May 10, 2024  
2022-2023 University Catalog 
    
2022-2023 University Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Courses


 

Veterinary Medicine

  
  • VM 45500 - Equine Behavior For The Veterinary Technician


    Credit Hours: 1.00.  This course is an in-depth look at equine behavior beyond the basics covered in the nursing courses. It is designed to show how the environment in which the horse is kept can affect its behavior. This course will also demonstrate how the study of behavior is applied in equine welfare and to the solution of practical problems and problem behavior in the equine patient. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 45600 - Advanced Ophthalmology For Veterinary Technicians


    Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an in-depth look at ocular anatomy and physiology, use of exam equipment, diagnostic techniques, imaging, pharmacology, surgical instrument identification, cleaning, and care of instruments, surgical nursing, surgical procedures, anesthesia protocols and concerns that are associated with these procedures. Typically offered Spring. Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 45700 - Advanced Neurology For Veterinary Medicine


    Credit Hours: 1.00. This course will focus on neuroanatomy and neurophysiology as well as explore a variety of common neurologic diseases and the basic pathophysiology behind those disease processes. Students will also learn proper nursing care techniques associated with patients with these diseases. Typically offered Spring.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 45800 - Advanced Surgical Nursing And Anesthesia


    Credit Hours: 1.00. This course is an in-depth look at small animal surgical nursing, surgical procedures, surgical instrumentation, wound management and the physiological reason certain anesthetic protocols are used. Students will learn using a variety of teaching modalities. Typically offered Spring.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 49000 - Topics In Veterinary Medicine


    Credit Hours: 0.50 to 5.00. Advanced study in the field of animal health and practice of veterinary medicine. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Spring.Credits: 0.50 to 5.00
  
  • VM 80900 - International Veterinary Medicine


    Credit Hours: 0.50 or 1.00.  The course will consist of eight lectures addressing international aspects of the following topics: zoonotic diseases, food hygiene, biosecurity, animal welfare, animal husbandry, infectious diseases, cultural competence, veterinary medical education, and role of international organizations in animal health. Participating students will be required to choose an internationally relevant topic of interest to research. The last session of the course will be a poster session in which each student will present and discuss a poster. The posters will be evaluated by a panel of 3-4 faculty members and a grade assessed. Permission of Department required. Typically offered Spring.Credits: 0.50 or 1.00
  
  • VM 81000 - Veterinary Externship


    Credit Hours: 6.00.  A six-week or 280-contact-hour work experience, under the direct supervision of a veterinarian, in a facet of veterinary medicine selected as a career goal by the student. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 6.00
  
  • VM 81001 - International Veterinary Experience


    Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00.  This course will allow veterinary students to establish a unique veterinary learning experience in their area of interest in an international location. Each veterinary learning experience will be designed by the student with input from faculty advisor and the professor of record. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 1.00 to 6.00
  
  • VM 81002 - Veterinary Medicine Service Learning-VIDA


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  This 10 day service learning study abroad program is designed for veterinary students to gain practical experience by performing spay neuters of small animals as well as addressing wellness needs of both small and large animals. Typically offered Summer.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VM 81003 - International Veterinary Medicine- Directed Experience


    Credit Hours: 1.00 to 6.00.  This course allows veterinary students to participate in a unique faculty-led veterinary learning experience in an international location. Credit will be assigned on the basis of 1 credit for each 45-50 hours of student effort up to a maximum of 6 credits. In most instances, one week of experience will equal one credit. Each veterinary learning experience will be designed by the faculty leader to accomplish specific learning goals in the focuses area of study. The course will be offered in the summer and will vary in length from 1-6 weeks depending on the specific experience.Credits: 1.00 to 6.00
  
  • VM 81004 - Conservation Medicine And Exotic Pet Medicine And Surgery In Czech Republic And Austria


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  This course is a 3-week international rotation for 2nd and 3rd year DVM students in Czech Republic and Austria. Students will spend 4-8 days in UVPS clinics and several days onsite at Zoo Brno. Additional lectures, animal science and behavior experience in both countries. Permission of department required. Typically offered Spring Summer.Credits: 3.00
  
  • VM 81005 - Pre-Clinical Practicum In Veterinary Medicine


    Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00.  This practicum will provide international students with hands-on experience working in a modern veterinary practice or other veterinary medical setting. The student will gain experience working as a member of the veterinary team and participate in wellness care as well as diagnosis and treatment of disease using contemporary equipment and facilities. Credits: 1.00 to 3.00
  
  • VM 82000 - Applications And Integrations I


    Credit Hours: 2.00. This course uses a small group tutorial, problem-oriented approach to understanding how basic science concepts are integrated into clinical aspects of veterinary medicine. Students are expected to identify learning issues, resolve identified gaps in their knowledge base, integrate information across disciplines, and practice/develop problem-solving skills using simulated case materials. Evaluation of students will be based upon, but not limited to, tutorial group evaluation, peer evaluation, self-evaluation, and comprehensive content and process examinations. Introductory session on hematology, clinical chemistry and radiography will be included to facilitate student interpretation of testing used in the cases.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VM 82500 - Current Issues In Veterinary Medicine


    Credit Hours: 0.00.  This course provides a regular forum to bring PVM students and faculty together to discuss current issues facing the veterinary profession.  Topics will vary depending upon current events and opportunities to feature guest lecturers.  Time-shifting may be done to accommodate special events such as PVM Research Day. Offered Fall/SpringCredits: 0.00
  
  • VM 83000 - Applications And Integrations II


    Credit Hours: 2.00. This course uses a small group tutorial, problem-oriented approach to understanding how basic science concepts are integrated into clinical aspects of veterinary medicine. Students are expected to identify learning issues, resolve identified gaps in their knowledge base, integrate information across disciplines, and practice/develop problem-solving skills using simulated case materials and research problems. Evaluation of students will be based upon, tutorial group evaluation, peer evaluation, self-evaluation, and a comprehensive content and process evaluation, which will include material from VM 82000 and other current DVM courses (anatomy, physiology, etc.).Credits: 2.00
  
  • VM 84000 - Applications And Integrations III


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  This course uses a small group tutorial, problem-oriented approach to understanding how basic science concepts are integrated into clinical aspects of veterinary medicine. Students are expected to identify learning issues, resolve identified gaps in their knowledge base, integrate information across disciplines, and practice/develop problem- solving skills using simulated case materials. Evaluation of students will be based upon, tutorial group evaluation, peer evaluation, self-evaluation, and a comprehensive content and process evaluation, which will include materials from previous classes (VM 82000/83000 and other freshman DVM courses) as well as the current DVM coursework (hematology, parasitology, bacteriology, pharmacology and pathology). Offered FallCredits: 2.00
  
  • VM 85000 - Applications and Integrations IV


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  Small group tutorial, problem-oriented approach to understanding how basic science concepts are integrated into clinical aspects of veterinary medicine. Students are expected to identify learning issues, resolve identified gaps in their knowledge base, integrate information across disciplines, and practice/develop problem-solving skills using simulated case materials and research problems at a higher level of performance than in VM 82000 , VM 83000 , and VM 84000 . Evaluation of students will be based upon, but not limited to, tutorial group evaluation, peer evaluation, self-evaluation, and a comprehensive content and process examination that will include material fromVM 82000 , VM 83000 , and VM 84000 . The final examination will contain an oral component. Typically offered Spring.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VM 86000 - Early Origins Of Veterinary Medicine Seminar


    Credit Hours: 1.00.  Students will study the very early origins of man’s fascination with animals from the Paleolithic era, and the roots of veterinary medicine in Mesopotamia, Ancient Egypt, and East and South Asia. Particular attention will be paid to works of art that help demonstrate man’s fascination with animals and their well-being. This course is appropriate for students with no previous study of history or art history. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 86500 - History Of Veterinary Medicine From Marshals, Horse Doctors, Cow Leeches, The First Schools Of VM


    Credit Hours: 1.00.  The students will study the history of marshals, horse doctors, cow leeches, and authors, an emphasis on the launching of European veterinary education with a rationale for a veterinary profession, and the history of the first official schools of veterinary medicine in France (Lyon and Alfort), concluding with the history of the increasing demand for veterinary schools. Particular attention will be paid to works that help demonstrate man’s fascination with animals and their well-being. This course is appropriate for students with no previous study of history or art history. Special note: This syllabus and course schedule is subject to revisions as needed throughout the semester. Students will be given advance notice of any change. Typically offered Fall.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 86600 - Pathogenic Bacteria, Viruses, Mayhew, Darwin, And Mendel


    Credit Hours: 1.00.  Students will study the golden age of pathogenic bacteriology from the 1860s to the end of the nineteenth century; the discovery of viruses; the development of immunological products; intractable vector-borne hemoprotozoal parasitic diseases; horse-doctoring in the nineteenth century; care of animals used in transport, war and sport; and will conclude with Darwin’s natural selection and Mendel’s fractional inheritance. Particular attention will be paid to works that help demonstrate man’s fascination with animals and their well-being. This course is appropriate for students with no previous study of history or art history. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 86700 - Veterinary Medicine Comes Of Age


    Credit Hours: 1.00.  Students will study early veterinary contributions to biomedical science; how livestock production was enhanced by veterinary specialists; companion animal medicine; bioethics, animal experimentation, and sentience; overcoming the exclusion of women, and the evolving spectrum of opportunity in veterinary careers. Particular attention will be paid to works that help demonstrate man’s fascination with animals and their well-being. This course is appropriate for students with no previous study of history or art history. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 87000 - History Of Veterinary Medicine From The Ancient Greeks Through The Renaissance Seminar


    Credit Hours: 1.00.  The students will study the contributions of the ancient Greeks and Romans to the development of animal doctors. The veterinary highpoint during the Byzantine Empire and Arabian medical and veterinary progress will also be studied. Animals in the Dark Ages, equine and canine medicine in Medieval Europe, and the Italian roots of the Renaissance in medical sciences will be studied. Particular attention will be paid to works of art that help demonstrate man’s fascination with animals and their well-being. This course is appropriate for students with no previous study of history or art history. Typically offered Fall.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 87800 - Swine Herd Health And Diagnostic Pathology


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  Arrange total clinic hours 129. Advanced training and experience in working with swine herds on a herd health management program (see VCS 87800 , 129 clinic hours) and advanced training in diagnostic approaches to identification of the causes and pathogenesis of disease of mammals (see VCS 88600 , 129 clinic hours). Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 3.00
  
  • VM 89000 - Topics In Veterinary Medicine


    Credit Hours: 0.50 to 5.00.  Advanced study in the field of animal health and practice of veterinary medicine. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 0.50 to 5.00
  
  • VM 89100 - Special Topics In Veterinary Medicine Arranged


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  Opportunities for as many as 50 off-campus, three-week blocks are available for each fourth-year class. Only educational experiences that have no comparable coverage in the Purdue DVM curriculum will be acceptable. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 3.00
  
  • VM 89200 - Principles Of Professionalism, Jurisprudence, And Ethics


    Credit Hours: 1.00.  Presentation/discussion format dealing with a broad spectrum of ethical, legal, and professional issues that impact the veterinary profession. Students are challenged to analyze the role they play as responsible members of the veterinary professional community. Typically offered Fall Summer.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VM 89400 - International Veterinary Medicine- Directed Clinical Experience


    Credit Hours: 1.00 to 3.00.  This course allows veterinary students to participate in a unique faculty-led veterinary learning experience in an international location. Credit will be assigned on the basis of 1 credit for each 45-50 hours of student effort up to a maximum of 3 credits. In most instances, one week of experience will equal one credit. Each veterinary learning experience will be designed by the faculty leader to accomplish specific learning goals in the focuses area of study. The course will be offered at various times during the clinical year and will vary in length from 1-3 weeks depending on the specific experience. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 1.00 to 3.00
  
  • VM 89401 - Clinical Rotation In Small Animal Medicine In Switzerland


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  This course is a 3-credit clinical rotation. A faculty member will lead this elective 3-week clinical rotation in Switzerland. Students will spend one week each participating in rotations in small animal medicine and related disciplines at the University of Zurich, University of Bern, and one or two private veterinary clinics in Switzerland or southern Germany. The Purdue faculty member leading the rotation each year will spend one week at each rotation site. During time that the Purdue faculty member is not with the students at rotation sites, on-site mentors will supervise the students’ clinical experience. Typically offered Fall.Credits: 3.00
  
  • VM 89500 - Clinical Applications


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  Introduction to the Veterinary Teaching Hospital (VTH) and the Animal Disease Diagnostic Laboratory. Students rotate through various sections of the VTH and participate in the evaluation and management of patients. Problem-solving skills and application of material from the basic sciences are emphasized. Typically offered Fall.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VM 89900 - Veterinary Medicine Topics


    Credit Hours: 0.50 to 6.00.  This is a variable title/variable credit course for VM. Credits: 0.50 to 6.00

Women’s Gender and Sexuality Studies

  
  • WGSS 28000 - Women’s, Gender, And Sexuality Studies: An Introduction


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  An introductory survey of the concepts and research data in the new scholarship on women. Topics covered include biology, sexuality, socialization, family and work, creativity, and politics. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 28100 - Variable Topics In Women’s, Gender, And Sexuality Studies


    Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00.  This course examines in depth particular topics from the introductory course in Women’s Studies. It addresses gender issues for both men and women. Possible topics include gender and popular culture, women’s bodies, body image, and health, masculinities, queering gender and gender transgression.Credits: 1.00 to 4.00
  
  • WGSS 28200 - Introduction To LGBTQ Studies


    Credit Hours: 3.00. (ANTH 28200) This course offers students an introduction to the interdisciplinary study of lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and queer lives. It provides a basic grounding in theories of sexuality and LGBT histories, identities and movements in the U.S. and globally. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 38000 - Comparative Studies In Gender And Culture


    Credit Hours: 3.00. This course expands students’ understanding of gender issues by exploring the multicultural diversity of women’s lives. It examines how race, class, sexuality, and culture interact and shape society and ecology in the United States and in a global context. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 38100 - Women Of Color In The United States


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  Explores the diversity of racial and ethnic groups in the United States with a particular emphasis on the histories, experiences, and cultural contributions of women of color. Provides a broad introduction to the intersections of gender, race and ethnicity. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 38200 - Love, Sex And Sexuality


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  Explores intimate relationships and marriage practices in Western and non-Western societies from a historical and comparative perspective. Examines the changes in love and marriage in Greco-Roman societies, medieval and modern Europe, China, India and the Muslim world, among others. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 38300 - Women, Work, And Labor


    Credit Hours: 3.00. Examines race, class and gender issues as they affect working women in America. Covering women’s work from domestic labor to informal economies to factories, topics include women’s participation in trade unions, wage inequalities, family leave policies and sexual harassment. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 39000 - Variable Topics In Women’s, Gender And Sexuality Studies


    Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00. Variable topics under the direction of an instructor in a particular field of specialization. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 1.00 to 4.00
  
  • WGSS 43000 - Women In African History


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  (HIST 43000 [Inactive]) African women’s history is rich and deeply layered. In this course, we will examine the social, political, economic, religious, and cultural experiences of women living in Africa. Although we look at women in the pre-colonial and slave trade eras, the focus will be on women during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Much of our reading and discussion will consider not only women, but also gender as we think about women’s interactions with men and children. This course is concerned with the historical forces shaping African women’s lives, as well as with ways in which women have been active agents in the making of their own histories. Students can expect to engage with a number of different types of texts (e.g. firms, novels, scholarly analyses, and primary sources.) Typically offered Fall, Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 48000 - Feminist Theory


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  Intensive study of a variety of contemporary and international feminist theories from an interdisciplinary perspective. Provides an overview of major trends, critical approaches, and diverse viewpoints in the field of feminist theory. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 48200 - Interdisciplinary Studies In Sexuality: Scholarship On Lesbian And Gay Issues


    Credit Hours: 3.00. This course offers an interdisciplinary introduction to recent work in lesbian and gay studies in various fields, including literature, history, film, cultural theory, medicine, law, and studies of sexuality. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 48300 - Feminisms In Global Perspective


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  Explores feminist struggles through the writings of First and Third World feminist scholars. Focuses on feminist projects within and against colonial, nationalist, religious and global contexts. Includes Third World feminist critiques of Western feminisms. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 48500 - Feminist Perspectives On Film And Cinema And Visual Culture


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  In this course, students investigate the gendered and intersectional meanings ascribed to or generated by popular cinematic and other mass-distributed visual texts, with particular attention to the way that visual media have impacted women’s participation in public culture over the last century and a half. This course is highly conceptual, asking students to learn to recognize power relations hiding within visual entertainments and embedded within the experience of everyday life. with the goal of deepening their understanding and appreciation of the experience of spectatorship and visuality as a central element of modern American and contemporary global mass culture.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 49200 - Practicum In Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies


    Credit Hours: 2.00 to 4.00.  This course is designed to integrate knowledge derived from women’s studies scholarship with practical experience. Students will define their own projects in consultation with women’s studies faculty. Periodic conferences and written reports required. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 2.00 to 4.00
  
  • WGSS 49900 - Independent Study In Women’s, Gender And Sexuality Studies


    Credit Hours: 1.00 to 4.00.  Special topics or projects under the direction of the instructor in a particular field of specialization. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 1.00 to 4.00
  
  • WGSS 58500 - Feminist Art Criticism


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  (AD 58500) Analysis and discussion of feminist approaches in judging art, the representation of women in art and the concept of a female aesthetic, the role of gender, race, and class in the art criticism discourse, and the impact of feminism on women artists. Typically offered Summer Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 59900 - Selected Topics In Women’s Gender And Sexuality Studies


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  A study of selected topics taught by an instructor in whose particular field of specialization the content of the course falls. Permission of instructor required. Typically offered Fall Spring Summer.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 68000 - Feminist Theory


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  This course focuses on feminist theories at an advanced level and in a global perspective. Graduate students engage with key theoretical issues in contemporary feminist studies, and examine how feminist scholars have theorized women and gender issues across disciplines. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 68100 - Contemporary Issues In Feminist Scholarship


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  Applies feminist theory, knowledge, and methods to the examination of selected contemporary issues. Emphasizes ways in which theory and practice interact in feminist scholarship. Content may vary according to the issues examined. Prerequisite: WGSS 68000 . Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 3.00
  
  • WGSS 68200 - Issues In Feminist Research And Methodology


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  This course provides a methodological framework for theorizing, constructing and executing research from a feminist perspective. Students acquire knowledge of the diversity of feminist research projects and methods; they learn to pose research questions; and they will be able to prepare a research or grant proposal drawing on interdisciplinary methods. The course is designed to meet the needs of graduate students in Women’s Studies and is open to students in other programs who are interested in feminist research. The course deals with both theoretical and practical issues in methodology. Prerequisites: WGSS 68000 . Typically offered Spring.Credits: 3.00

Vertically Integrated Projects

  
  • VIP 17911 - First Year Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) I


    Credit Hours: 1.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges.  Students will participate in weekly lectures and professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VIP 17912 - First Year Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) II


    Credit Hours: 1.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges.  Students will participate in weekly lectures and professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 1.00
  
  • VIP 17920 - First Year Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP)


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges.  Students will participate in weekly lectures and professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VIP 27920 - Sophomore Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP)


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges. Students will participate in weekly lectures and professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VIP 37920 - Junior Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP)


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges.  Students will participate in weekly lectures and professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VIP 37930 - Junior Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) Ext


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges.  Students will participate in professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools.Credits: 3.00
  
  • VIP 47920 - Senior Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP)


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges.  Students will participate in weekly lectures and professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VIP 47921 - Senior Design Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) I


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges.  Students will participate in weekly lectures and professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VIP 47922 - Senior Design Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) II


    Credit Hours: 2.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges.  Students will participate in weekly lectures and professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools. Typically offered Fall Spring.Credits: 2.00
  
  • VIP 47930 - Senior Participation In Vertically Integrated Projects (VIP) Ext


    Credit Hours: 3.00.  This course provides an opportunity for undergraduate students to engage in authentic and extended research and design projects related to active research areas of Purdue faculty members and national, international, and industry-sponsored design challenges. Students will work on interdisciplinary and vertically-integrated teams (first-year through seniors) with faculty and graduate student mentors to address these real-world research and design challenges.  Students will participate in professional development activities that include topics related to design, research, documentation and technical writing, communication, leadership and teamwork, ethics, project management, intellectual property, information literacy, and introduction to a broad range of applicable research topics, technologies and development tools.Credits: 3.00
 

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