Timeroom: Fall 2024

Displaying 3261 - 3270 of 4505 Results for: %20Title = NURS612C
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 849 (01) - Forest Inventory and Modeling

Forest Inventory and Modeling

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   1  
CRN: 12475
Special Fees: $40.00
Applied sampling and statistical techniques for assessing current forest conditions and predicting future growth, yield, and structure. Topics include plot and point sampling, ecological inventory, and evaluation of site quality and stand density.
Cross listed with : NR 749.01
Instructors: Heidi Giguere
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 TR 11:10am - 12:30pm PARS NB24
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 T 2:10pm - 4:00pm JAMS G45
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 851 (01) - Aquatic Ecosystems

Aquatic Ecosystems

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   4  
CRN: 16095
Special Fees: $95.00
Energy flow and nutrient cycling in streams, rivers and lakes, with an emphasis on understanding the control of primary productivity, decomposition and community structure by both hydrologic and biotic drivers. Role of aquatic ecosystems in carbon and nitrogen budgets at watershed, regional, and global scales. Impacts of environmental changes such as global climate change and suburbanization on aquatic ecosystems. Lab.
Cross listed with : NR 751.01
Instructors: Wilfred Wollheim
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 TR 9:40am - 11:00am JAMS 144
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 F 2:10pm - 5:00pm JAMS 144
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 857 (01) - Remote Sensing of the Environment

Remote Sensing of the Environ

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   5  
CRN: 10288
Special Fees: $55.00
Practical and conceptual presentation of the use of remote sensing and other geospatial technologies for mapping and monitoring the environment. This course begins with the use of aerial photographs (photogrammetry, and photo interpretation) and includes measures of photo scale and area, parallax and stereo viewing, object heights, flight planning, photo geometry, the electromagnetic spectrum, camera systems and vegetation/land cover mapping. The course concludes with an introduction to other geospatial technologies including digital image analysis, global positioning (GPS), and geographic information systems (GIS). Conceptual lectures are augmented with practical homework assignments and hands-on lab exercises. Lab.
Cross listed with : NR 757.01
Instructors: Russell Congalton
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 MW 11:10am - 12:00pm JAMS G54
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 M 2:10pm - 5:00pm JAMS 152
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 857 (02) - Remote Sensing of the Environment

Remote Sensing of the Environ

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   5  
CRN: 10309
Special Fees: $55.00
Practical and conceptual presentation of the use of remote sensing and other geospatial technologies for mapping and monitoring the environment. This course begins with the use of aerial photographs (photogrammetry, and photo interpretation) and includes measures of photo scale and area, parallax and stereo viewing, object heights, flight planning, photo geometry, the electromagnetic spectrum, camera systems and vegetation/land cover mapping. The course concludes with an introduction to other geospatial technologies including digital image analysis, global positioning (GPS), and geographic information systems (GIS). Conceptual lectures are augmented with practical homework assignments and hands-on lab exercises. Lab.
Cross listed with : NR 757.02
Instructors: Russell Congalton
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 MW 11:10am - 12:00pm JAMS G54
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 T 2:10pm - 5:00pm JAMS 152
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 882 (01) - Forest Health

Forest Health

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   6  
CRN: 10749
Special Fees: $75.00
Forests cover over 30% of the land surface of the Earth and are incredibly important ecologically, economically, and to the health of the planet. While forests show great capacity to withstand disturbance, these ecosystems are increasingly threatened worldwide by climate change, native and introduced insects and disease, poor management practices, land clearing, drought, fire, and pollution. This course offers an overview of the dominant threats to forests, their causes and consequences, and options for monitoring, management, and mitigation.
Cross listed with : NR 782.01
Instructors: Jeffrey Garnas
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 TR 9:40am - 11:00am JAMS 140
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 F 1:10pm - 3:00pm JAMS 140
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 887 (01) - Advanced Topics in Sustainable Energy

Adv Topics Sustainable Energy

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   6  
CRN: 11894
Special Fees: $36.00
This course will engage students in advanced topics in sustainable energy. Course reviews basic structure of our energy system, energy markets and economics, and the environmental, economic and technological of our energy landscape. Focus will be on electricity and building use with introductions to the transportation system. Students will gain the knowledge to evaluate innovations in technology, policy and financing necessary to implement sustainable energy goals from conservation and efficiency to renewables and energy storage.
Cross listed with : NR 787.01
Instructors: Constantine Spandagos
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 MW 3:10pm - 4:30pm JAMS G54
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 899 (01) - Master's Thesis

Master's Thesis

Credits: 1.0 to 10.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term - Grad Thesis (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Graduate Credit/Fail grading
Class Size:   20  
CRN: 13947
Master's Thesis. Usually 6 credits, but up to 10 credits when the problem warrants.
Repeat Rule: May be repeated for a maximum of 10 credits.
Instructors: Jessica Ernakovich
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 Hours Arranged TBA
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 900 (01) - Teaching Assistantship Practicum

Teaching Assistantship Practic

Credits: 0.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Graduate Credit/Fail grading
Class Size:   20  
CRN: 14676
This course covers best practices, norms, and expectations in performing the duties of a teaching assistant. Strategies for effective grading, communication with students and instructors, and institutional policies are explored and reinforced.
Instructors: Mark Ducey
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 Hours Arranged TBA
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 903 (01) - Approach to Research

Approach to Research

Credits: 2.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Graduate Credit/Fail grading
Class Size:   25  
CRN: 10274
Provides incoming graduate students with an overview of the scientific method, peer review, and various research approaches and methods. Ethics, institutional and individual responsibilities, and effective communication are also addressed in a seminar and discussion format.
Instructors: Rem Moll
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 W 8:10am - 10:00am MURK G04
Durham   Life Sciences & Agriculture :: Natural Resources

NR 977 (01) - Just Maps: Cartographies of Environmental Justice

Just Maps

Credits: 4.0
Term: Fall 2024 - Full Term (08/26/2024 - 12/09/2024)
Grade Mode: Letter Grading
Class Size:   20  
CRN: 14696
Maps are ubiquitous. We carry them in our pockets, hang them on walls. We use maps to orient ourselves and rely on them to make meaning of social-environmental information. But whose space and time to maps employ? How do maps construct knowledge and to what social and political ends? What power dynamics do maps reflect and how do they become powerful themselves? This course explores such questions with focus on environmental in/justice. Completion of a GIS/Mapping course required prior to taking this course.
Instructors: Teresa Cohn
Start Date End Date Days Time Location
8/26/2024 12/9/2024 MF 9:10am - 11:00am JAMS 144