This Calendar is effective September 1, 2000 - August 31, 2001
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3.5 Course Overviews: "G"


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GEOGRAPHY (GEOG)

GEOG 200
World Regional Geography
3—Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with video component.
Prerequisite: None.

This telecourse is designed to provide a systematic introduction to the major geographical regions of the modern world. It examines in turn Europe, Russia, North America, the Pacific Rim, Central America, South America, Islamic North Africa and Southwest Asia, Subsaharan Africa, South Asia, China, and Southeast Asia. The course also introduces the methods and perspectives of the discipline of geography, focusing on the relationships between human societies and their natural and built environments.


GEOG 201
Introductory Human Geography
3—Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with video component.
Prerequisite: None.

This is a telecourse that introduces students to the fundamentals of human geography. It investigates the location of people and activities throughout the world and seeks to understand the reasons for their distribution. Asking questions about where things are, why they are there, and what the geographic significance of their distribution is, this course examines a number of subject areas including: population, migration, social customs, political geography, development, agriculture, industry, settlements and urban patterns, and resource problems.


GEOG 265
Introductory Physical Geography I
3—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with home lab.
Prerequisite: None.
Precluded courses: GEOG 265 cannot be taken for credit if credit has already been obtained for GEOG 261 and GEOG 262.

This course describes some of the natural physical and chemical characteristics of Earth and some of the natural processes occurring at, and near, Earth's surface. It provides a scientific background for further studies of natural systems and the environment, soils, climate and climate change, and water resources. Topics covered include the following: Earth's energy budget, atmospheric and oceanic circulation, moisture in the atmosphere, global climates, vegetation and climate, soils, hydrologic cycle, and water budgets.


GEOG 266
Introductory Physical Geography II
3—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with home lab.
Prerequisite: None.

This course is primarily concerned with geomorphology, the study of the Earth's surface and landforms. It provides students with a clearer understanding of the physical environment around them. Topics covered include the internal structure of the Earth and the forces that shape and deform it, rock types, weathering and erosion, groundwater and the hydrological cycle, and landforms and the agents that create them (volcanoes, gravity, rivers, glaciers, wind, waves and currents).


GEOG 302
The Canadian North
3—Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with home lab.
Prerequisite: None.

The Canadian North surveys the human geography of northern Canada. Despite the fact that this region makes up well over half of the country's total land area, it remains sparsely settled and poorly understood by residents of southern Canada. This course will introduce you to this fascinating and complex area, through an examination of such questions as economic development, environmental issues, and Aboriginal peoples' efforts to attain self-government.


GEOG 304
Introduction to Remote Sensing
3—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: COMP 200 and MATH 270, or the equivalent, are recommended but not required.

This course is designed for students whose interests or vocations involve either the natural or the anthropogenic physical environment. Remote sensing is an examination and interpretation of information obtained through the use of various technologies to explore the surface and subsurface of the earth. Disciplines commonly using such data include agriculture and forestry, fisheries and oceanography, geology and geography, biology/ecology, meteorology and climatology, hydrology and environmental science. Satellites, airborne, and ground-based sensors are used to provide the information used by agencies involved in these studies.

The course includes an exploration of the concepts underlying the acquisition and interpretation of remotely sensed data, and an overview, consisting of case studies, of some of the more common applications of remote sensing. The specific applications discussed include landuse studies, vegetation and agriculture, geology and soils, hydrology, ecology and pollution monitoring, extraterrestrial applications and atmospheric patterns and processes.


GEOG 310
Canadian Urban Development
6—Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: None.
Precluded course: GEOG 310 cannot be taken for credit if credit has already been obtained for SOSC 303.

This course provides students with an understanding of urban systems in Canada. It traces the development of urban growth in Canada, examines various theories that have been put forward to account for the structure and function of the urban system, and focuses on some of the problems and solutions proposed for the future of Canada's cities. This course will be of special interest to educators and people interested in government, public administration, planning, real estate, and public affairs.


GEOG 495-496
Geography Projects
3 each—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: Permission of the professor and at least 12 credits (at least 3 at the senior level) in the topic area.

Geography Projects is based on a contracted study arrangement between the student and an approved supervisor. Students improve their skills to choose and define problems, obtain information from libraries or experiments, organize facts and ideas, and report ideas and conclusions in written form. This course is for students who wish to carry out science-related projects in geography or to obtain formal recognition of science-related skills and training they have received on the job. Projects can only be done on work planned. They cannot be done on work already completed. A student may do one 3-credit project (GEOG 495) or two 3-credit projects (GEOG 495 and GEOG 496). Contact the course professor before registering. These courses are excluded from the challenge for credit policy.




GEOLOGY (GEOL)

GEOL 200
Introductory Physical Geology
3—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: None.

This course describes some of the physical and chemical characteristics of Earth and some of the natural processes occurring in and on Earth. Topics covered include minerals and rocks, igneous rocks, and metamorphic rocks; weathering, soils and sedimentary rocks; geologic time; structural geology; earthquakes and plate tectonics; evolution of ocean basins and the continents; geologic resources; natural transformations of landscapes; volcanoes and volcanic eruptions; and mountain building.


GEOL 201
Introductory Historical Geology
3—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with home lab.
Prerequisite: GEOL 200 is strongly recommended but not required.

Historical geology is involved directly or indirectly with most aspects of geological studies. There are direct links with astronomy, biology, chemistry, and physics. The course examines: introduction to historical geology and basic principles; sedimentary rocks and historical geology; life through time; the geological concepts of time; planetary beginnings and the origin of the Earth; evolution of the Earth; the crust of the Earth; the Precambrian era; the early Paleozoic era; the late Paleozoic era; the Mesozoic era; the Tertiary period; the Quaternary period; historical geology today and tomorrow.


GEOL 313
Our Physical Resources
3—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: None.

This course examines the nature and uses of numerous physical resources of the world, emphasizing the resources of Canada, and Alberta in particular. The course covers such topics as formation, distribution, extraction, and use of fossil fuels, and nuclear and other energy resources. It examines water, metallic, and industrial resources. Political, economic, and social impacts of the development of these resources are also examined.


GEOL 319
Structural Geology: The Architecture of Earth's Continental Crust
3—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with home lab.
Prerequisite: GEOL 200 and GEOL 201 or equivalent. Students should have a working knowledge of geometry.

This course considers the Earth's crust from the scale of continents down to that of a single rock outcrop or hand specimen. Mountain building and the resulting rock structures are the main theme of the course, although other features such as intrusions, salt domes, and crustal extension are also discussed. The course units cover the geological compass, outcrop patterns and geologic maps, plotting with stereonets, apparent dip and related structural geometry, displacement on faults, measurement of fold orientation and folds on geologic maps.


GEOL 415
Earth's Origin and Early Evolution
3—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: GEOL 200 and GEOL 201 or equivalent. Students should feel comfortable with the manipulation of algebraic equations and have a rudimentary knowledge of single-variable differential calculus. Where applied, chemical principles essential for the course are adequately explained, although it would be beneficial for students to have CHEM 217.

This course explores the evidence for the processes, events, and materials involved in the formation and evolution of the Earth. Various geochemical tools and techniques used by geologists to reveal and interpret the evidence are also described and discussed.


GEOL 495-496
Geology Projects
3 each—Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with home lab.
Prerequisite: Permission of the professor and at least 12 credits (at least 3 at the senior level) in the topic area.

Geology Projects is based on a contracted study arrangement between the student and an approved supervisor. Students improve their skills to choose and define problems, obtain information from libraries or experiments, organize facts and ideas, and report ideas and conclusions in written form. This course is for students who wish to carry out science-related projects in geology or to obtain formal recognition of science-related skills and training they have received on the job. Projects can only be done on work planned. They cannot be done on work already completed. A student may do one 3-credit project (GEOL 495) or two 3-credit projects (GEOL 495 and GEOL 496). Contact the course professor before registering. These courses are excluded from the challenge for credit policy.




GERMAN (GERM)

GERM 200
First Year University German I
3—Humanities
Delivery Mode: Home study with audio component.
Prerequisite: None. This course is demanding for students without any knowledge of German. A general knowledge of grammar is necessary. This course may not be taken for credit by students who have obtained credit in a senior-level high school German course.

This course introduces the student to the basic elements of the German language. Both oral and written expressions are emphasized in the study of vocabulary, grammar, and idiomatic expression. Pronunciation, oral comprehension, and reading and writing skills are emphasized as well. The course will enable the student to speak and write in simple German in a range of everyday situations.


GERM 201
First Year University German II
3—Humanities
Delivery Mode: Home study with audio component.
Prerequisite: GERM 200 or equivalent. This course may not be taken for credit by students who have obtained credit in a senior-level high school German course.

This course continues the study of the basic elements of the German language begun in GERM 200. Both oral and written expressions are emphasized in the study of vocabulary, grammar, and idioms. Pronunciation, oral comprehension, and reading and writing skills are emphasized as well. The course enables the student to speak and write in simple German in a range of everyday situations.


GERM 306*
German for Reading Knowledge I
Reading—3—Humanities
Delivery Mode: Home study. Computer access required.
Prerequisite: None.
Precluded course: This course may not be taken for credit by students who have obtained credit in any senior-level high school German, GERM 200, GERM 201, etc.

This course is an introduction to German for the purpose of developing a reading skill in German. Texts from various disciplines in the social sciences and the humanities are deciphered. This course meets the needs of students who require a reading knowledge of German. Contact the course professor before registering to determine if the computer equipment to which you have access is sufficient.

*GERM 306 becomes replaces GERM 305 from fall 2000.




GLOBAL STUDIES (GLST)

(See also GEOG 200, GEOG 201, and HIST 327.)

GLST 307
The Pacific Century
3—Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with video component.
Prerequisite: None.

This course is a telecourse designed to acquaint students with the cultures and recent history of Asian countries on the Pacific Rim, and with the ongoing interchange between these countries and North America. Although several units of the course are devoted to China and to Japan, attention is also given to such Southeast Asian countries as Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, Indonesia, and the Philippines. Tradition and modernization, collisions between East and West, democracy and authoritarianism, imperialism and nationalism, interdependence and independence, and other themes are discussed from the points of view of history, geography, anthropology, political science, and economics.


GLST 308
Americas: An Introduction to Latin America and the Caribbean
3—Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study with video component.
Prerequisite: None.

Americas explores the political, economic, and social dynamics that have shaped Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as the processes that are shaping their future. Americas uses ten hours of video programs to bring to life a startlingly diverse region that encompasses great wealth and desperate poverty, countries as tiny as Jamaica and as enormous as Brazil, with democratic and authoritarian governments and a complex, multicultural heritage.


GLST 377
Twentieth-century China-From the Fall of the Manchu Qing to the Death of Den Xiaoping
3—Social Science
Delivery Mode: Home study.
Prerequisite: GLST 307 is recommended but not required.

The study of modern China is important because of China's great size, population, and global impact in world trade and politics. Moreover, recent Chinese history is of direct relevance to the story of Canadian immigration and to the Chinese diaspora experience in Canada. Twentieth-century China surveys the history of China during the last hundred years, analysing the collapse of the old dynastic empire and its metamorphosis into its present political form.



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