Courses Taught
ENGR 270 - Survey of How Things Work
-
Description: Removing mysteries surrounding science and technology. Identify key concepts from applied science and technology to obtain better understanding on how things work. Review and explain the principles behind the technologies which define our modern way of life. A survey of broad range of technology could include: cell phones, GPS, radio, television, computers, ultrasound, microwave ovens, automobile, bioengineering, and other industrial and consumer technologies. Common day technology examples illustrating scientific knowledge and applications.
EE 185 - Introduction to Electrical Engineering and Problem Solving I
-
Description: Project based examples from electrical engineering. Systematic thinking process for engineering problem solving. Group problem solving. Mathematical, conceptual and computer based projects. Solving engineering problems and presenting solutions through technical reports and oral presentations. Solutions of engineering problems using computation tools and basic programming.
-
Prerequisites: Credit or enrollment in MATH 142
EE 186 - Introduction to Electrical Engineering and Problem Solving II
-
Description: Project based and hands on continuation of 185. Group skills needed to work effectively in teams. Individual interactive skills for small and large groups. Learning to use tools and methods for solving electrical engineering problems.
-
Prerequisites: EE 185
EE 311 - Electromagnetic Fields and Waves
-
Description: Fundamentals and applications of electric and magnetic fields and materials. Electrostatics and magnetostatics, potentials, capacitance and inductance, energy, force, and torque. Uniform plane electromagnetic waves, Poynting vector. Transmission lines: transient and sinusoidal steady-state conditions, reflection coefficient.
-
Prerequisites: EE 201, MATH 265, PHYS 222, credit or enrollment in MATH 267.
EE 314 - Electromagnetics for non Electrical Engineers
-
Description: Conceptual study of electromagnetism and its application in engineering and related fields. EM fundamentals, EM spectrum, radiation, radiating systems, wireless, modern concepts of physics, quantum computing, transmission lines, high speed effects, waveguides, GPS, and other related phenomena will be discussed and explained with the application in mind.
-
Prerequisites: PHYS 222, PHYS 112 or equivalent.
EE/CPRE/SE 491 - Senior Design Project I and Professionalism
-
Description: Preparing for entry to the workplace. Selected professional topics. Use of technical writing skills in developing project plan and design report; design review presentation. First of two-semester team-oriented, project design and implementation experience.
-
Prerequisites: EE 322 or CPRE 308, ENGL 314, completion of 24 credits in EE/CPRE/SE core professional program
Loading...