- Lecturer: Prof Nikodemus Angula
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International Economics is sub-divided into two major areas, namely, International trade and International Finance, sometimes called international monetary economics. This course focus on International Finance. In the study of International Finance we address the issues such as: What is meant by a country balance of payments? How are exchange rates determined? Why does financial capital flow rapidly and sizably across international frontier? What role do international financial institutions play in the global economy?
- Lecturer: Kasnath Jazuvirua Kavezeri
Industrial Ergonomics (IEM710S) is a core course undertaken in Year 3, semester 5 by Industrial Engineering students and offered in the Mechanical & Marine Engineering Department. The course is design to help students understand human interaction with other elements of a system in order to improve human well-being and overall system performance. The course is design to deal more with the physical aspect of ergonomics without ignoring other units of human factor ergonomics.
- Lecturer: Sipiwe Nyadongo

This course aims to enable students to demonstrate a deepened understanding of the application of organic chemistry in the industry. Organic compounds of industrial and commercial importance will be discussed, including their production and environmental impact, use, and the scaling of organic reactions.
Upon completing this course students will, through assessment activities, show evidence of their ability to:
1. Elucidate the mechanisms of major industrial organic reactions;
2. Formulate reaction conditions for the industrial synthesis and transformation of organic compounds, intermediates and fine chemicals;
3. Evaluate the chemistry, use, environmental and economic impact of the basic building block chemicals derived from natural gas, petroleum and non-petroleum sources
4. Evaluate the chemistry, use, environmental and economic impact of polymers derived from ethylene, propylene, butadiene, isobutene
5. Describe the use of catalysts in industrial organic chemistry
6. Discuss concepts of green chemistry and sustainability in the chemical industry
7. Retrieve relevant information in scientific literature and demonstrate effective report writing, experimental design and data analysis.
- Lecturer: Dr Marius Mutorwa
- Lecturer: Stephen Visagie
This course provides instruction and practice in writing for the mass communication media with an emphasis on the development of the journalistic style. Students will learn the fundamentals of generating ideas for news writing, research, writing style and grammar, and the basics of on-line journalism and research. Through a variety of writing tasks, the course will equip students with language and writing skills, which will enable them to function effectively in the communication environment.
- Lecturer: Jordaania Kondjeni Andima
- Lecturer: Dr Hugh Ellis-Mwiya
- Lecturer: Johnson Mutirua
The course aims at equipping the students with in-depth knowledge about the instrument for operation, characterisation and analysis and their applications in everyday life. This course further help the student in current -day technology, industry, and research
By the end of this course of study, you should be able to.
- Evaluate the importance of different instrument and their use;
- Demonstrate the practical application of the instrument and problems related to the instrument;
- Apply the theoretical principles to solve the operational problem of the instrument;
- Discuss comprehensively use of the instrument for everyday life and scientific purposes;
- Analyse the principle of different instrument, its operation and evaluate the working output;
Develop and maintain useful engineering skills while still retaining an active grasp of the relevant physics
- Lecturer: Prof Dipti Ranjan Sahu
Integrated Clinical Pathophysiology (ICP) is a course which aims to integrate the theory and practicals of the first five semesters of the programme with the laboratory practice learning/ Work Integrated Learning (WIL) of semesters six and seven and to evaluate the laboratory findings in terms of the pathophysiology disease status of the patient. The course involves within subject/ discipline integration which is critical and a precursor to between subject/ discipline integration and ultimately total integration of the knowledge acquired in all semesters of the course. Integration is important because it allows one to process any information presented and appreciate it holistically without apportioning that this is a microbiology issue, chemistry or haematology issue. This comes with the understanding that no disease pronounces itself as discipline specific in a patient, hence we need to use all critical thinking skills acquired in all disciplines to apply our knowledge in the laboratory. It is a very good feeling to like a particular discipline in Medical Laboratory Sciences and even specialise in it, but it is a lot better to understand and apply knowledge across the field of clinical pathology first before specialising.
- Lecturer: Dr Martin Gonzo
- Lecturer: Edwig Shingenge
- Lecturer: Hubert Shitaleni
- Lecturer: Roselin Tsauses

This course introduces students to the fundamental concepts of Intelligent Transportation Systems (ITS) with emphasis on transportation systems, communication systems, vehicle technologies, transportation planning, transportation policy, and urban planning. The course focuses on the application of IT’s to transportation infrastructure and vehicles, and how it enhances transportation safety, productivity, environment, and travel reliability. With the accessibility of mobile devices, ITS applications, such as trip planners, help travellers make informed travel choices.
- Lecturer: Bonny Chicken
- Lecturer: Maria Indongo
- Lecturer: Selma Gwangapi Naanda
- Lecturer: Martha Polla

Welcome to Intermodal Transportation. This course is scheduled for the first semester of this academic year. All course instructions have been explained in the course outline; make sure to download it and familiarize yourself with all expectations for the current semester.
The contact details of the facilitator of this course have been included in the course outline; do not hesitate to contact him/her for queries relating to this course.
- Lecturer: Bonny Chicken
- Lecturer: Maria Indongo
- Lecturer: Selma Gwangapi Naanda

The aim of the course is to equip students with the skills and knowledge required to work in a hospitality establishment's food preparation areas. Students should be able to develop advanced practical and reflective competence for the department of Food and beverage and Food production
- Lecturer: Alida Siebert
- Lecturer: Nasimane Ekandjo
Introduction to Criminal Justice Studies is a foundational course in your studies of Criminal Justice and should assist you as a first-year student to conceptualise and contextualise the various components of the Criminal Justice System. The literature used in the course is mostly imported, while the course will be delivered with an emphasis on the Namibian Criminal Justice system. It provides an examination of the Namibian system of Criminal Justice, its agencies, and the processes that constitute it. The course content therefore focuses on the various functions of its sub-systems, i.e., Police, Prosecution, Judiciary, and Corrections, against the backdrop of the various approaches to explaining "crime.”
- Lecturer: Macdonald Handura
- Lecturer: Beatrice Mutonga
- Lecturer: Tuma Naukushu
The course explores some major theories on criminal and deviant behaviour. The course aims to introduce you to the study of criminology and to help you understand the dynamics of crime and criminal behaviour.
- Lecturer: Macdonald Handura
- Lecturer: Beatrice Mutonga
- Lecturer: Charles Sibolile
- Lecturer: Gail Van Wyk

In the discipline of human resource management, training and development is the field concerned with organisational activity aimed at improving the performance of individuals and groups in organisational settings. Education, training and development have been referred to as employee development, human resource development, and learning and development. Employee education, training and development at the right time, ensures big payoffs for the employer in the form of increased productivity, knowledge, loyalty, and employee contributions.
People are the most important treasure in any organisation. How we lead, motivate, train and develop employees is of out most importance. To remain competitive, organisations need to have well motivated and highly performing employees. This can be achieved by training and developing employees.
This course expose you to how to manage training in organisations, the factors that affect training environments and how to determine training needs.
Enjoy the course. Remember: What we learn with joy, we never forget.
- Lecturer: Nicolette Fourie
- Lecturer: Brenda Kahuikee
- Lecturer: Abraham Shilomboleni
In Introduction to Geospatial Data emphasis is placed on learning the basics of different data models, various co-ordinate systems as well as the basics of aerial photography and GPS (Global Positioning System). The enrollment key is IGD411S
- Lecturer: Desire Husselmann
Welcome NUST-students to the course shell for Introduction to Land Use Planning and Management (ILP510S). The enrolment key for the course is landuse (1 word & small letters). Check the announcement box (in course shell) regularly for information regarding lectures & important dates.
- Lecturer: Nadine Korrubel
This is a practical photography course focusing on digital photography and darkroom techniques. It emphasizes sensitivity to people, events and circumstances under which media practitioners - especially photo journalists – communicate messages.
Students will learn how to operate the still camera, develop black-and-white photographs and produce photographic material for various media formats.
- Lecturer: Jordaania Kondjeni Andima
- Lecturer: Dr Hugh Ellis-Mwiya
This aim of this course is to provide the students with an overview of the general properties of waves from different physical media, Archimedes’ Principle, transformer and general electricity concepts.
- Lecturer: Ilana Malan
This course will introduce students to programming concepts and techniques for solving
computing-related problems. Students will learn to brainstorm a given problem, decompose it
to reduce its complexity, and define the modules that form the solution. They will be exposed
to how to represent data as a compact block of information, define a sequence of instructions
as part of the solution, iterate over a subset of those instructions, or select a portion of them.
- Lecturer: Tendai Mataranyika
- Lecturer: Dr Simon Muchinenyika

Welcome to the Course. The aim of this course is to introduce the students to the Public Management concepts in general. It also provides insights on the nature and scope of Public Management as well as about various environments within which public management operates. In addition, the course makes the students understand the various functions of a public manager and management and technological aids used in Public Management
- Lecturer: Dr Tekla Amutenya
- Lecturer: Aleks Joseph
- Lecturer: Brenda Kahuikee
- Lecturer: Abraham Shilomboleni