Copyright & Disclaimer Information - Illinois Institute of Technology

Copyright & Disclaimer Information - Illinois Institute of Technology Copyright & Disclaimer Information - Illinois Institute of Technology

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Illinois Institute of Technology floors, roofs, stairs, framing. Perspective sketching. Prerequisite: EG 105 or consent of instructor. (2-2-3) EG 309 Architectural Drawing II A continuation of EG 308, with more complicated layout problems of residential, small commercial, and industrial buildings. Detailed study of functions of the building. Methods of construction and use of materials and simple perspectives. Prerequisite: EG 308. (2-2-3) EG 310 Architectural Drawing III Individual problems assigned to each student; each project developed from schematic plan through all stages of design, including sketches, working drawings, and presentation drawings; perspective drawing with rendering in all media. Prerequisite: EG 309. (2-2-3) EG 312 Architectural Freehand Drawing Accurate and rapid sketching, with special emphasis on architectural forms, proportions, perspective; pencil, crayon, chalk, and brush techniques; simple composition problems. Prerequisite: EG 105 or consent of instructor. (2-2-3) EG 313 Architectural Detailing Comprises design and drawing and the fitting together of various materials used in erecting and finishing contemporary and traditional buildings. Prerequisite: EG 309 or consent of instructor. (2-2-3) EG 325 Advanced Engineering Graphics for Non-Engineers Continuation of EG 225. Threads and fasteners, sectioning and auxiliary views, limit dimensioning, detail and assembly drawings, data representation, principles of descriptive geometry, manufacturing processes and computer graphics/CAD. Credit for this course is not applicable to an engineering degree. Prerequisite: EG 225. (2-1-3) EG 329 Graphic Representation for Non-Engineers Basic techniques of graphics applied to communications and report writing. Copyright & Disclaimer Information: Copyright © 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007. CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. CollegeSource® digital catalogs are derivative works owned and copyrighted by CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. Catalog content is owned and copyrighted by the appropriate school. While CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation provides information as a service to the public, copyright is retained on all digital catalogs. Copyright & Disclaimer Information: Copyright © 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007. CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. CollegeSource® digital catalogs are derivative works owned and copyrighted by CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. Catalog content is owned and copyrighted by the appropriate school. While CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation provides information as a service to the public, copyright is retained on all digital catalogs. Use of Harvard Graphics to generate charts and graphs including two- and three-dimensional line charts and pie charts, Integration of graphical presentations into technical and business reports. Credit for this course is not applicable to an engineering degree. Prerequisite: EG 225. (2-2-3) EG 405 Mechanical Design Graphics Basic concepts of mechanical design and analysis. Advanced design layouts, details, assemblies, tolerance systems, surface finish control, materials, processes, ANSI drafting standards, engineering data processing systems and procedures, application of computers to design, and CAD/CAM. Prerequisite: EG 305. (2-2-3) EG 406 Technical and Pictorial Illustration Theory and construction of parallel and perspective pictorial projections, axonometric and oblique projections, parallel and angular perspective. Exploded pictorial assemblies. Basic rendering techniques used in technical illustration. Introduction to computer-generated pictorials. Prerequisite: EG 105. (2-2-3) EG 409 Computer-Generated Pictorial Projections Study of computer-generated representations of three dimensional objects. Projections include multiview, perspective, axonometric and oblique. Prerequisites: EG 406. (2-2-3) EG 419 Computer Graphics in Engineering Techniques of computer-aided design and computer-aided manufacturing. Study of various computer graphic hardware and software systems through demonstrations and use. Prerequisites: EG 105 and junior standing or consent of instructor. (2-2-3) EG 425 Computer Graphics for Non-Engineers Principles and applications of computer graphics in business and nontechnical fields. Study of computer graphics hardware and software systems. Use of computer in producing charts, graphs and technical drawings. Use Course Descriptions of PC-CAD in problem solving and design. Credit for this course is not applicable to an engineering degree. Prerequisite: EG 325. (2-1-3) EG 429 Computer Graphics for Desktop Publishing Integration of computer graphicgenerated images into technical and business reports produced with popular desktop publishing software. Emphasis on creation and selection of graphical presentations for optimum readability. Scanning and retouching techniques for two- and three-dimensional presentations. Introduction to multi-media and slide presentations. Credit for this course is not applicable to an engineering degree. Prerequisite: EG 329. (2-2-3) Graduate Courses Graduate courses are available to degree-seeking undergraduate students with the approval of the course instructor and faculty adviser. See the current IIT Bulletin: Graduate Programs for course descriptions. English ENGL 101 Writing in the University A study of the use of writing, reading, and discussion as a means of discovering, questioning, and analyzing ideas, with an emphasis on audience, context, and the use of revision. (3-0-3) (C) This course satisfies IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement (page 30). It does not satisfy a general education requirement in the humanities and social or behavioral sciences. ENGL 110 English Structure in Academic Prose ENGL 110 and ENGL 111 comprise a one-year sequence for students whose native language is not English. ENGL 110 helps students with the complex structure and vocabulary of academic writing, with an emphasis on short compositions. (3-0-3) (C) ENGL 111 Writing in the University for Non-Native Students Equivalent to ENGL 101. Designed to deal with the special writing problems IIT Undergraduate Bulletin 1999-2001 139

Course Descriptions of those students whose native language is not English. (3-0-3) (C) This course satisfies IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement (page 30). It does not satisfy a general education requirement in the humanities and social or behavioral sciences. ENGL 301 Introduction to Linguistics The objective analysis of language structure and structural hierarchies; a survey of the basic concepts of linguistics; the phoneme, the morpheme, language change over time and space. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 305 Aspects of the American English Language Beginning with a survey of the development of the English language and its place in the world’s languages, the course examines the structure of contemporary standard American English from a linguistic perspective and develops the concepts and vocabulary briefly to examine existing geographic and socio-economic variation. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 307 The Self in Language Explores the constructed nature of “the self” in literature and non-fiction prose. Special focus on the role of language in determining one’s identity. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 334 Literature of Modern Science A study of the literature of science from the Renaissance to modern times. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) Copyright & Disclaimer Information: Copyright © 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007. CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. CollegeSource® digital catalogs are derivative works owned and copyrighted by CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. Catalog content is owned and copyrighted by the appropriate school. While CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation provides information as a service to the public, copyright is retained on all digital catalogs. Copyright & Disclaimer Information: Copyright © 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007. CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. CollegeSource® digital catalogs are derivative works owned and copyrighted by CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. Catalog content is owned and copyrighted by the appropriate school. While CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation provides information as a service to the public, copyright is retained on all digital catalogs. ENGL 337 Shakespeare: Early Work Study of Shakespeare’s work before 1600, focusing on the histories, early comedies and tragedies. Close reading of the plays language and form, and emphasis on the place of drama in early modem cultute. Syllabus varies but is likely to include Taming of the Shrew, Much Ado About Nothing, Parts 1 and 2 of Henry IV, Henry V, Hamlet. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 338 Shakespeare: Late Work Study of Shakespeare’s work after 1600, focusing on the middle and late comedies and tragedies and the romances. Close reading of the plays’ language and form, and emphasis on the place of drama in early modern culture. Syllabus varies but is likely to include Twelfth Night, Macbeth, Coriolanus, Othello, King Lear, The Winter's, Tale and The Tempest. May be taken independently of ENGL 337. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 339 Short Fiction A formal and thematic analysis of a diverse selection of works of short fiction. The selection will be announced by the instructor when the course is scheduled. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 340 World Drama A study of major world dramatists. The syllabus varies, but may include works by Sophocles, Lope de Vega, Marlowe, Shakespeare, Moliere, Goethe, Ibsen, Soyinka and others. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 341 Modern Drama Study of major dramatists and movements in the theater since Ibsen and IIT Undergraduate Bulletin 1999-2001 Strindberg, with special emphasis on such writers as Chekhov, Shaw, Brecht, O’Neill, Ionesco and Pinter. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 343 Theater in Chicago Designed to introduce students to the variety of professional theater performances in and around Chicago. Main emphasis is on seeing plays, ancient to contemporary; essays and oral reports; study of dramatic genres and theater history. Prerequisite: A 100level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 343 Film Analysis Examination of the style and language of film as shown in a number of feature films, with emphasis on the various ways individual directors use the cinema for personal and cultural ends. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 345 The Novel Analysis of the novel as a literary form with attention to its place in ongoing cultural and political discourse. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C) ENGL 347 The Novel Today An examination of major world fiction since World War II. Readings will be chosen from such writers as Graham Greene, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Heinrich Boll, Saul Bellow, Robertson Davies, Gabriel Marquez, Nadine Gordimer, Toni Morrison and Salman Rushdie. Prerequisite: A 100-level humanities course and satisfaction of IIT’s Basic Writing Proficiency Requirement. (3-0-3) (H) (C)

<strong>Illinois</strong> <strong>Institute</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>Technology</strong><br />

floors, ro<strong>of</strong>s, stairs, framing. Perspective<br />

sketching. Prerequisite: EG 105 or consent<br />

<strong>of</strong> instructor. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 309<br />

Architectural Drawing II<br />

A continuation <strong>of</strong> EG 308, with more<br />

complicated layout problems <strong>of</strong> residential,<br />

small commercial, and industrial<br />

buildings. Detailed study <strong>of</strong> functions<br />

<strong>of</strong> the building. Methods <strong>of</strong> construction<br />

and use <strong>of</strong> materials and simple perspectives.<br />

Prerequisite: EG 308. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 310<br />

Architectural Drawing III<br />

Individual problems assigned to each<br />

student; each project developed from<br />

schematic plan through all stages<br />

<strong>of</strong> design, including sketches, working<br />

drawings, and presentation drawings;<br />

perspective drawing with rendering in<br />

all media. Prerequisite: EG 309. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 312<br />

Architectural Freehand Drawing<br />

Accurate and rapid sketching, with<br />

special emphasis on architectural forms,<br />

proportions, perspective; pencil, crayon,<br />

chalk, and brush techniques; simple<br />

composition problems. Prerequisite:<br />

EG 105 or consent <strong>of</strong> instructor. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 313<br />

Architectural Detailing<br />

Comprises design and drawing and<br />

the fitting together <strong>of</strong> various materials<br />

used in erecting and finishing contemporary<br />

and traditional buildings.<br />

Prerequisite: EG 309 or consent<br />

<strong>of</strong> instructor. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 325<br />

Advanced Engineering Graphics<br />

for Non-Engineers<br />

Continuation <strong>of</strong> EG 225. Threads<br />

and fasteners, sectioning and auxiliary<br />

views, limit dimensioning, detail and<br />

assembly drawings, data representation,<br />

principles <strong>of</strong> descriptive geometry,<br />

manufacturing processes and computer<br />

graphics/CAD. Credit for this course<br />

is not applicable to an engineering<br />

degree. Prerequisite: EG 225. (2-1-3)<br />

EG 329<br />

Graphic Representation<br />

for Non-Engineers<br />

Basic techniques <strong>of</strong> graphics applied<br />

to communications and report writing.<br />

<strong>Copyright</strong> & <strong>Disclaimer</strong> <strong>Information</strong>: <strong>Copyright</strong> © 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007. CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. CollegeSource® digital catalogs are derivative works owned and copyrighted by CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. Catalog content is owned and copyrighted by the appropriate school. While CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation provides information as a service to the public, copyright is retained on all digital catalogs.<br />

<strong>Copyright</strong> & <strong>Disclaimer</strong> <strong>Information</strong>: <strong>Copyright</strong> © 1994, 1995, 1996, 1997, 1998, 1999, 2000, 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2006, 2007. CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. CollegeSource® digital catalogs are derivative works owned and copyrighted by CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation. Catalog content is owned and copyrighted by the appropriate school. While CollegeSource®, Inc. and Career Guidance Foundation provides information as a service to the public, copyright is retained on all digital catalogs.<br />

Use <strong>of</strong> Harvard Graphics to generate<br />

charts and graphs including two- and<br />

three-dimensional line charts and pie<br />

charts, Integration <strong>of</strong> graphical presentations<br />

into technical and business<br />

reports. Credit for this course is not<br />

applicable to an engineering degree.<br />

Prerequisite: EG 225. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 405<br />

Mechanical Design Graphics<br />

Basic concepts <strong>of</strong> mechanical design<br />

and analysis. Advanced design layouts,<br />

details, assemblies, tolerance systems,<br />

surface finish control, materials,<br />

processes, ANSI drafting standards,<br />

engineering data processing systems and<br />

procedures, application <strong>of</strong> computers<br />

to design, and CAD/CAM.<br />

Prerequisite: EG 305. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 406<br />

Technical and Pictorial Illustration<br />

Theory and construction <strong>of</strong> parallel and<br />

perspective pictorial projections, axonometric<br />

and oblique projections, parallel<br />

and angular perspective. Exploded<br />

pictorial assemblies. Basic rendering<br />

techniques used in technical illustration.<br />

Introduction to computer-generated<br />

pictorials. Prerequisite: EG 105. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 409<br />

Computer-Generated Pictorial<br />

Projections<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> computer-generated representations<br />

<strong>of</strong> three dimensional objects.<br />

Projections include multiview, perspective,<br />

axonometric and oblique.<br />

Prerequisites: EG 406. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 419<br />

Computer Graphics in Engineering<br />

Techniques <strong>of</strong> computer-aided design<br />

and computer-aided manufacturing.<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> various computer graphic<br />

hardware and s<strong>of</strong>tware systems through<br />

demonstrations and use. Prerequisites:<br />

EG 105 and junior standing or consent<br />

<strong>of</strong> instructor. (2-2-3)<br />

EG 425<br />

Computer Graphics for<br />

Non-Engineers<br />

Principles and applications <strong>of</strong> computer<br />

graphics in business and nontechnical<br />

fields. Study <strong>of</strong> computer graphics<br />

hardware and s<strong>of</strong>tware systems. Use<br />

<strong>of</strong> computer in producing charts,<br />

graphs and technical drawings. Use<br />

Course Descriptions<br />

<strong>of</strong> PC-CAD in problem solving and<br />

design. Credit for this course is not<br />

applicable to an engineering degree.<br />

Prerequisite: EG 325. (2-1-3)<br />

EG 429<br />

Computer Graphics for Desktop<br />

Publishing<br />

Integration <strong>of</strong> computer graphicgenerated<br />

images into technical and<br />

business reports produced with popular<br />

desktop publishing s<strong>of</strong>tware. Emphasis<br />

on creation and selection <strong>of</strong> graphical<br />

presentations for optimum readability.<br />

Scanning and retouching techniques<br />

for two- and three-dimensional presentations.<br />

Introduction to multi-media<br />

and slide presentations. Credit for this<br />

course is not applicable to an engineering<br />

degree. Prerequisite: EG 329. (2-2-3)<br />

Graduate Courses<br />

Graduate courses are available to<br />

degree-seeking undergraduate students<br />

with the approval <strong>of</strong> the course instructor<br />

and faculty adviser. See the current<br />

IIT Bulletin: Graduate Programs for<br />

course descriptions.<br />

English<br />

ENGL 101<br />

Writing in the University<br />

A study <strong>of</strong> the use <strong>of</strong> writing, reading,<br />

and discussion as a means <strong>of</strong> discovering,<br />

questioning, and analyzing ideas,<br />

with an emphasis on audience, context,<br />

and the use <strong>of</strong> revision. (3-0-3) (C)<br />

This course satisfies IIT’s Basic Writing<br />

Pr<strong>of</strong>iciency Requirement (page 30).<br />

It does not satisfy a general education<br />

requirement in the humanities and<br />

social or behavioral sciences.<br />

ENGL 110<br />

English Structure in Academic Prose<br />

ENGL 110 and ENGL 111 comprise a<br />

one-year sequence for students whose<br />

native language is not English. ENGL<br />

110 helps students with the complex<br />

structure and vocabulary <strong>of</strong> academic<br />

writing, with an emphasis on short<br />

compositions. (3-0-3) (C)<br />

ENGL 111<br />

Writing in the University for<br />

Non-Native Students<br />

Equivalent to ENGL 101. Designed to<br />

deal with the special writing problems<br />

IIT Undergraduate Bulletin 1999-2001 139

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