Human Physiology Yates
Professor: Tony Yates
This course allows guest users to enter  This course requires an enrolment key
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Intro General & Biological Chemistry Lab Yates
Professor: Tony Yates
This course allows guest users to enter  This course requires an enrolment key
This website accompanies the Introduction to General and Biological Chemistry Lab section GNSC L1124-4, meeting 8:00 to 10:00 a.m., Thursdays in Wood Science 207. The laboratory component of the course emphasizes inquiry-based, hand-on learning experiences in the following chemistry content areas: atomic structure and chemical bonding; physical chemistry of liquids and solutions; nature of chemical changes and energy changes accompanying such change; structural theory of organic chemistry; reactions of organic molecules; structures and properties of natural organic compounds; and, chemical reactions in living organisms.
Substitute Introduction to Chemistry Lab
Professor: Michael Jordan
This course requires an enrolment key
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Human Anatomy
Professor: Tony Yates
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What could be more exciting than Human Anatomy Lab?
German 1313 Jterm

This course is the first part of a thorough introduction to the rudiments of German grammar.  We will concentrate on beginning to develop proficiency in writing, speaking, listening, and reading German.  At the end of the month, you should be able to compose and understand simple sentence structures (even though frequent mistakes will still occur) about yourself, your interests and daily activities in both the present and the past tense.
Arts and Ideas
Professor: Kristen Todd
This course allows guest users to enter  

Course Objectives (as stated in the OBU catalog): This course explores ideas, concepts and unifying stylistic trends in non-western, modern, and postmodern arts (including visual, musical, and theatrical idioms.)  Subjects include modern and postmodern aesthetics, commercial genres and venues, non-western socio-economic elements, and other constraints placed upon artistic creation in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. 

German 1313-J
Professor: David Nagle
This course requires an enrolment key

For those with no previous knowledge of German, this is the first of two courses designed to bring one to Level 1 of the Common European Framework (CEF). It offers a gradual approach to grammatical concepts as part of a transparent language learning process in which learning strategies are explicitly stated. After a successful semester one will be able to compose and understand simple sentences (albeit with frequent mistakes) for getting acquainted with others, shopping, telling time, and eating in a restaurant.
German 2313 - Intermediate German Language & Culture 1
Professor: David Nagle
This course requires an enrolment key

This thorough review of German grammar seeks to build your vocabulary and level of comfort in German. We will increase proficiency in writing, speaking, listening, and reading German. Our study will include inquiries into Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. After a successful semester, memorized responses (not without mistakes) will still characterize your German usage, but you will be on the road to creatively combining structures on your own.
GRMN 3063 - Conversation and Composition 1
Professor: David Nagle

Prerequisite: second semester intermediate German or equivalent skill.
Intensive training in conversational skills on topics of everyday life and of current interest.  Introduction to theme writing.  Practice in in advanced-level grammatical structures.

General Psychology
Professor: Bret Roark
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GenChem II Lab York
Professor: Shawna York
This course requires an enrolment key
Lab Sp09
Issues in Biology Yates
Professor: Tony Yates
Professor: John Farris
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Gen Chem II - York
Professor: Shawna York
This course allows guest users to enter  This course requires an enrolment key
Dr. York's section of General Chemistry II lecture for Spring 09
US 206 Arts and Western Culture
Professor: Lee Hinson
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German 1313 copy 1
This course requires an enrolment key
For those with no previous knowledge of German, this is the first of two courses designed to bring one to Level 1 of the Common European Framework (CEF). It offers a gradual approach to grammatical concepts as part of a transparent language learning process in which learning strategies are explicitly stated. After a successful semester one will be able to compose and understand simple sentences (albeit with frequent mistakes) for getting acquainted with others, shopping, telling time, and eating in a restaurant.