemical aspects of mine waste management.
  
  • CIV E 683 - Site Investigation Practice


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (first term, 3-0-0) Techniques of site investigation for geotechnical engineering, in situ testing, instrumentation for field performance studies, case histories covering both rock and soil applications.
  
  • CIV E 684 - Engineering Geology and Terrain Analysis


    ★ 4 (fi 6) (second term, 3-1s-1) Information sources in engineering geology and terrain analysis, elements of the geology of sediments and glacial geology. Glacial and periglacial land forms. Photogeology and airphoto interpretation applied to geotechnical engineering. Case histories based on specific materials and regional problems.
  
  • CIV E 690 - Advanced Foundation Engineering


    ★ 4 (fi 6) (either term, 3-1s-1) Theories of lateral pressures. Limit equilibrium methods, elasticity methods, semi-empirical methods. Soil anchors. Design of retaining walls and strutted excavations. Bearing capacity of shallow and deep foundations. Allowable settlement of structures. Analysis of settlement of shallow and deep foundations. Behavior of pile groups. Design problems in foundation engineering.
  
  • CIV E 692 - Tunnelling


    ★ 3.5 (fi 6) (second term, 3-1s-0) Methods of tunnelling, including excavation methods and support techniques, ground response, in situ and induced stress field, displacement field around deep and near surface tunnels, ground-support interaction, design criteria for tunnels in soil and rock, shaft design, site investigation practice and monitoring of tunnels.
  
  • CIV E 695 - Soil Structures


    ★ 4 (fi 6) (second term, 3-1s-1) Stresses in slopes. Limit equilibrium methods of analysis. Landslides in soil. Design of earth dams and embankments. Case histories of earth and rockfill dams. Dam foundations. Soft ground tunnelling.
  
  • CIV E 697 - Rock Engineering


    ★ 4 (fi 6) (first term, 3-1s-1) Elements of structural geology, analysis of the geometry of rock defects, properties of intact rocks. Properties of rock masses and stresses in rock masses, stability of rock slopes. Rock foundations and underground excavations in rock. Case studies.
  
  • CIV E 698 - Petroleum Geomechanics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Application geotechnical engineering principles to petroleum engineering problems. Principles of thermo-poroelasticity are reviewed. Borehole stability, hydraulic fracturing, subsidence/heave, sand production, formation damage and reservoir-geomechanical modelling are the major topics for the course. Special attention is given to geomechanical influences on reservoir flow processes. Prerequisite: consent of Instructor.
  
  • CIV E 709 - Advanced Topics in Construction Engineering and Management


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CIV E 719 - Advanced Topics in Transportation and Engineering


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Prerequisites: permission of Department or Instructor. In this course various advanced topics on transportation engineering and planning will be taught. Some possible advanced topics are: advanced probability theory, traffic safety, travel survey method, ITS technology, advanced network analysis, travel behaviour analysis, integrated land use and transportation modelling, public transportation planning and designing, freight transportation, transportation logistics and operation research. New topics may be added later by the Instructors.
  
  • CIV E 728 - Water and Wastewater Treatment


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Theory, design and application of new or alternative processes for treatment of water and wastewater, including ozone, chlorine dioxide, ultraviolet radiation, advanced oxidation, membrane and others.
  
  • CIV E 729 - Advanced Topics in Environmental Engineering


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CIV E 739 - Advanced Topics in Fluid Mechanics and Hydraulics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CIV E 749 - Advanced Topics in Water Resources Engineering


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CIV E 779 - Advanced Topics in Structural Engineering


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CIV E 789 - Advanced Topics in Civil Engineering


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CIV E 799 - Advanced Topics in Soil Mechanics


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CIV E 900 - Directed Research Project


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (variable, unassigned) An engineering project for students registered in a Masters of Engineering program.
  
  • CIV E 910 - Directed Research


    ★ 6 (fi 12) (variable, unassigned) An engineering project for students registered in the joint MBA/MEng program.

Classics: Undergraduate

Department of History and Classics
Faculty of Arts

Notes

  1. None of the courses under this heading will fulfil the language other than English requirements for the Faculty of Arts.
  2. Courses under this heading from 100-400 level may be taken by students with no knowledge of Greek or Latin. Knowledge of Greek or Latin may be required at the 500-level.
  3. The 100-level courses provide the broadest introduction to Classics, while the 200-level courses are overviews of specific areas within Classics. The 300-level courses build upon the 200-level courses and have suitable prerequisites. Note: Some 300-level courses do not have a specific topic and the details of the topic to be offered in any given year can be obtained from the Department.
  4. All 400-level courses under this heading have a prerequisite of at least one senior level Classics, Greek, or Latin course.
  5. The courses numbered 460 through the 500-level are designed for Classics majors, honors, and graduate students. Because precise topics in any given course may vary from year to year, students’ interests are taken into account. For additional related courses see Greek (GREEK) and Latin (LATIN) listings.

  
  • CLASS 102 - Greek and Roman Mythology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) A survey of classical mythology with readings in translation from various ancient authors as well as from modern scholarly works.
  
  • CLASS 103 - Introduction to Ancient Greece


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Formerly CLASS 270.
  
  • CLASS 104 - Introduction to Ancient Rome


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Formerly CLASS 271.
  
  • CLASS 110 - The Ancient World


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) World history from the beginning of written records to the sixth century AD. The ancient history of the Mediterranean world, with particular emphasis on Egypt, Greece and Rome and compares developments in civilization in these areas with those in Persia, India and China.
  
  • CLASS 220 - Introduction to the Methodology, Theory and Practice of Classical Archaeology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CLASS 221 - Literature of Greece and Rome


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An introductory survey in English translation of major works from Greek and Latin literature. May not be taken concurrently with or subsequent to CLASS 321/322.
  
  • CLASS 254 - Introduction to Greek Art and Archaeology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Survey of the art, artifacts, and monuments of the Ancient Greek World. Formerly CLASS 252.
  
  • CLASS 255 - Introduction to Roman Art and Archaeology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Survey of the art, artifacts, and monuments of the Ancient Roman World. Formerly CLASS 252.
  
  • CLASS 261 - Women, Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) The role of women and the construction of gender and sexuality in Greek and Roman society from the Archaic period to Late Antiquity.
  
  • CLASS 280 - Introduction to Ancient Greek History


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Not open to students with credit in any two of CLASS 371, 372, and 373.
  
  • CLASS 282 - Introductory Roman History I


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) From the foundation of the city to the fall of the Republic. Not open to students with credit in CLASS 281, 365 or 366.
  
  • CLASS 283 - Introductory Roman History II


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) The Roman Empire to the late fifth century. Not open to students with credit in CLASS 281, 378 or 379.
  
  • CLASS 284 - History of the Byzantine Empire


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) From its development out of the Eastern Roman Empire until the capture of Constantinople in 1453.
  
  • CLASS 291 - Introduction to Scientific Terminology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) The Greek and Latin elements of modern scientific terminology, with an examination of its history and cultural background.
  
  • CLASS 294 - Ancient Science, Technology, and Medicine


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) An introduction to the development of science, technology, and medicine in the ancient world with particular reference to the civilizations of Greece and Rome.
  
  • CLASS 299 - Topics in the Ancient World


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CLASS 303 - Religion in Greco-Roman Antiquity


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Examination of the nature of pre-Christian religious practices in antiquity.
  
  • CLASS 304 - Warfare in Greco-Roman Antiquity


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) The development from Archaic Greece to Late Antiquity of warfare, both in its technical aspects and as a political and socio-cultural phenomenon. Prerequisite: Any of CLASS 103, 104, or any CLASS course at the 200 level or above or HIST 295 or 296.
  
  • CLASS 321 - Literature and Culture of the Greek World


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Representative works of Greek literature and their cultural context. All readings in English. Prerequisite: CLASS 102, 221 or consent of Department.
  
  • CLASS 322 - Literature and Culture of the Roman World


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Representative works of Latin and Greek literature and their cultural context. All readings in English. Prerequisite: CLASS 102, 221 or consent of Department.
  
  • CLASS 330 - From Alexander the Great to Cleopatra: The Hellenistic World


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) The history of the Hellenistic world from Alexander the Great to the defeat of Antony and Cleopatra at the Battle of Actium. Special emphasis will be placed upon Alexander’s successors and the development of the Hellenistic kingdoms.
  
  • CLASS 355 - Topics in Roman Civilization


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Examination of one aspect of the Classical Roman World. (Emphasis in any one year may be archaeological, historical or literary.)
  
  • CLASS 356 - Topics in Ancient Art


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0) Examination of one aspect of art in the Greco-Roman world. Prerequisites: CLASS 254 or 255.
  
  • CLASS 399 - Topics in the Ancient World


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 3-0-0)
  
  • CLASS 400 - Topics in the Culture and Society of Greco-Roman Antiquity


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Prerequisite: Any course at or above the 200-level in CLASS, GREEK or LATIN, or consent of Department. May be repeated for credit when course content differs.
  
  • CLASS 463 - Topics in Roman History


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Prerequisite: Any CLASS course at the 200 level or above or consent of Department. May be repeated for credit when course content differs.
  
  • CLASS 473 - Topics in Classical Archaeology


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Prerequisite: Any CLASS course at the 200 level or above or consent of Department. May be repeated for credit when course content differs.
  
  • CLASS 475 - Techniques of Classical Field Archaeology


    ★ 3-6 (variable) (variable, 0-10L-0) The techniques of survey, excavation and recording in Classical Archaeology. Prerequisites: Students must be either Classics majors or in a Classics graduate program. Note: Offered only for fieldwork in the archaeology of the Greek and Roman world and restricted to those participating in a fieldwork program sponsored by the Department. Requires payment of additional student instructional support fees. Refer to the Fees Payment Guide in the University Regulations and Information for Students section of the Calendar.
  
  • CLASS 476 - Advanced Field Techniques in Classical Archaeology


    ★ 3-6 (variable) (variable, 0-10L-0) Advanced field application of Classical Archaeological Theory. Prerequisites: CLASS 475 or equivalent. Note: Offered only for fieldwork in the archaeology of the Greek and Roman world and restricted to those participating in a fieldwork program sponsored by the Department. Requires payment of additional student instructional support fees. Refer to the Fees Payment Guide in the University Regulations and Information for Students section of the Calendar.
  
  • CLASS 478 - Topics in Roman Art


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) In-depth study of aspects of Roman art. Prerequisite: Any CLASS course at the 200 level or above or consent of Department. May be repeated for credit when course content differs.
  
  • CLASS 480 - Topics in the Archaeology of the Roman Provinces


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Prerequisite: Any CLASS course at the 200 level or above or consent of Department. May be repeated for credit when course content differs.
  
  • CLASS 481 - Topics in Greek History


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Prerequisite: Any CLASS course at the 200 level or above or consent of Department. May be repeated for credit when course content differs.
  
  • CLASS 498 - Individual Study of Literary Problems


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Prerequisite: Any course at or above the 200-level in CLASS, GREEK, or LATIN or consent of Department. May be repeated for credit when course content differs.
  
  • CLASS 499 - Individual Study of Historical and Archaeological Problems


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Prerequisite: Any CLASS course at the 200 level or above or consent of Department. May be repeated for credit when course content differs.
  
  • CLASS 500 - Fourth-Year Honors Tutorial


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Prerequisite: consent of Department.

Classics: Graduate

  
  • CLASS 501 - Research Methods and Resources in Classics


    ★ 1 (fi 2) (first term, 0-1s-0)
  
  • CLASS 505 - Topics in the Culture and Society of Greco-Roman Antiquity


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0)
  
  • CLASS 515 - Topics in the Archaeology of Greece


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0)
  
  • CLASS 516 - Topics in the Archaeology of the Roman Provinces


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0)
  
  • CLASS 522 - Studies in Ancient History


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0)
  
  • CLASS 578 - Roman Art


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0)
  
  • CLASS 599 - Individual Study


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Prerequisite: consent of Department. Repeatable.
  
  • CLASS 601 - Studies in Classical Archaeology I


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Requires payment of additional student instructional support fees. Refer to the Fees Payment Guide in the University Regulations and Information for Students section of the Calendar.
  
  • CLASS 602 - Studies in Classical Archaeology II


    ★ 3 (fi 6) (either term, 0-3s-0) Requires payment of additional student instructional support fees. Refer to the Fees Payment Guide in the University Regulations and Information for Students section of the Calendar.
 

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