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You are in the official 2007-2008 General Catalog
for California State University, Fresno.
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The following chart is a guide to the appropriate subjects used in this catalog for the university's departments and programs of study.
AAIS Africana and American Indian Studies
ACCT Accountancy
AETH Applied Ethics
AGBS Agricultural Business; Graduate
AGEC Agricultural Economics
AGED Agricultural Education
AGRI Agriculture; Graduate
AH Arts and Humanities
ANTH Anthropology
ARM Armenian
ARMS Armenian Studies
ART Art
ARTDS Art and Design
ARTH Art History
ASAM Asian American Studies
ASCI Animal Sciences
ASP Aerospace Studies
ATHL Athletics
BA Business Administration
BIOL Biology
BIOSC Biological Science Core
BIOTC Biotechnology
BOT Botany
BUS Business
CDDS Communicative Disorders and Deaf Studies
CE Civil Engineering
CGSCI Cognitive Science
CFS Child and Family Sciences
CHEM Chemistry
CHIN Chinese
CI Curriculum and Instruction
CLAS Chicano and Latin American Studies
COMM Communication
COMS Community Service
CONST Construction Management
COUN Counselor Education
CRIM Criminology
CRP City and Regional Planning
CRSC Crop Science - Agronomy and Vegetable Crops
CSB Craig School of Business
CSCI Computer Science
CSH Consumer Science and Housing
CST CalState TEACH
CULG Culinology
DANCE Theatre Arts
DRAMA Theatre Arts
DS Decision Sciences
EAD Educational Administration
ECE Electrical and Computer Engineering
ECOL Ecology
ECON Economics
EDL Educational Leadership
EE Electrical Engineering
EHD Education and Human Development
ENGL English
ENGR Engineering
ENOL Enology
ENSC Environmental Science
ENTR Entrepreneurship
ERA Educational Research and Administration
ESL English as a Second Language
FCS Family and Consumer Sciences
FIN Finance
FL Foreign Language
FM Fashion Merchandising
FN Food and Nutrition
FREN French
FSC Food Science
FSM Food Systems Management
GD Graphic Design
GENET Genetics
GEOG Geography
GEOL Geology
GERM German
GERON Gerontology
GME Geomatics Engineering
GPA Graduate Public Administration
GRK Greek
GS Graduate Studies
GSCC Graduate Studies - Community College
HEC Home Economics Education
HHS Health and Human Services
HIST History
HMONG Hmong
HONOR Honors
HORT Horticulture
HRM Human Resource Management
HS Health Science
HUM Humanities
IAS Interdisciplinary Arts Studies
ID Interior Design
INOV Institute of Innovation
IS Information Systems
ISA International Studies Abroad
ISC International Studies Course
IT Industrial Technology
ITAL Italian
JAPN Japanese
KAC Kinesiology Activity
KINES Kinesiology
LATIN Latin
LCOM Learning Communities
LEE Literacy and Early Education
LING Linguistics
MATH Mathematics
MBA Master of Business Administration
MCJ Mass Communication and Journalism
ME Mechanical Engineering
MEAG Mechanized Agriculture
MGT Management
MICRO Microbiology
MKTG Marketing
MS Military Science
MSA Master of Science in Accountancy
MSCI Marine Science
MUSIC Music
NSCI Natural Science
NURS Nursing
NUTR Nutrition
OH Ornamental Horticulture
PAX Peace and Conflict Studies
PH Master of Public Health
PHIL Philosophy
PHTH Physical Therapy
PHYAN Physiology/Anatomy/Development
PHYS Physics
PLANT Plant Science
PLSI Political Science
PLTH Plant Health
PORT Portuguese
PSCI Physical Science
PSYCH Psychology
RES Revising and Editing Skills
RLS Recreation and Leisure Studies
SC Solutions Center
SKT Sanskrit
SOC Sociology
SPAN Spanish
SPED Special Education
SSCI Social Science
SW Soil and Water
SWRK Social Work
UNIV University
VEN Viticulture and Enology
VIT Viticulture
WS Women's Studies
ZOOL Zoology
A1 - G.E. FOUNDATION
A2 - G.E. FOUNDATION
A3 - G.E. FOUNDATION
B1 - G.E. BREADTH
B2 - G.E. BREADTH
B4 - G.E. FOUNDATION
C1- G.E. BREADTH
C2 - G.E. BREADTH
D1 - G.E. BREADTH
D2 - G.E. BREADTH
D3 - G.E. BREADTH
E1 - G.E. BREADTH
IB - G.E. INTEGRATION
IC - G.E. INTEGRATION
ID - G.E. INTEGRATION
MI - G.E. MULTICULTURAL/INTERNATIONAL
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1-99
Lower-division courses are designed for first- and second-year students
but open to the others.
100-199
Upper-division courses designed for third-, fourth- and fifth-year students;
counted as graduate work for students with graduate status; permitted for
use on a master's degree program only with departmental approval
190
Independent study, undergraduate
200-297
Graduate-level courses are designed for use in master's degree, credential,
certificate of advanced study, and doctorate curricula. Access to these
courses is limited to those who have been officially admitted to a graduate
degree, advanced certificate, or credential program. Last-semester undergraduate
seniors wanting to enroll in 200-level courses must meet all criteria listed
on the Undergraduate Petition to Enroll in Graduate (200-level) Courses
available from the Division of Graduate Studies or online under Enrollment/Registration
at http://www.csufresno.edu/gradstudies/handbook/frm/index.htm#anchorcc.
290
Independent study, graduate
298
Graduate Degree Project. Restricted to graduate students having received
official notification by the Division of Graduate Studies of approval for
advancement to candidacy. For complete eligibility requirements, see Criteria for Thesis and Project under
Graduate Studies. Project schedule numbers are obtainable through the student's
department. Failure to meet the eligibility requirements may result in cancellation
of such enrollment. Project enrollment is not available through Extension
or Open University.
299
Graduate Degree Thesis/Dissertation. Registration in this course is restricted
to graduate students who have officially been notified of their advancement
to candidacy by the Division of Graduate Studies and who have filed an approved
thesis committee assignment form with the Division of Graduate Studies.
For complete eligibility requirements, see Criteria
for Thesis and Project under Graduate Studies. Thesis schedule numbers
are obtainable through the student's department. Failure to meet eligibility
requirements may result in cancellation of such enrollment. Thesis enrollment
is not available through Extension or Open University.
300-399
Designed to meet professional needs that cannot be served by regular established
course offerings. These courses are offered only through Extension and summer
sessions. They assume completion of the bachelor's degree and/or appropriate
professional service and are focused upon the problems that enrolled students
encounter in their professional service. Although these courses are designed
primarily for purposes other than the partial fulfillment of degree and
credential requirements, they may, with approval by the department, be applied
toward the undergraduate major. They may be used as part of the 40-unit
upper-division requirement for the B.A. and as electives in the fulfillment
of the total requirements for a baccalaureate degree and/or credential.
They may not be used to meet the requirements of a master's degree or a
doctoral degree.
400-499 are upper-division courses in CSU system programs administered by California State University, Fresno. Enrollment provisions listed for courses numbered 100-199 apply to these courses as well.
600-699 are graduate courses in CSU system programs administered by California State University, Fresno. Enrollment provisions listed for courses numbered 200-299 apply to these courses as well.
A-B Two-semester course normally taken in sequence
A, B Listed as separate courses; may be taken independently
F Field course
G For graduate students only; these courses are designed for use in the first year of two-year master's degree programs; they consist of an intensive combination of material normally offered at the undergraduate level.
H Honors
L Laboratory associated with another course
M Multiple subject designation for education courses/methods designation for communication courses
N Non-majors
R Remedial course
S Service Learning courses
T Topics course, varied area subject matter, repeatable for credit with different title and description
W Writing skills course, meets upper-division (UDWS) requirement for graduation
Z Semester abroad program courses
Course Descriptions. Courses are listed by number, title, units, and maximum total credit. Each unit generally represents one hour per week in class and two hours of preparation. Courses involving laboratory, activity, or other application normally require additional hours of class attendance. Lecture-laboratory hours indicate deviation from the usual one class hour per week for one unit of credit. Prerequisites are listed at the beginning of the course description. Course offerings are listed each semester in the Class Schedule.
Prerequisites. Course prerequisites are designed to protect students by ensuring that they have the necessary background and preparation for success in the course. Transfer courses with equivalent content are accepted in lieu of stated prerequisites. Students should check the prerequisites carefully before registering in a course to be sure that they have been met. The instructor can deny admission to a course if a student has not met the prerequisites.
Permission of Instructor. The instructor has the authority to waive the stated prerequisites for a course if it is in the interest of the student to do so and if in the instructor's judgment, the student has a background sufficiently adequate to permit satisfactory performance in the course.
Students will not receive credit for courses in foreign language or mathematics if credit has been awarded previously for a higher numbered course for which the lower numbered course is a prerequisite.
CAN. The California Articulation Number identifies some of the transferable,
lower-division, introductory (preparatory) courses commonly taught on California
college campuses. The CAN (ex. CAN ECON 2) is listed parenthetically at
the end of the course description.
Courses
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