Note: Expense to students in courses with variable fees depends upon
the specific projects selected by the students. Students should consult
with course instructors.
Industrial Arts and Technology (IA)
1. Elements of Woodwork (3)
Processes of bench woodwork and wood turning; use and care of hand tools;
fundamentals, exercises, correct construction methods; basic operations
on light woodworking machinery.
2. Machine Woodworking (3)
Prerequisite: IA 1. Operation and upkeep of woodworking machinery in the
construction of various types of cabinet work, case work, and furniture.
3. Cabinet and Furniture Making (3)
Prerequisites: Ind. Arts 1, 2. Construction of various types of cabinets
and fixtures. Designing and construction of furniture; applied wood turning.
5. Beginning Carpentry (3)
For technical majors, prospective industrial arts teachers, and students
interested in architecture. Principles of carpentry and frame construction;
building materials, concrete, brick, plaster, glass, roofing, and insulation.
6A-B. Welding (2-2)
Laboratory course in the fundamentals of welding; oxyacetylene welding and
cutting; electric arc welding.
9A-B. Automotive Mechanics (3-3)
(a) Mechanics of the automobile, basic operating principles. (b) Auto repairing
substitutes for the 416 hours practical experience in automotive and transportation
unit shop. Methods and practice of auto repairing; automotive machine shop.
Lecture, laboratory.
10A-B. Machine Shop (3-3)
(A) Construction and operation of the lathe, drilling machine, milling machines,
shapers, and grinders; simple operations performed by the machinist, including
bench work, methods of layout. (B) Operation of machine tools, including
the shaper, milling machine, and grinders; special machine tools and instruments.
11. Practical Problems in Electricity (3)
Fundamentals of electricity; application to industry and everyday life;
practical projects and teaching aids constructed in shop laboratory.
13. Metals and Heat Treatment (2)
Physical properties of ferrous and non-ferrous metals and alloys; the transformation
in steel, grain size and growth, precipitation hardening, carburizing; heat
treatment and special problems.
18. Sheet Metal (3)
Sheet metal work and layout including bending, shaping, soldering, riveting,
and spot welding.
19. Applied Drawing (3)
Not open to students with credit in IA 20. Grammar and composition of drawing;
sketching, lettering, orthographic projection, working drawings, dimensioning,
developments, pictorial drawing, and blueprinting.
20. Mechanical Drawing (2)
Not open to students with credit in IA 19. For engineering and mathematics
students. Elementary lettering, orthographic and isometric projections,
intersections, developments, simple machine drawings.
21. Home Planning (2) (Same as H Ec 21)
Preliminary drawings for a practical and economical residence; home financing,
building costs, building codes and restrictions; functional aspect of home
planning and provision of adequate storage space.
22. Architectural Drawing (3)
For technical majors, prospective industrial arts teachers and students
interested in architecture. Production of a complete set of plans, details
and specifications for an up-to-date medium sized residence.
26. Hand Compostition (3)
Introduction to the graphic arts; hand composition and typography; trade
history; fundamentals and application of design; ise and operation of composing
room equipment; prrofreading, lockup and imposition.
27. Presswork and Bookbinding (3)
Fundamentals of letterpress equipment, operation and adjustments; imposition,
make-ready; solvents, inks, and ink mixing; paper calculations; fundamentals
of basic bookbinding, side and saddle stitching; hand sewing, case making;
gold stamping.
28. Platemaking and Offset Lithography (3)
Principles of photolithography, development and application; copy preparation,
camera work, stripping, platemaking, offset presswork; preparation of nonphoto-
graphic plates; halftone screens, line, and color work.
29. Graphic Arts Processes (3)
Fundamentals and techniques of silk-screen printing, linoleum block printing,
marbling, rubber stamp making, and stereotyping, intaglio processes, collotype,
and printing plates.
30. Industrial Arts for Elementary Schools (2)
Techniques of using simple hand tools; leather craft, weaving, and other
crafts.
34. Elementary Stagecraft (2 or 3) (See Speech 34)
40. General Metal (3)
Occupational exploration, appreciation of good design and sound construction;
selection of industrial products and making articles for home and recreation;
art metal, bench metal, forging, machine shop practice, heat treating, metal
casting, ornamentation, sheet metal.
50. Orientation to Industrial Arts (1)
Orientation and problems relating to industrial arts.
100. Carpentry (3)
Wood frame house construction; principles of roof framing; estimating and
ordering materials. Occasional field trips.
101. Mill Cabinet and Furniture Construction (3)
Prerequisite: IA 2, 19. Use of woodworking machinery for building construction
and machine-made cabinets, fixtures, and furniture; routing and managing
of work and the possibilities of each machine; adjustment, care, and upkeep
of machines, motors, and other equipment.
103A-B. General Woodwork (3-3)
Prerequisites: Ind. Arts 1, 2. (a) Organization and management of the
wood- working laboratory; review of hand and machine woodwork; construction
of teaching aids. (b) Units in wood turning, painting and finishing, upholstery
and other related skills.
106. Advanced Welding (2)
Prerequisite: IA 6. Welding processes; fields of application; metallurgy
and engineering application; welding symbols; heat treatment, testing and
determining strength of welds.
107. Jewelry (2)
Techniques and materials used in the designing and fashioning of jewelry;
basic processes and techniques; useful and artistic projects.
108. Handcraft (2)
Leatherwork, plastics, metal tooling, wood carving, enameling and other
industrial arts crafts areas; application of the principles of design.
109A. Automotive Electrical System (3)
Prerequisites: Ind. Arts 9A, 11. Principles of electricity applied to
the starting, lighting, ignition systems of the automobile; motor testing,
tune-up, and shop practice in maintenance and repair of automotive electrical
equipment.
109B. Automotive Fuel System (2)
Prerequisite: Ind. Arts 9A. Principles of automotive fuel systems and carburetion;
origin, production and nature of motor fuel; shop practice in testing, maintenance
and repair of carburetors and other fuel system components; advanced motor
testing and tune-up.
111A. Advanced Applied Electricity (3)
Prerequisite: Ind. Arts 11. Principles of industrial electric wiring;
electric motor service and repair; home appliance service and repair; electrical
machines, maintenance and repair.
111B. General Electricity (3)
Prerequisite: Ind. Arts 11. Instruction in basic radio; organization and
management of the public school electricity and radio shop. Laboratory practice
in construction of practical projects and teaching aids.
112. Advanced Machine Shop (3)
Prerequisite: IA 10A-B. Design, repair, and construction of machines
and tools for practical use; making of repair parts for tools, machines.
113. Materials and Processes (2)
Prerequisites: Ind. Arts 6, 10A-B. Techniques and methods of heat treatment
as applied to oxyacetylene and electric welded ferrous and non-ferrous metals;
physical properties, composition and constituents of metals used in industry.
115. General Machine Shop (3)
Prerequisite: Ind. Arts 10A. Review of fundamental operations; machine
shop organization, management and ordering of materials and supplies; development
of teaching devices, projects; care, repair, maintenance of machine shop
tools, machines, supplementary equipment.
116. General Auto Mechanics (3)
For industrial arts auto mechanics teaching majors. Planning, organization
and management of industrial arts auto mechanics laboratory; course development,
construction of teaching devices. Field trip observation.
117. Advanced Metal Craft (2)
Prerequisite: Ind. Arts 7. Spinning and casting of non-ferrous metals;
low and high form and sectional chuck spinning; flat and centrifugal methods
of casting. Construction of useful and artistic projects from copper, brass,
bronze, aluminum, pewter, gar-alloy, and silver.
118. Advanced Sheet Metal (3)
Pattern drafting and layout; tool operations and techniques through
practice in make-up of sheet metal work.
119. General Metal (3)
Development of appreciation and manipulation of metals; metal casting,
forging, bench metal, and ornamental iron.
120. Industrial Arts Design (2)
Prerequisite: Ind. Arts 19. Form, construction, and decoration of wood
and metal projects used in industrial arts and technical classes.
121. Machine Drawing (3)
Prerequisite: IA 19 or equivalent. Sketching and drawing of machine
parts in detail and assembly; use of standard tables.
122. Advanced Architectural Drawing (3)
Prerequisite: IA 22 or permission of instructor. Perspective elements
developed from working drawings in IA 22; mechanical perspective representation
for general drawing, architectural and industrial designing.
123. Methods of Teaching Industrial Arts (3)
Prerequisite: Ed 185. Teaching techniques and procedures in industrial
arts; organization of teaching material; literature of the field; professional
standards for teachers. Observation in public schools.
124. Industrial Education Philosophy and History (2)
Evolution, development, and present status of industrial education. Basic
philosophy of industrial arts education and trade and industrial education.
125. Curriculum Development in Industrial Education (2)
Prerequisite: IA 123. Development of the curriculum for industrial arts
in elementary and secondary schools through individual planning and laboratory
experimentation.
126. Teaching Aids in Industrial Education (2)
Preparation and use of various teaching aids such as models, mockups,
cutaways, charts, motion pictures, slides; application to the planned lesson.
127. Typography (3)
Fundamentals of typographic layout and design, type styles and faces;
adaptability, limitations, and peculiarities of hand and machine-set type;
photoengraving and other art reproduction.
128. Graphic Reproduction Fundamentals (2)
Overview of the processes, materials, and personnel of the graphic arts
industry; major reproduction processes of letterpress, intaglio, and plane
surfaces; line, half-tone, and process color reproduction; silk-screen and
block printing.
129. Printing Management (3)
Problems of production, control, cost, safety, equipment and supplies;
bookkeeping, ordering, job tickets, organization, and management.
130. Activity Laboratory (3)
Recommended for kindergarten-primary and general elementary credentials.
Construction of projects for an activity and integrated teaching program.
134A-B. Advanced Stagecraft (1-1) or (2-2) or (3-3) (See Speech 134A-B)
190. Independent Study (1-5)
Industrial Arts (IA)
(See Course Numbering System
Definitions and Eligibility)
280. Problems in Industrial Arts Research (2)
For graduate majors and minors in industrial arts. Research and study of
problems in all phases of industrial arts education.
285. School Shop Planning and Organization (2)
Problems in planning and organizing various types of school shops; architectural
considerations, selection of equipment, specifications. Visits to schools
and shop buildings under construction.
286. Safety and Related Problems (2)
Research and study of safety problems in school shop, home, and community;
planning specific safety programs for shops, units of shops, and public
school systems.
287. Seminar on the General Shop (2)
Prerequisite: graduate standing and 12 units upper division industrial arts.
The general shop and its place in industrial arts education; organization,
advantages, limitations; equipment, supplies, safety; subject matter, content,
and methods of teaching.
288. Administration and Supervision of Industrial Arts (2)
Policies and procedures in administration and supervision of industrial
arts.
290. Independent Study (1-5)
Return to Courses Menu
Return to General Catalog Home Page