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English |
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ENG 381 - Medieval World Literature Credits: 3
An introduction to Medieval World Literature in translation, including works from Europe, the Middle East, and Asia from the sixth century CE to 1400 CE. Students will read major works by Boethius, Dante, Christine de Pizan, Petrarch, Abelard and Heloise, Chretien de Troyes, Farid Ud-Din Attar, Kenko, Sei Shonagon, and Ou-Yang Hsui, as well as anonymous Irish and Anglo-Saxon texts.
Prerequisite(s): ENG 201 .
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ENG 419 - Advanced Grant Writing Credits: 3
This course applies the fundamentals and theory of grant writing to a client-based project with non-profit or not-for-profit local organizations in a service-learning environment. Students will work with the client to locate sources of funding, prepare the grant proposal, and submit the grant application to the appropriate agency. Classroom instruction will include rhetorical analysis of the grant-writing situation broadly allowing them to apply principles of effective grant writing to a specific client and grant situation. English 419 also emphasizes the effective management of collaborative writing and client-based projects.
Prerequisite(s): ENG 319 or permission of instructor.
Repeatability: This course is repeatable up to six hours for the Rhetoric and Writing emphasis.
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Exercise Science |
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Finance |
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FIN 305 - Business Finance Credits: 3
The methods utilized by corporations in securing and utilizing capital. Major topics of interest include capital budgeting, cost of capital, capital structure, and characteristics of alternative forms of capital.
Prerequisite(s): ACCT 201 , ACCT 202 , ECON 265 , ECON 208 , ECON 209 , and MATH 215 .
Term(s) Offered: Fall, Spring, Summer
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French |
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Gender Studies |
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