List of all ENGR courses
These Course Descriptions include updates that were added after the original publication on April 2, 2018.
New students who are entering the college for the first time should follow this version when selecting courses.
Show me the April 2, 2018, web published version.
Show me what changed in 2018-2019.
New students who are entering the college for the first time should follow this version when selecting courses.
Show me the April 2, 2018, web published version.
Show me what changed in 2018-2019.
ENGR 2105 (1 Credit Hours)
Offered at RLC Electrical Circuits I Laboratory This is a Texas Common Course Number. Corequisite/Concurrent: ENGR 2305. Course Description: Laboratory experiments supporting theoretical principles presented in ENGR 2305 involving DC and AC circuit theory, network theorems, time, and frequency domain circuit analysis. Introduction to principles and operation of basic laboratory equipment; laboratory report preparation. (3 Lab.) Coordinating Board Academic Approval Number 1410015510 * Note: This Course Description includes updates that were added after it was originally published on April 2, 2018. (Original) | (Changes) |
Academic Courses
Designated by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board for transfer among community colleges and state public four year colleges and universities as freshman and sophomore general education courses.
WECM Courses
Designated by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board as workforce education (technical) courses offered for credit and CEUs (Continuing Education Units). While these courses are designed to transfer among state community colleges, they are not designed to automatically transfer to public four-year colleges and universities.
Designated by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board for transfer among community colleges and state public four year colleges and universities as freshman and sophomore general education courses.
WECM Courses
Designated by the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board as workforce education (technical) courses offered for credit and CEUs (Continuing Education Units). While these courses are designed to transfer among state community colleges, they are not designed to automatically transfer to public four-year colleges and universities.