Course Descriptions African Studies • Anthropology • Arabic • Art University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus University College: Arts• Science s• Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus, Teaneck, ; and Vancouver Campus, British Columbia, Canada

Courses offered fall, spring and/or summer are household archaeology, Mayan ideology and the elements and principles of design. Eastern so noted. To determine availability of courses post-classic Mayan achievements. A field course and Western styles will be included in discus - not so designated, please check with appropriate in Belize, Central America (in cooperation with sions of masterworks. Aesthetic judgment, com - school director. FDU’s sister institution, Galen University). positional organization and artistic methodology will be examined in each case. Emphasis will be on the viewing and discussion of works within a Africana Studies Arabic specific context involving some demonstrations and hands-on studio experiences. Museum visits School of Criminal Justice, Political School of the Humanities and art experiences will be designed to reach the Science and International Studies ultimate goal, i.e., an appreciation of art. ARAB1101 Fall, Spring AFST1101 3 Credits 3 Credits Elementary Arabic I ART1107 Africa and Africans I: History and An introduction to contemporary spoken and 3 Credits Traditions written Arabic. Development of Art I This is an introductory survey course on Africa. History of art from ancient through medieval This course provides students with insights into ARAB1102 times. Required of all art majors. the history, traditions and the African society 3 Credits before 1800. The course will focus on the fami - Elementary Arabic II ART1108 ly, ideas, linkages, kinships and ways of life of A continuation of ARAB1101 Elementary 3 Credits the African people. Arabic I. Prerequisite: ARAB1101 Elementary Development of Art II Arabic I or equivalent. History of art from the Renaissance through the AFST1102 present. Required of all art majors. 3 Credits ARAB2103 Africa and Africans II: Communities 3 Credits ART1112 and Culture Intermediate Arabic I 3 Credits This survey course will introduce students to the A continuation of conversation and reading in Medieval Art diversity of the African continent. It will intro - contemporary Arabic with emphasis on the cul - Painting, sculpture, architecture and minor arts duce students to African communities and cul - tural context of the language. Prerequisite: from the early Christian through the Gothic tures as well as focus on the relationship among ARAB1102 Elementary Arabic II or equivalent. periods. African societies and between Africa and the rest of the world. It will provide insights into ARAB2104 ART1120 contemporary Africa (since 1800) including its 3 Credits 3 Credits arts, economy, ideas, literature, music, politics, Intermediate Arabic II Modern Art to Mid-century etc. Prerequisite: AFST1101 Africa and Africans A continuation of ARAB2103 Intermediate The major movements in painting, sculpture I: History and Traditions. Arabic I. Prerequisite: ARAB2103 Intermediate and architecture in Europe and America in the Arabic I or equivalent. late 19th and early 20th centuries. Anthropology ART1131 Art 3 Credits School of Psychology History of Graphic Design and School of Art and Media Studies Illustration ANTH3101 A survey of visual-communication systems from 1 Credit Art History and Lecture early global civilization through book and maga - Introduction to Mayan Civilization zine illustration, poster and advertising art from This course provides an overview of Mayan ART1101 the 19th century to the present. (Equivalent to history, culture, art and archaeology, as well as 3 Credits COMM1131 History of Graphic Design and field experiences at several ancient Mayan cities, Art Appreciation Illustration.) excavation sites and caves (e.g., Baking Pot, Basic elements underlying various forms of the Cahal Pech, Caracol and Xunantunich). Stu - visual arts. (Cannot be counted toward a major ART1133 dents will have an opportunity to explore every - or secondary area of concentration in fine arts.) 3 Credits thing from the jade-filled tombs of rulers to History of Photography post-classic period refuse dumps, as well as the ART1103 History of photography from Niépce to the opportunity to learn about excavation tech - 3 Credits present day. niques, mapping and methods for surveying cul - Principles of Art Appreciation tural remains. Specific topics include Mayan This course is designed to introduce students to the language of art through an examination of

419 Course Descriptions Art University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ART1135 foundation.) Prerequisite: ART1141 Two-dimen- ART1161 3 Credits sional Design. 3 Credits Cinema I: The Director’s Vision Spring Fee Painting I Cinema theory, technique, technology and style. Painting in acrylic or oil media. Problems of Weekly screenings of important films. May be ART1144 form, expression and technique. repeated, but student may not repeat topic. 3 Credits Fall, Spring Fall Fee Color Theory I The physical and psychological properties of ART1167 ART1136 color and the application of these phenomena 3 Credits 3 Credits in the creative arts. Collage and Mixed Media Cinema II: Themes in Films Fee Constructing works of art from paper and Major films in historical and contemporary cin- ART1147 castoff materials, including three-dimensional ema and their unique contributions to film 2 Credits objects and boxes in assemblage. theory, technique, technology and style. May be Introduction to Studio Arts I repeated, but student may not repeat topic. Drawing, painting and composition for non-art ART1169 Spring Fee majors. Basic techniques and practical applica - 3 Credits tion of elements and principles of design. Watercolor Painting I ART1137 (Cannot be counted toward a fine arts major.) Fundamentals of transparent watercolor paint - 3 Credits Fee ing. Stretching, wash techniques and brush History of Fashion Design manipulation. This course is a study of the history of fashion ART1151 through the ages — from Egypt and ancient 3 Credits ART1170 Greece to the present day. Sketching, written General Drawing I 3 Credits assignments and observation will be used to Basic techniques and concepts in creative draw - Advertising Design gain knowledge on the subject. FDU NetID (for - ing from observation and imagination. (Fresh- Principles of design applied to commercial lay - merly Webmail) account required. man art major foundation.) outs. (Equivalent to COMM1170 Advertising Design.) ART2137 ART1153 3 Credits 3 Credits ART1172 Global Roots of American Life Drawing I 3 Credits Architecture Basic concepts and techniques of drawing the Designing with Color This survey course introduces students to Amer - human form through observation of live models. With online lectures, offline reading, uploaded ican architecture with the emphasis on global (Freshman art major foundation.) graphics and computing conferences, students influences brought by a unique makeup of the Fee will explore the way of using the computer to population of immigrants. Prerequisite: design with color, developing color schemes and ENWR1001 Composition I: Rhetoric and ART1157 design projects. Inquiry. Corequisite: ENWR1002 Composition 3 Credits II: Research and Argument. Printmaking I ART1174 Basic printmaking techniques and their aesthetic 3 Credits ART2238 possibilities. Monoprints, linocuts and wood - Desktop Publishing I 3 Credits blocks. Fundamentals of layout, design and typography The Global Art World Fee on the computer. Introduction to publishing on Via the internet as virtual art world, the purpose the computer using Quark Xpress ®, Adobe ® of this course is to acquaint students with visual ART1158 Illustrator ® and Adobe ® Photoshop ®. art from around the world. The class will travel 3 Credits (Equivalent to COMM1174 Desktop the globe to visit museums, galleries and artists. Silk-screen Printing I Publishing.) Students will become acquainted with relation - Serigraphy: The artistic use of silk-screen ships between historical and contemporary method of printing. Basic techniques of single ART1177 work and how it interconnects all continents and multicolored printing. 3 Credits and countries. Fee Introduction to Digital Media Fundamentals of using the computer as a draw - Art Studios ART1159 ing/painting medium. Digitizing, video imaging 3 Credits and manipulation of digital information to ART1141 Monotype Printmaking create visual art. (Equivalent to COMM1177 3 Credits This course will explore Monotype technique Introduction to Digital Media.) Two-dimensional Design using Xerox copy transfer, stencil masking, Basic elements and principles of two- dimensional texture transfer, paper collage and brayer ART1178 design and composition. (Freshman art major method on unique rubber plate and paper 3 Credits foundation.) lithography. All processes will be demonstrated Multimedia on the Internet Fall Fee in class and applied through printing sessions Fundamentals of interactive design for the web and critiques. using Macromedia Flash. Useful in multimedia ART1142 Fee and web design. Three contact hours required 3 Credits for all students. Extended laboratory of two con - Three-dimensional Design tact hours required for art majors only. Basic elements and principles of three-dimensional design and composition. (Freshman art major

420 Course Descriptions Art University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ART1179 ART1838 on lectures and outside projects on skeletal and 3 Credits 3 Credits muscular structures. Prerequisite: ART1153 Digital Illustration and Design Elementary Digital Video Life Drawing I or permission of instructor. The use of the computer as a primary tool in A hands-on class in the creation of short videos Fee illustration and design. Extended laboratory for utilizing video download to digital files, nonlin - art majors only. ear editing and postproduction on the computer. ART2257 Students will make their own videos from con - 3 Credits ART1181 cept to completion. (Equivalent to COMM1838 Printmaking II 3 Credits Elementary Digital Video.) An extension of and further study of skills and Sculpture I techniques covered in ART1157 Printmaking I. Developing perceptual skills through clay, plas - ART1841 Students will be encouraged to develop their ter and mixed media. 3 Credits own projects. Fee Pastel Drawing I An introduction to drawing techniques using ART2258 ART1187 color. 3 Credits 3 Credits Silk-screen Printing II Ceramics I ART1843 Various stencil methods of silk-screen reproduc - Clay structure; methods of coil, slab and wheel 3 Credits tion including photographic film. Techniques of construction; firing and glazing. Design for the Web multicolor printing emphasized. Prerequisite: Fall Fee Introduction to design issues specific for the ART1158 Silk-screen Printing I or permission of web. The course includes an overview of how instructor. ART1189 the internet functions. It covers basic website Fee 3 Credits interactivity and navigation, image adjustment Jewelry I and compression, as well as basics of multime - ART2261 Basic design concepts and creation in metal jew - dia on the web. 3 Credits elry. Painting II ART2182 Continuation of ART1161 Painting I. Pre requi- ART1192 3 Credits site: ART1141 Two-dimensional Design, 3 Credits Wood Sculpture ART1161 Painting I or permission of instructor. Digital Photography I Basic shop practices and production for building Fundamentals of electronic imaging to input wood sculpture. ART2269 photographic materials and manipulate them in 3 Credits a digital environment for creative use and com - ART2189 Watercolor Painting II mercial application. 3 Credits Advanced techniques in water-soluble media. Basic Jewelry II Emphasis on original procedures for painting ART1830 Introduction to basic casting techniques and various subjects including still life and land - 3 Credits model making for jewelry and small sculpture. scape. Prerequisite: ART1169 Watercolor Adobe ® Photoshop ® for Illustration Prerequisite: ART1189 Jewelry I or permission Painting I or permission of instructor. Using Adobe ® Photoshop ®. Traditional illustra - of instructor. tion techniques are revised to enable the artist to ART2271 work directly on the computer. ART2215 3 Credits 3 Credits Adobe ® After Effects: ART1832 Photoshop ® for Advertisement and Broadcast Graphics 3 Credits Illustration This course is an introduction into the world of Alternative Art I The use of Photoshop ® in the creation and broadcast motion graphics for television and the A study of underground and outsider art forms manipulation of digital artwork for editorials web using an industry-leading software, Adobe ® beyond the scope of the traditional, including and advertising in print media. Student projects After Effects. Students learn basic animation body-art (tattoos, piercing, etc.). Performance are modeled after real-world commercial assign - techniques while creating short movies — art, folk art and rituals. ments. animated logos, titles and openings. Winter Session ART2247 ART2274 ART1834 2 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Introduction to Studio Arts II Computer 3-Dimensional Modeling Alternative Art II Sculpture and graphics for nonart majors. Basic Students will learn the design aspects of creating Building on concepts covered in ART1832 techniques. Elements and principles of design three-dimensional graphics for broadcast appli - Alternative Art I. applied to three-dimensional forms and print - cations and design tools for creating virtual sets. making. (Cannot be counted toward a fine arts ART1837 major.) Prerequisite: ART1147 Introduction to ART2275 3 Credits Studio Arts I. 3 Credits Alternative Art III Fee Computer Animation II Utilizing basic skills covered in ART1832 and Continuation of animation principles with a ART1834 Alternative Art I and II. Students will ART2253 focus on three-dimensional animation. be expected to create finished pieces of alterna - 3 Credits tive art. Life Drawing II Continued practice of drawing the human figure through observation of live models. Emphasis

421 Course Descriptions Art University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ART2277 tices of video/digital production and postpro - ART3675 3 Credits duction. This includes camera shooting and digi - 3 Credits Illustration tal video editing. (Equivalent to COMM2673 Advanced Video Production Book, magazine, editorial, advertising and Basic Video Production.) The study of video/digital preproduction, pro - humorous illustration. Prerequisite: ART1151 duction and postproduction with an emphasis General Drawing I, ART1153 Life Drawing I or ART2841 on professional techniques, procedures and the - ART1161 Painting I, ART1169 Watercolor 3 Credits ory. (Equivalent to COMM3675 Advanced Painting I or permission of instructor. Pastel Drawing II Video Production.) This course builds on the basic media and color ART2281 techniques of ART1841 Pastel Drawing I and ART3749 3 Credits includes experimental pastel techniques. 3 Credits Sculpture II Prerequisite: ART1841 Pastel Drawing I. Advanced Video Editing Continued problems in three-dimensional art This is a project-oriented, hands-on course that using clay, plaster and mixed media. Prerequi- ART3255 emphasizes enhanced editing techniques, proce - site: ART1142 Three-dimensional Design or 3 Credits dures and theory. Prerequisite: ART2648 Basic ART1181 Sculpture I. Drawing for Animation II Video Editing. (Equivalent to COMM3749 Fee Using two-dimensional animation, advanced cell Advanced Video Editing.) drawing and storyboarding to make an anima - ART2287 tion. Prerequisite: ART2294 2-D Computer ART4430–ART4449 3 Credits Animation. 1–3 Credits Ceramics II Selected Studies in Art Advanced problems on potter’s wheel and addi - ART3352 Studies in an area of art. tional work in glazing and firing. Prerequisite: 3 Credits ART1187 Ceramics I or permission of instructor. General Drawing III ART4472 Fee Advanced exploration of both the students’ 3 Credits environment and selected drawing media. Senior Seminar ART2294 Preparation for the extensive exploration of a 3 Credits ART3353 specific topic in one’s area of concentration 2-D Computer Animation 3 Credits under the guidance of a faculty mentor. Development of storyboards and characters, Life Drawing III introduction of two-dimensional animation on Advanced media and techniques in drawing ART4473 the computer for online games and short human figures from live models. Emphasis on 3 Credits movies. expressive content, form and style. Prerequi- Senior Project sites: ART1153 Life Drawing I and ART2253 Extensive exploration of a specific topic in one’s ART2295 Life Drawing II. area of concentration under the guidance of a 3 Credits Fee faculty mentor. 3D Computer Animation Fundamentals of creating three-dimensional ani - ART3361 ART4475, ART4476 mation from conception to final presentation on 3 Credits Variable Credits the computer. (Equivalent to COMM1175 Painting III Honors Art Computer Animation I.) Solutions to problems of form and content in Independent study in art for students in the painting through individual creative develop - University Honors Program under the direction ART2648 ment. Prerequisite: ART2261 Painting II or of a specific faculty member with approval of 3 Credits permission of instructor. the school director. Prerequisite: admission to Basic Video Editing the University Honors Program. Introductory video/audio editing techniques, ART3372 procedures and theory. A hands-on approach 3 Credits ART4498 utilizing nonlinear video-editing equipment to Motion Graphics: Broadcast and 3 Credits edit video projects. Corequisite: ART2649 Basic Web Animation Internship in Art Video Editing Laboratory. (Equivalent to Working with Adobe ® After Effects and Consult with department for further informa - COMM2648 Basic Video Editing.) Macromedia Flash, students will explore com - tion. Prerequisites: upper-division standing puter animation and motion graphics. Students and permission of school director or intern - ART2649 will produce animations that can be recorded ship adviser. Maximum of 6 hours for all 0 Credits onto video or exported to the web. internships. Basic Video Editing Laboratory Video/audio editing with the professional AVID ART3387 ART4821 digital nonlinear editing system. These labs will 3 Credits 3 Credits emphasize a hands-on approach in the editing of Ceramics III Portfolio video projects. Corequisite: ART2648 Basic Continued problems in clay. Prerequisite: Students will learn to prepare a professional Video Editing. ART2287 Ceramics II or permission of portfolio for presentation after college. instructor. Portfolios for specialized needs will be ART2673 Fee addressed. 3 Credits Basic Video Production Classroom and hands-on field production course introducing students to the principles and prac -

422 Course Descriptions Biological Sciences University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

BIOL1105 culturing, fermentation reactions and micro - Biological 3 Credits scopic examinations. Prerequisites: CHEM1107 Lecture 2 hours Chemistry for Health Sciences and CHEM1117 Sciences The Human Environment Laboratory: Chemistry for Health Sciences. School of Natural Sciences Includes interaction among the biological, Corequisite: BIOL2125 Microbiology for the chemical and physical topics, population Health Sciences. growth, technological change, resource avail - Fee Courses for Nonmajors ability and pollution problems. Corequisite: BIOL1115 Laboratory: The Human Environ- BIOL2203, BIOL2223 BIOL1001 ment. 4 Credits 3 Credits Lecture 3 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Lecture 2 hours BIOL1106 Human Anatomy and Physiology I Principles of Modern Biology 3 Credits Study of organ systems of the human body. The Basic principles of biology using evolution as the Lecture 2 hours cells, tissues, integumentary system, skeletal sys - unifying theme of a study of biologically impor - Over-the-Counter Drugs tem, articulations, muscular system, nervous tant chemicals, structure and functions of cells, Characteristics and development of nonprescrip - sys tem and special senses. Required of students organisms, plants and animals. The interactions tion drugs. Mechanisms of action of over-the- in the nursing program. of individuals and populations are examined to counter medications. Effects on major body Fee understand humanity’s impact on the environ - systems. Interactions with prescription medica- ment. Corequisite: BIOL1011 Laboratory: tions, food supplements and herbs. Side effects BIOL2204, BIOL2224 Principles of Modern Biology. and contraindications. Over-the-counter medi- 4 Credits Fall, Spring cations in the media and sports. Corequisite: Lecture 3 hours; Laboratory 2 hours BIOL1116 Laboratory: Over-the-Counter Human Anatomy and Physiology II BIOL1011 Drugs. Study of organ systems of the human body. 0 Credits Cir culatory system, lymphatic system, urinary Laboratory 2 hours BIOL1115 system, endocrine system, male and female Laboratory: Principles of Modern 0 Credits reproductive systems and embryonic devel- Biology Laboratory 2 hours opment. Required of students in the nursing Scientific method, microscopy, cells, cell struc - Laboratory: The Human Environment program. Prerequisite: BIOL2203, BIOL2223 ture, function, division, osmosis, diffusion, tests Experiments illustrating the topics discussed in Human Anatomy and Physiology I. for carbohydrates, fats, proteins, chlorophyll BIOL1105 The Human Environment. Fee analysis for pigments, Mendelian genetics, study Corequisite: BIOL1105 The Human Courses for Students in the Environment. of animal and plant tissues with organization Sciences and dissection of a small vertebrae. Corequisite: Fee BIOL1001 Principles of Modern Biology. BIOL1251 Fee BIOL1116 0 Credits 3 Credits Lecture 3 hours BIOL1060 Laboratory 2 hours General Biology I 3 Credits Laboratory: Over-the-Counter Drugs Modern biological principles and processes Lecture 2 hours Laboratory investigations of the effects of over- relating to organismal diversity, evolution, ecolo - Genetics and Society the-counter medications on living systems. gy and behavior. Corequisite: BIOL1253 An introduction to genetics with emphasis on Corequisite: BIOL1106 Over-the-Counter Laboratory: General Biology I. the impact of new developments in genetic Drugs. technology on the individual and on society. Fee BIOL1252 Transmission of genes in families, genetic coun- 3 Credits seling and reproductive decisions, treatment and BIOL2125 Lecture 3 hours diagnosis of inherited disease, genes in popula- 4 Credits General Biology II tions. Current topics such as cloning, stem cell Lecture 3 hours Modern biological principles and processes research and genetically modified foods will be Microbiology for the Health Sciences relating to organismal diversity, evolution, ecolo - discussed. Corequisite: BIOL1061 Laboratory: Introduction to microbial world, bacteriology, gy and behavior. Cell structure and function, cell Genetics and Society. virology, mycology, parasitology and immunol - ogy. Suitable for students planning a career in metabolism and genetics biochemistry will be covered. Corequisite: BIOL1254 Laboratory: BIOL1061 health sciences. Prerequisites: CHEM1107 General Biology II. 0 Credits Chemistry for Health Sciences and CHEM1117 Laboratory 2 hours Laboratory: Chemistry for Health Sciences. BIOL1253 Laboratory: Genetics and Society Corequisite: BIOL2126 Laboratory: Microbiol - 1 Credit Laboratory exercises supplementary to concepts ogy for the Health Sciences. Laboratory 3 hours examined in BIOL1060 Genetics and Society. Laboratory: General Biology I Corequisite: BIOL1060 Genetics and Society. BIOL2126 Experiments illustrating the topics discussed in Fee 0 Credits Laboratory 2 hours BIOL1251 General Biology I. Corequisite: Laboratory: Microbiology for the BIOL1251 General Biology I. Health Sciences Fee Isolation and identification of common patho - genic and nonpathogenic organisms, staining,

423 Course Descriptions Biological Sciences University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

BIOL1254 BIOL2211 BIOL1252 General Biology II, BIOL1253 1 Credit 0 Credits Laboratory: General Biology I, BIOL1254 Laboratory 3 hours Laboratory 4 hours Laboratory: General Biology II, CHEM1201 Laboratory: General Biology II Laboratory: Genetics General Chemistry I, CHEM1202 General Experiments illustrating the topics discussed in Laboratory exercises emphasize experimental Chemistry II, CHEM1203 General Chemistry BIOL1252 General Biology II. Corequisite: design and methods and enhance understanding Laboratory I, CHEM1204 General Chemistry BIOL1252 General Biology II. of principles of genetics through problem solv - Laboratory II, CHEM2261 Organic Chemistry I, Fee ing. Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General Biology I; CHEM2262 Organic Chemistry II, CHEM2263 BIOL1252 General Biology II; BIOL1253 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I and Courses for Majors Laboratory: General Biology I; BIOL1254 CHEM2264 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II. Laboratory: General Biology II, CHEM1201, Corequisite: BIOL3226 Laboratory: General BIOL2120 CHEM1203 General Chemistry; and CHEM1202, Microbiology. 3 Credits CHEM1204 General Chemistry II . Corequisite: Lecture 2 hours BIOL2210 Genetics. BIOL3226 Introduction to Aquaculture and 0 Credits Hydroponics BIOL2237, BIOL2239 Laboratory 4 hours Laboratory: General Microbiology An introduction to aquaculture and hydroponics 4 Credits to illustrate the practices of biological sustain - Lecture 3 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Isolation and identification of common patho - Human Structure and Function I ability. Discussions will focus on the biological genic and nonpathogenic organisms utilizing requirementsof aquaculture organisms and the Study of the structure and adaptive homeostatic staining, culturing, biochemical analysis and engineering requirements of typical manmade control of organ systems. Contemporary problems microscopic inspection. BIOL1251 General flowing-water systems. Mathematical models in the environmental and health sciences are relat - Biology I, BIOL1252 General Biology II, and calculations will be employed to create ed to the human body. Laboratory includes organ BIOL1253 Laboratory: General Biology I, sustainable business models for aquaculture dissection. Open to sophomore and junior biology BIOL1254 Laboratory: General Biology II, and hydroponics. Corequisite: BIOL2121 Lab: majors. Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General Biology CHEM1201 General Chemistry I, CHEM1202 Introduction to Aquaculture and Hydroponics. I and BIOL1253 Laboratory: General Biology I. General Chemistry II, CHEM2261 Organic Fall, Spring Fee Chemistry I, CHEM2262 Organic Chemistry II, BIOL2121 CHEM2263 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I 0 Credits BIOL2250 and CHEM2264 Organic Chemistry Laboratory II. Laboratory 2 hours 4 Credits Corequisite: BIOL3225 General Microbiology. Lab: Introduction to Aquaculture and Lecture 2 hours Fee Hydroponics Ecology and Field Biology Experiments illustrating the topics discussed in Relationships of organisms and their environ - BIOL3345 BIOL2120 Introduction to Aquaculture and ment. Ecosystem analysis including study of 3 Credits Hydroponics. Corequisite: BIOL2120 Introduc - abiotic components, organisms, pop ulation Lecture 3 hours Molecular Genetics tion to Aquaculture and Hydroponics. dynamics and community structure. Corequi - site: BIOL2150 Laboratory: Ecology and Field Structure and function of genomes and pro - BIOL2150 Biology. teomes. Experimental manipulation of macro - 0 Credits Fee molecules including restriction mapping, Laboratory 4 hours cloning and identification of recombinant Laboratory: Ecology and Field BIOL2300 molecules. Applications in research, medicine, Biology 3 Credits agriculture and forensics. Gene mining for phar - Experimental Design Fieldwork illustrating the topics discussed in macogenomics and gene therapy. Use of internet BIOL2250 Ecology and Field Biology. This course examines the scientific research databases. Ethical, legal and social issues. Pre - Corequisite: BIOL2250 Ecology and Field Biology. process, with hands-on exercises in statistical requisites: BIOL2210 Genetics and BIOL2211 Fee data analysis and the analysis of original re- Laboratory: Genetics . search procedure using Excel, SAS and SPSS Fall, Spring BIOL2210 technologies. The analysis of experimental de- 4 Credits sign in original research papers is through the BIOL3357 Lecture 2 hours identification of experimental variables, graphi - 4 Credits Genetics cal representations, statistical techniques, data Lecture 3 hours Human Structure and Function II Study of transmission of inherited characteris - interpretation and research theses. Prerequisites: tics, the structure and function of the genetic BIOL1251 General Biology I, BIOL1252 Intensive study of the structure and function material, mutation, manipulations of genetic General Biology II, BIOL1253 Laboratory: and adaptive homeostatic control of organ sys - material by recombinant DNA techniques and General Biology I and BIOL1254 Laboratory: tems. Emphasis will be on problem-solving tech - their applications, genomics, proteomics, popu - General Biology II. niques and applications of concepts to clinical lation genetics and evolution. Prerequisites: situations. Prerequisites: BIOL1251, BIOL1253 BIOL1251 General Biology I; BIOL1252 BIOL3225 General Biology I; BIOL1252, BIOL1254 General Biology II; BIOL1253 Laboratory: 4 Credits General Biology II; and BIOL2237, BIOL2239 General Biology I, BIOL1254 Laboratory: Lecture 2 hours Human Structure and Function I. Corequisite: General Microbiology General Biology II; CHEM1201, CHEM1203 BIOL3358 Laboratory: Human Structure and General Chemistry I; CHEM1202, CHEM1204 Introduction to microorganisms’ structure, Function II. General Chemistry II. Corequisite: BIOL2211 biochemistry, genetics and physiology and their Fall, Spring Laboratory: Genetics. interactions with animals and other organisms. Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General Biology I,

424 Course Descriptions Biological Sciences University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

BIOL3358 BIOL1254 Laboratory: General Biology II. BIOL4405 0 Credits Corequisite: BIOL4220 Histology. 3 Credits Laboratory 2 hours Fee Lecture 3 hours Laboratory: Human Structure and Ethics in Science Function II BIOL4235 Studies relating to the ethical application of Laboratory exercises include the study of physi - 4 Credits advances in sciences to humans, other living ological control mechanisms. Emphasis will be Lecture 2 hours organisms, ecosystems and the planet. on basic physiological principles covering mus - Developmental Biology Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General Biology I, cular, cardiovascular, pulmonary and central Life cycles and the evolution of developmental BIOL1252 General Biology II, BIOL1253 nervous system. Prerequisites: BIOL1251, patterns, principles of experimental embryology, Laboratory: General Biology I and BIOL1254 BIOL1253 General Biology I; and BIOL1252, genes and development techniques and ethical Laboratory: General Biology II. BIOL1254 General Biology II. Corequisite: issues, genetic core of development, differential BIOL3357 Human Structure and Function II. gene expression, cell-to-cell communication in BIOL4414 Spring development. Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General 3 Credits Biology I and BIOL1253 Laboratory: General Lecture 2 hours BIOL3417 Biology I. Corequisite: BIOL4236 Laboratory: Animal Behavior 3 Credits Developmental Biology. Principles of animal behavior. History, methods, Lecture 3 hours genetics, evolution, physiology of biological Introduction to Recombinant DNA BIOL4236 rhythms, learning, communication, migration, DNA structure and function, methods of creat - 0 Credits habitat selection and foraging. Corequisite: ing and cloning recombinant DNA molecules in Laboratory 4 hours BIOL4415 Laboratory: Animal Behavior. prokaryotic and eukaryotic systems and applica - Laboratory: Developmental Biology tions of these manipulations in biology, medi - Examining early and late embryonic develop - BIOL4415 cine, agriculture and industry. ment in selected invertebrates, amphibians, 1 Credit fish, birds and mammals in addition to meta - Laboratory 4 hours BIOL4000 morphosis, regeneration and aging as related to Laboratory: Animal Behavior 1 Credit environmental regulation of animal develop - Experiments illustrating the topics discussed Curricular Practical Training ment and mechanisms of evolutionary change. in BIOL4414 Animal Behavior. Corequisite: A curricular practical training (CPT) require - Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General Biology I BIOL4414 Animal Behavior. ment for work experience course/independent and BIOL1253 Laboratory: General Biology I. Fee study registration in most academic programs at Corequisite: BIOL4235 Developmental Biology. FDU. The training experience is integral to the Fee BIOL4420 course, and the detailed course objectives will 3 Credits be on a separate independent study proposal BIOL4240 Lecture 3 hours form. The student’s work or training experience 4 Credits Evolution will be: part-time (20 hours or less per week) or Lecture 2 hours Evolutionary biology at all levels of organization full-time (more than 20 hours per week). A non- Molecular Cell Biology (molecular to societal). Established principles of letter grade of “P” for Pass or “NC” for No This course investigates the central concept of evolution, why and how evolutionary reasoning Credit will be applied to degree audit as this gene expression, DNA to RNA to protein and follows from the scientific method. Prerequi- course will be excess credit and not counted cell structure/function by integrating structure/ sites: BIOL2210, BIOL2211 Genetics and toward a degree requirement. function of biomolecules, biotechnology/ MATH1201 Calculus I. molecular techniques, regulatory mechanisms BIOL4220 for gene expression, protein targeting, signals/ BIOL4432 4 Credits signal transduction pathways, cell cycle, cell/ 3 Credits Lecture 2 hours extracellular matrix organization, stem cells, cell Selected Studies in Biology Histology birth, cell death and cancer. Prerequisites: Recent developments in special fields of biology. Understanding of normal microscopic form and BIOL1251 General Biology I, BIOL1252 function of human tissues through lectures and General Biology II, BIOL1253 Laboratory: BIOL4476, BIOL4875 discussions which require introduction to micro - General Biology I, BIOL1254 Laboratory: Variable Credits scopic techniques and microscopic work. General Biology II. Corequisite: BIOL4241 Honors Biology Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General Biology I, Laboratory: Molecular Cell Biology. Independent study in biology for students in the BIOL1252 General Biology II, BIOL1253 University Honors Program under the direction Laboratory: General Biology I, BIOL1254 BIOL4241 of a specific faculty member with approval of Laboratory: General Biology II. Corequisite: 0 Credits the school director. Prerequisite: ad mis sion to BIOL4221 Laboratory: Histology. Laboratory 4 hours the University Honors Program. Laboratory: Molecular Cell Biology BIOL4221 Experiments illustrating the topics discussed BIOL4800 0 Credits in BIOL4240 Molecular Cell Biology. 1–3 Credits Laboratory 4 hours Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General Biology I, Independent Study Laboratory: Histology BIOL1252 General Biology II, BIOL1253 Independent study under the direction of a fac - Microscopic analysis of the structure of normal Laboratory: General Biology I, BIOL1254 ulty member after consultation with the school human and animal tissues as related to their Laboratory: General Biology II. Corequisite: director. functions. Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General BIOL4240 Molecular Cell Biology. Fee Biology I, BIOL1252 General Biology II, Fee BIOL1253 Laboratory: General Biology I,

425 Course Descriptions Chemistry University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

BIOL4803 Graduate Courses CHEM1201, CHEM1202 3 Credits Graduate courses may be taken by seventh- 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) Research in Biological Sciences I or eighth-semester students who receive the Lecture 3 hours each semester This course will explore a specific topic within approval of the school director. A list of courses General Chemistry I, II either ecology and environmental biology, cell and descriptions is contained in the Graduate The fundamental laws, theories and principles and molecular biology, anatomy and physiology Studies Bulletin. of chemistry, with emphasis on atomic structure, and microbiology or biochemistry. Using a pro - chemical bonding, periodic classification of the ject-based approach, the course progresses from elements, solutions, equilibrium, reaction kinet - a survey of basic lab techniques to the applica - Chemistry ics and the theory and practice of the qualitative tion of current techniques in the specific areas chemistry of the common ions. Prerequisites: of study. Topics will change with each course School of Natural Sciences elementary algebra and for CHEM1202 General offering and will be chosen for their relevance Chemistry II grade of C- or higher in and importance within the field. Courses for Nonmajors CHEM1201 General Chemistry I. Corequisites: CHEM1203, CHEM1204 General Chemistry BIOL4804 CHEM1107 Laboratory I, II. 1–4 Credits 4 Credits Fall, Spring, Summer Research in Biological Sciences II Lecture 3 hours This course is a continuation of a topic initiated Chemistry for Health Sciences CHEM1203, CHEM1204 in BIOL4803 Research in Biological Sciences 1. Chemical principles with examples taken from 2 Credits (1 Credit Each Semester) This course will explore a specific topic within health sciences. Organic compounds significant General Chemistry Laboratory I, II either ecology and environmental biology, cell for the medical field and biochemical processes Practical applications of the fundamental and molecular biology, anatomy and physiology with human focus. Corequisite: CHEM1117 laws, theories and principles of chemistry and microbiology or biochemistry using a pro - Laboratory: Chemistry for Health Sciences. through problem solving and laboratory ex- ject-based approach, where students master the Fall, Spring periments. Prerequisite: elementary algebra. application of current techniques in the specific Corequisites: CHEM1201, CHEM1202 General area of study. Topics will change with each CHEM1117 Chemistry I, II. course offering and will be chosen for their rele - 0 Credits Fall, Spring, Summer Fee vance and importance within the field. Laboratory 2 hours Prerequi site: BIOL4803 Research in Biological Laboratory: Chemistry for Health Courses for Majors Sciences 1. Sciences Illustration of the principles discussed in CHEM2211 BIOL4855 CHEM1107 Chemistry for Health Sciences. 3 Credits 4 Credits Corequisite: CHEM1107 Chemistry for Health Lecture 3 hours Lecture 3 hours Sciences. Inorganic Chemistry I Molecular Biology Techniques Fall, Spring Fee Principles of atomic and molecular structure, The concepts of molecular techniques including stereochemistry, periodicity and bonding, with DNA isolation and analysis (DNA isolation, CHEM1118, CHEM1119 emphasis on the main group elements and their plasmid preparation, spectrophotometry, 3 Credits descriptive chemistry. Also covers topics such as agarose gel electrophoresis, southern blotting, Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours hydrogen bonding, acid-based chemistry, inor - DNA profiling); RNA isolation and analysis Forensic Science ganic polymers, geochemistry and metallic (chromatography, RT-PCR, microarrays); pro - The forensic analysis of substances such as bonding. Prerequisites: CHEM1201 General tein expression (ELISA, polyacrylamide gel elec - glass, bullets and drugs will be discussed along Chemistry I and CHEM1203 General Chemistry trophoresis, western blotting); and genomic with the basic, analytical and organic chemistry Laboratory I. cloning, screening, sequencing and bioinformat - on which they are based. Fall ics (expression vectors, databases). Corequisite: BIOL4856 Lab: Molecular Biology Techniques. CHEM1135 CHEM2261, CHEM2262 3 Credits 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) BIOL4856 Lecture 2 hours Lecture 3 hours each semester 0 Credits Science and Art Organic Chemistry I, II Laboratory 2 hours The science of materials used in painting, sculp - Structure and chemical properties of aliphatic Lab: Molecular Biology Techniques ture and graphic arts. Conservation, restoration, and aromatic compounds of carbon, with em- Experiments illustrating the topics discussed in detection of art forgeries. Corequisite: phasis on electronic theory, mechanisms of reac - BIOL4855 Molecular Biology Techniques. CHEM1136 Laboratory: Science and Art. tion and principles of synthesis. Prerequi sites: Corequisite: BIOL4855 Molecular Biology CHEM1202, CHEM1204 General Chemistry II Techniques. CHEM1136 and for CHEM2262 Organic Chemistry II grade Fee 0 Credits of C- or higher in CHEM2261 Organic Laboratory 2 hours Chemistry I. Coreq uisites: CHEM2263, BIOL4900, BIOL4901 Laboratory: Science and Art CHEM2264 Organic Chemistry Laboratory I, II. 1 Credit Each Semester Experiments illustrating the topics discussed in Fall, Spring, Summer Biology Seminar I and II CHEM1135 Science and Art. Corequi site: A series of lectures by invited speakers on topics CHEM1135 Science and Art. CHEM2263, CHEM2264 of current interest. Exposure of students to Fee 4 Credits (2 Credits Each Semester) research developments and techniques in selected Laboratory 4 hours each semester areas of specialization. Organic Chemistry Laboratory I, II A laboratory course taken concurrently with CHEM2261, CHEM2262 Organic Chemistry I,

426 Course Descriptions Chinese • Civil Engineering University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

II, which illustrates important principles of CHEM2264 Organic Chemistry II. CHEM4800 structure and reactivity, synthesis and analysis of Fall, Spring 1–3 Credits Each Semester organic compounds. Corequisites: CHEM2261, Independent Study in Chemistry CHEM2262 Organic Chemistry I, II. CHEM3282 An individual research project undertaken Fall, Spring, Summer Fee 3 Credits under a faculty supervisor. A final research Lecture 3 hours report must be submitted. Open only to upper- CHEM3231, CHEM3232 Biochemistry II level students. 4 Credits Study of metabolism, storage and expression of Fall, Spring Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 4 hours genetic information and other current aspects of Analytical Chemistry Graduate Courses CHEM4000 Theoretical principles of quantitative analysis Graduate courses may be taken by seventh- or 1 Credit with applications to gravimetric and volumetric eighth-semester students with the approval of the Curricular Practical Training methods. Prerequisite: CHEM1202, school director. A list of courses and descriptions A curricular practical training (CPT) require - CHEM1204 General Chemistry II. is contained in the Graduate Studies Bulletin. Fall Fee ment for work experience course/independent study registration in most academic programs at CHEM3241 FDU. The training experience is integral to the Chinese 3 Credits course and the detailed course objectives will be Lecture 3 hours on a separate independent study proposed form. School of the Humanities Physical Chemistry I The student’s work or training experience will The principles of physical chemistry from the be: part-time (20 hours or less per week) or full- CHIN1009 molecular and microscopic aspects; kinetic time (more than 20 hours per week). A non-let - 3 Credits theory, quantum mechanics, spectroscopic ter grade of “P” for Pass or “NC” for No Credit Basic Chinese for Business Purposes studies and statistical concepts; thermody- will be applied to degree audit as this course will This course is designed to support students namics, chemical phase equilibria, elec - be excess credit and not counted toward a enrolled in internships in China who want to use trolytes and electrochemistry. Prerequisites: degree requirement. Chinese as a tool to communicate with the CHEM2262, CHEM2264 Organic Chemistry II Chinese people, especially for business purpos - and MATH2202 Calculus II. Corequisite: CHEM4233 es. Such students are assumed to have no previ - CHEM3243 Physical Chemistry Laboratory I. 3 Credits ous background in Mandarin. The course will Fall Lecture 3 hours focus on business Chinese, as well as some use - Instrumental Analysis ful words and expressions for the daily life. CHEM3242 Theory and applications of absorption, emission Listening and speaking skills are emphasized 3 Credits and interpretative spectroscopy, electrochem - and extensively practiced in the classroom. Lecture 3 hours istry and chromatography to problems of chemi - Physical Chemistry II cal analysis. Introduction to interfacing, data CHIN1101 The principles of physical chemistry from the acquisition and data manipulations. 3 Credits molecular and microscopic aspects; kinetic Spring Elementary Chinese I theory, quantum mechanics, spectroscopic Selections that encourage conversation, reading studies and statistical concepts; thermody- CHEM4234 and writing. namics, chemical phase equilibria, electrolytes 2 Credits and electrochemistry. Prerequisites: Laboratory 4 hours CHIN1102 CHEM3241, CHEM3243 Physical Chemistry I . Instrumental Analysis Laboratory 3 Credits Corequisite: CHEM3244 Physical Chemistry Practical laboratory experiments in absorption, Elementary Chinese II Laboratory II. emission and interpretative spectroscopy elec - Continuation of CHIN1101 Elementary Chinese troanalytical methods, chromatography and ele - Spring I. Prerequisite: CHIN1101 Elementary Chinese I mentary interfacing. or equivalent . Spring Fee CHEM3243, CHEM3244 4 Credits (2 Credits Each Semester) CHEM4314, CHEM3314 Laboratory 4 hours each semester Civil Engineering 3 Credits Physical Chemistry Laboratory I, II Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Lee Gildart and Oswald Haase Laboratory experiments demonstrating funda - Inorganic Chemistry II School of Computer Sciences and mental laws, concepts and mathematically Application of molecular orbital theory, solid Engineering derived relationships involving selected physico - state theory and ligand field theory to inorganic chemical properties of matter and energy. Co- systems with emphasis on the properties and CENG1205 requisites: CHEM3241, CHEM3242 Physical reactions of compounds of the transition ele - 3 Credits Chemistry I, II. ments. Laboratory demonstration of current Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Fall, Spring Fee techniques of preparing and characterizing Surveying I inorganic compounds. The first of a two-course sequence in surveying CHEM3281 Spring Fee as applied to the construction industry. Such 3 Credits areas as layout and control of buildings and Lecture 3 hours CHEM4430 roads, earthwork measurements, horizontal and Biochemistry I 1–3 Credits Each Semester vertical curves, superelevation on curves, com - Chemistry of substances of biological signifi - Selected Studies in Chemistry puter applications to surveying and electronic cance, with particular emphasis on proteins, Recent developments in special fields of measurements will be studied. Prerequisite: enzymes, nucleic acids, sugars, lipids, hormones chemistry. MATH1107 Precalculus or equivalent. and vitamins. Prerequisite: CHEM2262, Fall, Spring Fall

427 Course Descriptions Civil Engineering University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

CENG1206 quantity control and other topics related to connections; preparing design notes, structural 3 Credits water resources. Utilization of water resources drawings and shop drawings in accordance with Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours simulating models and tools, including Arc-GIS, codes, industry standards and AISC (American Surveying II HEC-HMS and HEC-RAS. Prerequisite: Institute of Steel Construction). LRFD (Load The second of a two-course sequence in survey - ENGR4254 Fluid Mechanics. and Resistance Factor Design) method used. ing as applied to the construction industry. Such Spring Prerequisite: CENG3256 Steel Structures. areas as layout and control of buildings and Spring roads, earthwork measurements, horizontal and CENG3261 vertical curves, superelevation on curves, com - 3 Credits CENG4276 puter applications to surveying and electronic Estimating I 3 Credits measurements will be studied. Prerequisite: The development of a procedure (including Advanced Concrete Design CENG1205 Surveying I. check and balance) for preparing a quantity sur - Design of a complete reinforced concrete build - Spring vey of materials, labor and equipment for both ing including beams, girders, slabs, columns and general and specialty contractors. Prerequisite: footings; preparing set of design notes, structur - CENG1245 MATH1107 Precalculus or equivalent. al drawings and shop drawings. All in accor - 3 Credits Fall dance with codes, industry standards and ACI Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours (American Concrete Institute). Prerequisite: Construction Materials and Systems CENG3270 CENG3257 Concrete Structures. An introduction to the methods, equipment and 3 Credits Spring personnel employed in constructing buildings Environmental and Land-use Planning and subsystems of buildings such as founda - Environmental laws and pollution, environmen - CENG4280 tions, walls, floors and roofs. The types and tal-impact analysis, land-usage laws and ec o- 3 Credits physical properties of construction materials. nomics will be covered. Prerequisite: ENGR1301 Finite Element Analysis Fall Engineering Practices, Graphics and Design. Formulation and assembly of finite-element Spring matrices in one- and two-dimensional problems. CENG3250 Modeling and practical applications in truss, 3 Credits CENG4241 beam and frame structures, heat conduction and Structural Analysis 3 Credits linear elasticity. Practice in the use of computer Classical analysis methods of determinate and Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours programs. Prerequisites: ENGR2228 Strength indeterminate structures. Deflection calculation Soil Mechanics of Materials and MATH3220 Linear Algebra. of beams and trusses, work-energy methods, The mechanics of soil and rock masses as Spring influence line concept for moving loads. applied to construction, with emphasis on foot - Prerequisite: ENGR2228 Strength of Materials. ing and pile foundations, retaining walls, bulk - CENG4320 Fall heads, fills, embankments and the control of 3 Credits landslides. Identification, classification and test - Transportation Engineering CENG3256 ing of the physical properties of soils. Highway and urban transportation systems. 3 Credits Prerequisite: ENGR2228 Strength of Materials. Organizations and associations. Planning. Steel Structures Fall Driver, vehicle, traffic and road alignment, sight The application of the principles of statics and distances. Intersection and interchange design. strength of materials in the design and analysis CENG4242 Drainage details. Earthwork: calculations of vol - of structural steel beams, columns, trusses and 3 Credits umes. Materials for roads and surfaces, bearing frames, connections and base plates, all in Foundations qualities. Computer applications. Term and lab - accordance with current AISC (American Design of concrete and reinforced concrete foot - oratory projects assigned. Prerequisites: Institute of Steel Construction) specifications. ings and foundations and retaining walls. CENG1205 Surveying I and CENG4241 Soil Prerequisite: CENG3250 Structural Analysis or Bearing, friction and combined pile, pile caps Mechanics. permission of instructor. and sheet piling. Prerequisite: CENG4241 Soil Spring Fall Mechanics. Spring CENG4321 CENG3257 3 Credits 3 Credits CENG4260 Bridge Design Concrete Structures 3 Credits Loads. Maximum moments and shear in simple The analysis and design of reinforced concrete Contracts and Specifications and continuous spans. Steel bridges: floor sys - beams, girders, slabs and columns, all in accor - A study of codes and specifications required in tems, concrete and steel floors. Beam and plate- dance with current ACI (American Concrete engineering contracts. General contracts, sub- girder bridges. Truss, concrete and prestressed Institute) code and standards. Corequisite: contracts, constructions management contracts. concrete bridges. Railing design. Railroad CENG3250 Structural Analysis. Contract law. Prerequisites: CENG1245 bridges. Steel-plate-deck bridges, economic con - Construction Materials and Systems and siderations. Box girders. Computer applications. CENG3260 ENGR2210 Technical Communications. Term project assigned. Prerequisite: CENG3250 3 Credits Spring Structural Analysis. Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Environmental Engineering CENG4272 CENG4385 Water and water-resources management in nat - 3 Credits 3 Credits ural and urban areas. Design and management Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Senior Design Project of facilities for water supply and wastewater Advanced Steel Design Students work on capstone design projects treatment, development of watersheds, hydro - Design of a complete structural steel-frame using the knowledge gained through past course graphs, flow routing, stormwater quality and building including beams, floors, columns and work, following professional practice, applying

428 Course Descriptions Communication University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

design methodologies and exercising sound COMM1174 COMM2102 engineering judgment. Prerequisites: Senior 3 Credits 3 Credits standing and ENGR2210 Technical Desktop Publishing International Communication Communications. Fundamentals of layout, design and typography This course discusses issues such as images of Spring on the computer. Introduction to publishing on foreign countries, (mis)understanding of differ - the computer using Quark Xpress ®, Adobe ® ent cultures, the flow of information and cultur - Illustrator ® and Adobe ® Photoshop ®. (Equi- al invasion/imperialism. By taking this course, Communication valent to ART1174 Desktop Publishing I.) students will (1) gain a better understanding of the relationship between international commu - School of Art and Media Studies COMM1175 nication and globalization, (2) grasp the role 3 Credits mass media play in global communication and COMM1000 Computer Animation I (3) enhance critical awareness of problems mass 3 Credits Fundamentals of creating two- and three- media pose. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composi - Digital Storytelling dimensional animation from conception to final tion II: Research and Argument. This course explores the practice of reporting presentation on the computer. (Equivalent to across media platforms. The instruction allows ART2295 3D Computer Animation. ) COMM2103 students to construct narratives using a mix of 3 Credits text, photography, audio, video and graphics. COMM1177 Culture and Communication in Film The course emphasizes development of multi - 3 Credits The course will discuss domestic and foreign media offerings for online presentation. Introduction to Digital Media films that analyze (1) the ways that they present Fundamentals of using the computer as a draw - similarities and differences between cultures, COMM1101 ing/painting medium. Digitizing, video imaging (2) how different cultures influence people to in - 3 Credits and manipulation of digital information to cre - teract differently in the same/similar situations, Mass Media: Image, Sound and Text ate visual art. (Equivalent to ART1177 (3) how and in what ways filmmakers are con - The process and social effects of mass commu - Introduction to Digital Media.) strained by but also display their culture while nication in historical and contemporary settings. amusing and persuading audiences and (4) what The impacts of print media, such as newspapers, COMM1838 functions films perform in global communica - magazines and books, and electronic media, 3 Credits tion. Pre requisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: such as radio, movies, television and the Elementary Digital Video Research and Argument. internet, are examined. A hands-on class in the creation of short videos utilizing video download to digital files, nonlin - COMM2104 COMM1105 ear editing and post-production use on the com - 3 Credits 3 Credits puter. Students will make their own videos from Language, Culture and Intercultural Communication concept to completion. (Equivalent to ART1838 Communication Focuses on cultures and subcultures as well as Elementary Digital Video.) Language and its relationship to culture and their impact on perception, communication and communication. The nature and function of lan - behavior. Explores similarities and differences COMM2025 guage at the conceptual, syntactic, semantic and between cultures and barriers to intercultural 3 Credits pragmatic levels. How a language shapes the communication. Examines principles of and Communication Theory characteristics of a culture and how the culture skills in effective communicating and intercul - This course provides the beginning communica - determines the features of its language. The tural settings. tion scholar with a solid grounding in communi - impact of language on (mis)understanding in cation theory, providing the basis for further intercultural/international interactions. Pre- COMM1106 learning and research in the field. The class will requisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research 3 Credits explore the evolution of the discipline since its and Argument. Interpersonal Communication emergence in the 20th century and explore the Basic concepts of human communication; the major theories and approaches to the study of COMM2204 observation and analysis of sending and receiv - communication in the historical and cultural 3 Credits ing verbal and nonverbal messages. context in which they emerged and developed. Understanding Human Communication COMM1131 The course will connect theory to practice. 3 Credits An introduction to a wide range of theories and History of Graphic Design and COMM2101 research about effective communication in con - Illustration 3 Credits texts such as friendship, small groups and orga - A survey of visual communication systems from Professional Communication nizations. Special emphasis on interpersonal and early global civilization through book and maga - Study of and practice in major oral and written intercultural communication issues. zine illustration and poster and advertising art communications techniques and modes appro - Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: from the 19th century to the present. (Equiva- priate to professional communicators and others. Research and Argument. lent to ART1131 History of Graphic Design and Emphasis on group dynamics, collab orative pre - Illustration.) sentations, research, audience analysis, effective COMM2210 writing and speaking styles. Prerequisite: 3 Credits COMM1170 ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Popular Culture and the Media 3 Credits Argument. Investigation of the interrelationships of the Advertising Design mass media and popular culture, analyzing the Principles of design applied to commercial lay - ways in which mass media mirror and affect outs. (Equivalent to ART1170 Advertising popular culture. Design.) Fee

429 Course Descriptions Communication University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

COMM2211 COMM2557 COMM2743 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Mental Health Issues and the Media Radio Broadcast Workshop History of Film: Special Topics This course will identify and evaluate common, Radio station operations. Selection and editing Selected topic: intensive study of one particular media-promoted perceptions of mental health, of news and musical materials, including practi - aspect of film history such as directors, studios addressing how images perpetuated by film, cal assignments. or genres. May be repeated, but student may print and broadcast media influence families, not repeat a topic. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 the health care industry, the political establish - COMM2558 Composition II: Research and Argument. ment and others responsible for the wellness of 3 Credits Fee individuals with mental illness. The course is Basic Radio Station Engineering suitable for nursing and psychology majors, as Practicum in broadcast audio equipment theory, COMM2745 well as communication majors and others inter - wiring, operation, studio design, construction 3 Credits ested in media or mental-health concerns. and maintenance. Emphasis on the current digital Introduction to Film revolution in broadcasting with areas of discus - The art of the motion picture, using selected COMM2215 sion including the digital production studio, edit - films, and including screenwriting, camera, 3 Credits ing tools, the on-air studio and HD digital radio performance, music and sound, editing and the Photoshop ® for Advertisement and transmission (both conventional and satellite). roles of producer and director. Illustration Fee The use of Photoshop ® in the creation and COMM2648 manipulation of digital artwork for editorials 3 Credits COMM2833 and advertising in print media. Student projects Basic Video Editing 3 Credits are modeled after real-world commercial Introductory video/audio editing techniques, News Reporting assignments. procedures and theory. A hands-on approach Evaluation of news and news-gathering methods. utilizing the AVID nonlinear video-editing Study of various types of stories in the press. COMM2272 equipment to edit video projects. Corequisite: Practice in newswriting. Prerequi site: ENWR1002 3 Credits COMM2649 Basic Video Editing Laboratory. Composition II: Research and Argument. Layout and Typography (Equivalent to ART2648 Basic Video Editing.) Layout techniques. Principles of typography. COMM2835 Copy-fitting for advertising. COMM2649 3 Credits 0 Credits Feature Article Writing COMM2321 Basic Video Editing Laboratory Recognizing, reporting, writing and editing 3 Credits Video/audio editing with the professional AVID quality feature stories, based on sound journalis - Advertising Principles digital nonlinear editing system. These labs will tic practice and drawing from contemporary and Study of the role of advertising in the marketing emphasize a hands-on approach in the editing of classic examples. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 mix, concepts and methods used in the setting video projects. Corequisite: COMM2648 Basic Composition II: Research and Argument. of advertising goals, budgeting, planning and Video Editing. Fee implementation of a creative strategy, consid- erations of media and evaluation of campaign COMM2659 COMM2851 plans. Economic, social, legal and ethical issues 3 Credits 3 Credits of advertising are discussed. Broadcast News Photojournalism: Technique, Theory Writing and rewriting news for radio and televi - and History COMM2415 sion broadcast. A studio course. Prerequisite: Emphasis on weekly student photography 3 Credits COMM2833 News Reporting. assignments in the style of a photojournalist. Sports and Popular Culture Students will shoot and modify/print weekly The significance of sports’ contributions to pop - COMM2673 shooting assignments. Professional photojour - ular culture during the 20th and 21st centuries. 3 Credits nalistic techniques and procedures will be The primary focus will be on the United States, Basic Video Production stressed. Photojournalistic theory and history but contemporary globalization will also be con - Classroom and hands-on field production will complement the hands-on assignments. sidered. The primary mode of inquiry will be course introducing students to the principles Note: Students must own or have access to a through discussions that examine sports in a and practices of video/digital production and digital camera with a zoom lens or a 35mm film variety of cultural forms including, but not limit - postproduction. This includes camera shooting camera with zoom or set of prime lenses as well ed to, literature, film, television, advertising, car - and digital video editing (with AVID) of video as photo-editing software such as Adobe Photo- toons, the internet and music. Prerequisites: projects. (Equivalent to ART2673 Basic Video shop/Adobe Photoshop Elements, Adobe Photo- ENWR1001 Composition I: Rhetoric and Production.) Deluxe or Corel Paint Shop Photo Album 5 Inquiry and ENWR1002 Composition II: Fee Deluxe. Research and Argument. COMM2685 3 Credits COMM3101 COMM2443 Scriptwriting for Television, Film and 3 Credits 3 Credits Audio Visuals Investigating Communication: Ethics in Media Preparation of concepts, treatments and Research Methods Ethics in the print and broadcast media, using scripts suitable for production. Prerequisite: An introduction to the research procedures and current newspaper articles and news programs ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and techniques used in such fields as advertising and as resources. Students participate in the deci - Argument. journalism. Emphasis on understanding the sion-making process of reviewing and selecting rationale for survey, experimental and ethno - information for mass audiences. Emphasis on graphic research methods. class discussions.

430 Course Descriptions Communication University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

COMM3102 COMM3348 COMM3558 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Media, History and Society Broadcast Advertising Advanced Radio Broadcast Workshop The relationship of media to history and soci - A practical and informative course describing Refinement of on-air performance and proce - ety: how media shapes culture, leads to social the various aspects of the television advertising dures, conducted at WFDU (FM). Permission of change and affects human history. An interdis - business (programming, sales, rating, nego- department required. Prerequisite: COMM2557 ciplinary approach that includes philosophy, tiations) with special emphasis on network Radio Broadcast Workshop. history, sociology, linguistics, semiotics, art, television. Prerequisite: COMM2321 Advertis- education, communications and cultural studies. ing Principles or permission of director. COMM3665 3 Credits COMM3216 COMM3360 International News: The Views 3 Credits 3 Credits Beyond Our Borders Myth, Symbol and Media Digital Audio Editing Analyzing the way news is reported and covered The ways in which words, pictures, symbols and Radio and television station and network opera - in countries outside the United States and how myths affect communication. tions, with emphasis on business considerations, they shape world news and the image of the roles and functions of various positions; practi - United States. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 COMM3295 cal work in and television facilities. Composition II: Research and Argument. 3 Credits Theories of the Press COMM3362 COMM3666 Survey of relationships between the freedom 3 Credits 3 Credits of speech and press, and the right to know (in Advertising Campaigns Television Around the World terms of contemporary theories of the press). Analysis of case-history studies of advertising Intensive examination of the use of world televi - Prerequisite: COMM1101 Mass Media: Image, campaigns. Preparation of an actual campaign. sion to inform, to mold opinion and to affect Sound and Text or permission of instructor. Prerequisite: COMM2321 Advertising Principles. attitudes toward government and institutions.

COMM3324 COMM3431 COMM3668 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Intercultural Communication in the Sports Information Writing Television News: The Big Issues Global Workplace Examination of and practical exercises in sports Tele vision’s coverage of the major social, eco - This course offers students the solid theoretical information writing; gathering news and writing nomic, political and philosophical issues of our foundation they need and an engaging writing basic sports stories and press releases; designing times. style peppered with examples culled from the and writing brochures and other publicity mate - personal experience of living and working rial; interviewing techniques; information COMM3675 abroad. The course zeroes in on the specific sources and outlets; setting up and operating 3 Credits needs of a firm — from broad cultural and busi - “gameday” activities. Advanced Video Production ness values to the influence of culture on negoti - The study of video/digital preproduction, pro - ations and the structure of the firm. Part of the COMM3432 duction and postproduction with an emphasis course focuses on applying cultural concepts to 3 Credits on professional techniques, procedures and the - real-life situations. It also emphasizes teamwork Sports Journalism ory. The course requires students to shoot and in intercultural groups. Legal issues in intercul - This course is concerned with the news and fea - edit independent projects. Students are encour - tural business communication are covered ture writing of sports events, including reportor - aged to produce a portfolio/reel for future pro - extensively. The first part of the course contains ial skills, photography and opinion writing. fessional endeavors. Pre requisite: COMM2673 detailed discussion of cultural values that influ - Attention given also to public relations and pro - Basic Video Production. (Equivalent to ART3675 ence intercultural business communication. motion of sports and sports events. Advanced Video Production.) Fee COMM3345 COMM3444 3 Credits 3 Credits COMM3748 Advertising Copywriting and Layout Public Relations 3 Credits Study of the creative functions of advertising in An introduction to the purposes and practices of Video Moviemaking print and broadcast. Students develop advertise - public relations and its role in administration Basic video moviemaking. Independent student ments, including all visual and verbal elements, and in society. The essentials of different activi - projects emphasizing preproduction (planning), to develop creative ability and critical judgment. ties in public relations and various media are production (camera shooting) and postproduc - Prerequisite: COMM2321 Advertising Principles. studied, basic skills are taught and applications tion (nonlinear digital editing with AVID). are made to case studies. Prerequisite: COMM2673 Basic Video COMM3346 Production. 3 Credits COMM3500 Fee Advertising Media Strategies 3 Credits Evaluation, selection and characteristics of mass Senior Communication Seminar COMM3749 media as used in advertising channel strategies. The capstone course that brings together the 3 Credits Media comparisons and cost calculations. Match - various areas — media theory, advertising, pub - Advanced Video Editing ing media audiences with target markets and lic relations, film, broadcasting and journalism A project-orientated, hands-on course that groups. Prerequisite: COMM2321 Advertising — that make up the field of communication. emphasizes enhanced editing techniques, pro - Principles. Required of all communication majors. Pre- cedures and theory with the AVID digital requisite: upper-division standing (a minimum of 64 credits earned).

431 Course Descriptions Computer Science University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

nonlinear editing system. Editing projects are COMM4470 control structures: sequential, conditional, itera - produced by the students through self-produced 3 Credits tive. Assignment statements. Basic input/output. video camera shoots, graphic media and audio The Television Newsroom Elements of methods. Design, coding and imple - media. Students are encouraged to add these The inner workings of the television newsroom: mentation of programs in various areas using a projects to their portfolios/reels. Prerequisite: operations, structure, personnel and crew. This language such as Java. (Equivalent to INFO2101 COMM2648 Basic Video Editing. (Equivalent approach is used in conjunction with an in- Computer Programming for Information to ART3749 Advanced Video Editing.) depth study of TV news field reporting. Stu- Technologists I.) dents will produce, shoot and edit on-the-scene Fall, Spring COMM3801 news stories using professional broadcast tech - 3 Credits niques and procedures. CSCI1202 Community, Computers and 3 Credits Cyberspace COMM4800 5 Contact Hours Impact of computers and communication 1–3 Credits Computer Programming II technology on individuals, communities and Independent Study in Stepwise refinement as a programming tool. societies. Communication Objects and classes. Inheritance and polymor - Independent study under the direction of a phism. Character string manipulation. COMM3834 specific faculty member. Prerequisites: upper- Advanced input/output. Elements of debugging 3 Credits division standing and approval of school director. and testing. Design, coding and implementation Advanced News Reporting of programs in various areas using a language Additional emphasis given to practical assign - COMM4930, COMM4932 –COMM4970 such as Java. Pre requi site: grade of C or better ments. Prerequisite: COMM2833 News Re- 1–3 Credits in either CSCI1201 Com puter Programming I porting. Selected Studies in Communications or INFO2101 Computer Programming for (Sports Ethics and Leadership, Information Technologists I. (Equivalent to COMM3835 Communication and Sport) INFO2102 Computer Programming for 3 Credits Studies in an area of communications. Information Technologists II.) Advanced Journalism Fall, Spring News gathering, interviewing, preparation of copy and critical story analysis. Prerequisite: Computer CSCI2215 COMM2833 News Reporting. 3 Credits Science Introduction to Computer Science COMM3997, COMM3998 Introduction to computer hardware and soft - 1–3 Credits Lee Gildart and Oswald Haase ware, their interaction and trade-offs. Essentials Internship in Communication School of Computer Sciences and of computer organization and arithmetic, assem - Consult with department for further informa - Engineering blers, I/O devices, operating systems, databases tion. Prerequisites: upper-division standing and and files. Basic ideas in the areas of computer permission of school director. Maxi mum 6 cred - CSCI1105 networks, system organization and computer its for all internships. 3 Credits theory. Foundation for more advanced courses. Survey of Computers and Computer Prerequisite: elementary knowledge of a pro - COMM3999 Software gramming language. 1–3 Credits History of computers, hardware and software Fall, Spring Internship: Equinox systems, files and databases, algorithms, per- Practical work on student newspaper or year - sonal computers, computer communications CSCI2232 book. Consult the school for further informa- and networking, computers and society: applica - 3 Credits tion. Maximum 6 credits for all internships. tions, issues and responsibilities. (No credit for Data Structures Prerequisites: upper-division standing, permission computer science major s.) Implementation of abstract data types used of school director and COMM2321 Advertising in computer science. Arrays, character strings, Principles or COMM2833 News Reporting. CSCI1110 stacks, queues, one-way and two-way linked lists, 3 Credits trees, graphs and file structures. Searching, sort - COMM4468 Visual Basic ing, storage management, structure and selec - 3 Credits The visual basic (VB) programming environ - tion. Prerequisite: a grade of C or better in Bollywood and Beyond: India in Film ment, projects, forms, VBX controls, modules CSCI1202 Computer Programming II or As India responded to major cultural and and DLLs. Language Building Blocks, Setting INFO2102 Computer Programming for technological shifts during the 20th century, properties, using methods and programming Information Technologists II. Bollywood was crucial to the creation and events. Writing code for subroutines and func - Fall, Spring reinforcement of the nation’s changing images of tions. Working object variables. MDIs child itself and its people. This study of Indian film forms. Controlling the Windows environment CSCI2235 reflects these changes and looks at the ways that through the API. Accessing and reporting on 3 Credits cultural identities are shaped with reference to databases with the data control. Prerequisite: Survey of Computing Security popular art, technology, history and contem - working knowledge of Windows. This course surveys various topics in the emerg - porary politics. (Equivalent to HUMN4468 ing field of computing and information security. Bollywood and Beyond: India in Film.) CSCI1201 The field is ever changing and is of national 3 Credits importance. Topics include first principles of 5 Contact Hours security, access control, security policies, file per - Computer Programming I missions and security, system monitoring, Elements of algorithm design and problem authentication methods, encryption techniques, solving. Elementary data types and arrays. Basic

432 Course Descriptions Computer Science University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

networking, gateways and firewalls and security CSCI3251 CSCI3314 management. Students will be able to identify 3 Credits 3 Credits different methods and tools appropriate for Design of Software Systems Mobile Application Development cyber defense. Prerequisite: CSCI1201 Systems-development life cycle: requirements Introduction to application development for Computer Programming I. analysis, system design, system implementation, mobile platforms using Android. Topics include software testing and maintenance. Program graphic user interface design with Android CSCI2243 documentation. Team projects. Prerequisite: Development Tools; Android’s API for video, 3 Credits CSCI2232 Data Structures. audio, graphic and animation; touch-screen han - Statistical Programming Spring dling; and fundamentals of game development. This is an in-lab SAS programming course, Prerequisite: CSCI1202 Computer including importing and exporting files, predic - CSCI3255 Programming II. tive-data modeling and exploration (mixed-mod - 3 Credits els analyses, multivariate statistical analysis, Mathematical Foundations of CSCI3317 longitudinal analysis and survival analysis) and a Computer Science 3 Credits programming approach to report writing. Pre- Discrete mathematics: sets, relations, algebras, Computer Game Programming requisites: MATH1105 College Algebra and graph theory, Boolean algebra, mathematical Introduction to computer game development. elementary knowledge of a programming lan - induction. Grammars and languages. Automata Topics include fundamentals of Microsoft guage. theory: finite and pushdown auto mata. Turing DirectX ® game and graphics libraries, 2D machines. Computability and the halting prob- graphics and animation, audio output, key - CSCI2247 lem. Decidability. Prerequisite: MATH2255 board/mouse handling and fundamentals of 3D 3 Credits Discrete Structures. modeling and programming. Prerequisite: Assembly Language Programming CSCI1202 Computer Programming II. Assembly language in relation to computer CSCI3268 architecture. Programming in assembly language 3 Credits CSCI3318 of a particular computer. Numerical and sym- Database Systems 3 Credits bolic applications. Input/output programming. Overview of the function and architecture of data - Cloud Computing Assembly systems: assemblers, loaders and link - base systems. Study of storage structures and This course provides a comprehensive introduc - ers. Macros. Prerequisites: CSCI1202 Computer their implementation. Survey of the current tion to cloud computing. Topics include cloud- Programming II and CSCI2215 Introduction to types of data models with emphasis on relation - computing models and technologies, IaaS, PaaS, Computer Science. al databases. Examples of data definition and SaaS, security and privacy issue. Hands-on pro - Fall, Spring data manipulation languages. Specific database jects include the use of cloud services, such as management systems will be studied to support Amazon Web services and Google APP Engine. CSCI3240 the database concepts. Prerequisites: CSCI1201 3 Credits Computer Programming I and CSCI2215 CSCI3320 Computer Networks Introduction to Computer Science or permission 3 Credits Introduction to the theory and practice of com - of instructor. Introduction to Computer Simulation puter networking. Protocol design and analysis. Systems and models; classifications of simulation Topics include layered protocol architectures, CSCI3274 types. An introduction to continuous simulation, packet and circuit switching, multiplexing, rout - 3 Credits discrete simulation, simulation languages and ing, congestion and flow control, error control, Linux System Administration games. Prerequisites: proficiency in a program - sequencing, addressing and performance analy - The course introduces the concepts of system ming language and MATH2202 Calculus II. sis. Examples from current data networks. Pre - administration as they apply to the Linux operat - requisite: CSCI2215 Introduction to Computer ing system. Topics include operating-system con - CSCI3331 Science. Corequisite: MATH2255 Discrete cepts; directories and file systems; users, groups 3 Credits Structures or permission of instructor. and permissions; Linux and Windows; bash shell Advanced Database and editing; regular expressions and scripting Study of database recovery, reorganization, per - CSCI3246 processes and services; network, network soft - formance and space management. Issues of 3 Credits ware and the internet; and database security and integrity, transaction processing, concurrency Wireless LANS installation. Students will be able to install and and logical and physical database design. Introduction to wireless LANS and their tech - maintain Linux-based computing systems in the Prerequisite: CSCI3268 Database Systems. nology and use. Topics include design, installa - lab. Integrated laboratory experience. tion, troubleshooting, security and 802.11 Corequisite: CSCI3268 Database Systems. CSCI3338 frames. Prerequisite or corequisite: CSCI3240 3 Credits Computer Networks. CSCI3278 Advanced Oracle SQL Performance 3 Credits and Tuning CSCI3249 Operating Systems Performance measurement and tuning of Oracle 3 Credits Operating system as machine virtualizer and SQL applications. Analysis of Oracle database Computer Organization resource manager. Management of parallel architecture with regard to optimizer modes. Introduction to computer architecture: instruc - processes. Main memory management; virtual Interaction of SQL language and database tion sets, data types and addressing modes. memory. Process management. Secondary stor - engine. Prerequisite: CSCI3268 Database Systems. Design of control unit of CPU; microprogram - age management. Performance measurement. ming; memory hierarchies; registers, caches, System security. Prerequisite: CSCI2247 CSCI3339 main, secondary and archival memories. Input/ Assembly Language Programming. (Equivalent 3 Credits output functions and control. Introduction to to INFO4278 Operating Systems.) Voice-over IP Technologies arithmetic-logic unit. Prerequisite: CSCI2247 This course gives an introduction of voice-over Assembly Language Programming. IP technologies. Topics include the Public

433 Course Descriptions Computer Science University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

Switched Telephone Network (PSTN), sig - CSCI3360 INFO4101 Data Communications and Com- nalling specifications, modulation and compres - 3 Credits puter Networks I. (Equivalent to INFO4891 sion of voice, Quality of Service (QoS), H.323 Software Reuse Network and Information Security.) architecture and protocol suite, Session Initi- Retrieving and integrating library units (code, ation Protocol (SIP), gateway protocols and documentation, etc.) into the design of reusable CSCI3410 voice and data network convergence. Prereq- software systems. Creating reusable assets for 3 Credits uisite: CSCI3240 Computer Networks. incorporation into a software library. Program- Foundations of Cybersecurity ming in Ada 9x or another object-oriented lan - The topic of Information Assurance and Securi- CSCI3340 guage. Programming projects are assigned. ty (IAS) has become of increasing importance as 3 Credits Prerequisite: CSCI2232 Data Structures. computer systems are being subjected to contin - Advanced Switching and Internet uous and more sophisticated attacks. This course Routing CSCI3375 presents an introduction to the application and This course focuses on advanced switching and 3 Credits management of mechanisms for cybersecurity internet routing protocols. Topics include switch Concepts of Programming Languages and information assurance in computing, com - design and operation, VLANs, port security Fundamental concepts underlying different par - munication and organizational systems. Topics 802.1x, trunking, port aggregation, high avail - adigms of programming languages. Syntactic covered include malware and social engineering, ability and redundant switched network design, and semantic aspects, including attribute bind - vulnerability assessments, network security, advanced IP addressing architectures, routing ing, storage management, control and data authentication, basic cryptography and risk algorithm concepts and routing protocols: RIP, abstraction. Programming in various languages. analysis. Prerequisite: CSCI3240 Computer OSPF, BGP, multicasting, protocol tunneling Prerequisite: CSCI2232 Data Structures. Networks or EENG4342 Data Communication and routing security. Prerequisite: CSCI3240 and Computer Networks or INFO4101 Data Computer Networks. FDU NetID (formerly CSCI3380 Communications and Computer Networks I. Webmail) account required. 3 Credits (Equivalent to INFO4410 Foundations of Cy- UNIX Shell Programming bersecurity.)) CSCI3342 To enable students to derive maximum benefits 3 Credits from using shells. The course will cover shells CSCI3420 Client-server Computing for the novice, shells programming for results 3 Credits An introduction to the theory and technology and shells programming for mastery. The skills Cryptography of client-server computing. General software to create whole applications together with the Cryptographic techniques are chief mechanisms architecture and component-based software sys - steps into the world of software developers and for protecting the security services of confiden - tem development, n-tier architecture, sockets, systems administrators. Prerequisite: CSCI2215 tiality and integrity. This course covers crypto - Remote Procedure Call (RPC), JAVA Remote Introduction to Computer Science. graphic primitives, including secret and public Method Invocation (RMI), Common Object key encryption, cryptographic hash functions, Request Broker Architecture (CORBA), Com- CSCI3381 digital envelopes and the key distribution prob - ponent Object Model (COM)/Distributed COM 3 Credits lem. Prerequisite: CSCI3410 Foundations of (DCOM) and their applications. Prerequisite: Compiler Theory Cybersecurity or INFO4410 Foundations of CSCI2232 Data Structures. Formal languages, grammar, Backus-Naur Form. Cybersecurity. Scanners. Top-down and bottom-up parsers. CSCI3345 Storage organization. Polish notation. Code CSCI3444 3 Credits generation and optimization. Pre requi site: 3 Credits Firewalls and Intrusion Detection CSCI3251 Design of Software Systems. Programming for the Internet Systems This course introduces students to the funda - This course covers the theoretical and practical CSCI3385 mentals of Microsoft.NET framework, the aspects of firewalls and intrusion detection sys - 3 Credits ASP.NET development environment and C# tems. Some aspects of VPNs and routers also Artificial Intelligence programming. It also covers XML web services, will be covered. Prerequisites: CSCI3240 A general introduction to the ideas and methods SQL Server database and Microsoft web server Computer Networks, CSCI3278 Operating that enable computers to be intelligent. Topics IIS (Internet Information Services). Students Systems or permission of instructor. include search algorithms, expert systems, study how to develop powerful websites and natural language processing, methods of knowl - web applications that access databases using CSCI3350 edge representation and machine learning. Pro- dynamic, server-side programming in C#. They 3 Credits gramming projects. Prerequisite: CSCI2232 also learn how to deploy such applications over SAS-I Data Structures. various servers. Prerequisite: CSCI3268 Based on commercial software SAS, this course Database Systems. (Equivalent to INFO4844 is a foundation for writing SAS programs to CSCI3391 Programming for the Internet.) accomplish data processing and statistical analy - 3 Credits sis. Topics include reading raw data files, SAS Network and Information Security CSCI3460 data sets, subsetting data; combining multiple Coverage of potential threats to a stand-alone or 3 Credits SAS files; creating SAS variables and recoding networked computer. The course includes Data Warehouse and Data Mining data values; and creating and linking HTML and strategies to harden the system against these Students will study the fundamentals of the data summary reports. Prerequisites: knowledge of a threats and discusses the liability of the network warehouse, including architecture and decision high-level programming language and basic administrator for crimes committed via the net - making. Techniques like online analytical proc- knowledge of statistics. work. Business issues considered include social esses and data mining will also be studied. Tools engineering, continuity, data backup and recov - and techniques to help make business decisions ery and risk analysis. Prerequisite: CSCI3240 will also be covered. Prerequisite: CSCI3268 Computer Networks or EENG4342 Data Database Systems. Communications and Computer Networks or

434 Course Descriptions Criminal Justice and Legal Studies University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

CSCI3470 the direction of a faculty member with approval in the administration of justice. It will examine 3 Credits of the school director. Pre requisite: admission to the biological, psychological and sociological Enterprise Computing for the IBM the University Honors Program. theories of crime causation. zSeries Students will study the software, architecture, CSCI4498, CSCI4499 CRIM1103 security, network capabilities and data manage - 3 Credits Each Semester 3 Credits ment of the IBM zSeries computers. There will Co-op in Computer Science Criminal Law also be a fundamental study of DB2 and the Integration of classroom study with specific The objective of this course is to provide the stu - zSeries control language. Prerequisites: planned periods of supervised learning in pro - dent with the general principles of criminal law CSCI1202 Computer Programming II and ductive employment experiences. A develop - as a whole, in contrast to the specific definition CSCI2215 Introduction to Computer Science. mental process designed to combine progressive of crimes (which vary from jurisdiction to juris - learning on the job, University course work and diction). These general principles will be applied CSCI3783 career-development skills. Prerequisite: permis - to: 1) classify and understand the varied ele - 3 Credits sion of director of co-op. ments of specific crimes; 2) formulate the bases Information Security for specific crimes that prosecutors must prove; This course will study the important area of CSCI4800 3) touch upon constitutional requirements; and information security. It will cover both security 1–6 Credits Each Semester 4) understand the recognized defenses to justify management and the technical components of Independent Study in Computer or explain alleged criminal conduct. security. Topics will include many of these areas: Science security analysis, logical security design, physical Independent study under the direction of a fac - CRIM1112 security design, implementation of security sys - ulty member after consultation with the school 3 Credits tems and security maintenance. Prerequisite: director. Minorities, Women and the Criminal CSCI3268 Database Systems. Justice System Graduate Courses This course examines the history and experi - CSCI4030 ences of minorities within the criminal justice Students may take selected graduate courses in 3 Credits Each Semester system. An examination of how each compo - computer science with the permission of the Current Topics in Computer Science nent of the criminal justice system relates and instructor and the school director. Topics selected from recent advances in com- responds to minorities and women in the capac - puter science. Content to vary from year to year. ity of defendants, victims, citizens and public Prerequisite: permission of the instructor. employees. Specific attention will be directed to Criminal Justice constitutional protections and matters of dis - CSCI4373 crimination, differential treatment, recent court 3 Credits and decisions and the future of women and minori - Distributed Database Systems ties in the criminal justice system. Theory of distributed databases and compari son Legal Studies to centralized databases. Methodologies to pro - School of Criminal Justice, Political CRIM1120 vide transparent access to and updating of local 3 Credits databases. Study of global locking and deadlock - Science and International Studies Introduction to Jurisprudence ing strategies. Prerequisite: CSCI3268 Database Jurisprudence is the study of legal theory and Sys tems. CRIM1101 the practical application of the law. The ap- 3 Credits proach to this class is twofold: (1) to make the CSCI4380 Introduction to Criminal Justice student aware of the history and nature of the 3 Credits This course provides a comprehensive overview law and the major philosophical approaches to Systems Development with Java of the United States criminal justice system. In the study and practice of law (a “classic” intel - This course introduces students to advanced context to the philosophical underpinnings of lectual examination of jurisprudence); and Java programming and how object-oriented sys - the U.S. Constitution and the historical, social (2) to critically apply those philosophies to the tems development is realized in Java language. and political development of the United States, practice of law. The class will examine the tenets The topics covered include graphical user inter - this course will examine the three major compo - of criminal law, contract law, civil and criminal face (GUI) design and programming, Java nents of the criminal justice system: (1) police procedure, torts, property law and family law. Swing Components, graphics, exception han - and law enforcement, (2) the court and adjudi - Those principles will be practically applied by dling, multithreading, Java database connectivity cations and (3) corrections. The framework of the student in order to gain insight into the (JDBC), Java networking programming, remote the course revolves around the concepts of function of the law as practiced in courts today. method invocation (RMI), Java Servlets and social order and control; theories of criminality; Java Server Pages (JSP). It also exposes students the legislation, enforcement and adjudication of CRIM1125 to the applications of entity objects, boundary criminal laws; the remediation of criminal 3 Credits objects and control objects in programming. It behavior; and the influence of public policy in Introduction to Social Service enables students to do programming in data - the administration of justice. Advocacy base, networking, windows, multithreading and This course introduces students to the funda - the web development using Java. Prerequisites: CRIM1102 mental concepts and theories of social service CSCI3251 Design of Software Systems and 3 Credits CSCI3268 Database Systems. advocacy and social work and explores the prac - Criminology and Social Theory tical implication of these on organizations, com - This course examines the theoretical perspec - CSCI4475, CSCI4476 munities, groups, families and individuals (the tives on the nature and causes of crime, criminal client). The course is centered on three major Variable Credits behavior and criminality. Topics include the Honors Computer Science components of social-work practice: 1) inequali - nature of law, types of crimes, deviancy, crime ty and social justice, 2) social welfare policy and Independent study in computer science for stu - statistics, crime-prevention strategies and issues dents in the University Honors Program under 3) social practice methods. The course will also

435 Course Descriptions Criminal Justice and Legal Studies University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

explore human behavior and development as ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and pants will be expected to hone their logical, ana - well as needs and services within the legal and Argument. lytical and grammatical skills. organizational context of the discipline. (Equivalent to PSYC1125 Introduction to Social CRIM2201 CRIM2206 Service Advocacy.) 3 Credits 3 Credits Police and Society Criminal Investigation CRIM1130 The objective of this course is to provide the An examination of the legal and procedural 3 Credits student with a comprehensive understanding aspects of conducting a criminal investigation as Working with Children and Families of the role, responsibility and interdependent part of the process of determining the facts of a This course is designed to prepare students with relationship of the police and law enforcement crime and the identification of the victims, wit - the knowledge, skills and ethics for effective within American society. Inherent to the respon - nesses and perpetrators. Crime-scene sketching; practice in the field of child and family welfare. sibility for maintaining order and public safety, photography; video; fingerprinting; evidence col - The course will explore the history, evolution enforcing society’s laws, preventing crime and lection; interviewing and interrogation; ballis - and current status of child-welfare policies, providing social-related services, there exists tics; forensic examination; voice, retina and the service continuum provided to families and dichotomy, controversy and challenges. Begin- DNA analysis; and other contemporary tech - children and the sociocultural context of child- ning with a historical perspective, contemporary nologies and applications will be explored. welfare practice. Empowerment and strengths- policing will be examined from a variety of oper - based perspectivess will form the theoretical ational, managerial and administrative perspec - CRIM2207 framework for practice skills. An emphasis will tives taking into consideration the many social, 3 Credits be placed on understanding public policies that cultural, legal, political, economic and techno - Community Policing support the basic needs of families as well as logical changes that influence a free, democratic A general examination of the evolution of polic - policies governing the child-welfare system and and capitalistic society. ing, public and community relations, including selected policies governing juvenile justice, adult the role of police in their interactions with criminal justice, mental health and educational CRIM2202 offenders and victims, community-police proj- systems. 3 Credits ects and programs and community-crime pre - Corrections, Parole and Probation vention. Specific attention will be directed to the CRIM1135 This course encompasses an analysis of formal importance of problem solving, developing com - 3 Credits institutions involved in the correction, punish - prehensive community partnerships and facili - Social Justice and Structural ment and rehabilitation of criminal offenders. tating organizational changes within police Inequality Topics include the prison as a sociocultural sys - agencies. This course will examine the intersections of tem, the efficacy of penal institutions and the inequality as it relates to race, class, sexuality emergence of alternative systems of punishment CRIM2208 and gender and how they intersect with social and control. In addition, the course will examine 3 Credits justice advocacy and social institutions. Students the functions of probation, parole and commu - Victimology will be introduced to specific problems and their nity corrections within the context of the reha - This course will focus on the criminal event connection to broader theoretical and policy bilitative, crime prevention and reintegration from both the perspective of the victim and the implications. models. motive of the offender. It will examine victim - ization patterns, typologies, lifestyles, causal CRIM1700 CRIM2204 factors, consequences and analyze the criminal 3 Credits 3 Credits justice system’s procedures, treatment and Introduction to Security Operations Juvenile Justice and Delinquency resources for crime victims. It also will utilize Beginning with the historical development of The objective of this course is to offer the stu - numerous case scenarios and analyze the private security, this course provides a conceptu - dent a comprehensive overview of juvenile dynamics of various violent crimes for warning al overview of the security industry to include delinquency and its impact on society. It will signs, criminal purpose/selection and strategies crime control, loss-and-risk prevention, asset examine the demands that delinquency places for individuals to reduce their risk of becoming protection, physical and electronic security and on schools, police, the courts, corrections and crime victims. the use of integrated technologies. Specifics the community. Attention will focus on the his - include personnel and physical security, barriers, tory, trends, patterns and extent of delinquency, CRIM2211 protective lighting, locking mechanisms, Intru- along with the role gangs, family, peers, gender 3 Credits sion Detection Systems (IDS), access/entry con - and schools play in its development. The impact School and Workplace Violence trol, Closed Circuit Television Systems (CCTV) of the police, the courts and juvenile corrections This course will examine the nature, types, and Crime Prevention through Environmental on reducing juvenile delinquency will also be extent and causes of and responses to school Design (CPED). examined. and workplace violence. It will consider relat - ed issues such as the origins of anger, the CRIM2100 CRIM2205 work/school climate, victim culpability and 3 Credits 3 Credits offender risk factors. Strategies to prevent and Professional and Legal Writing Criminal Justice Research Methods de-escalate violence and manage conflict will This course is designed to prepare students for An introduction to research design and method - also be examined. the characteristic style and format of writing let - ology within the frame of criminal justice stud - ters and reports within the various professions ies. Hypothesis development, experimental CRIM2212 of the criminal justice system. Emphasis will be design, surveys, testing and the gathering and 3 Credits on developing cogent, analytical and legally sus - presentation of information are covered. Partic- Terrorism, Intelligence and Justice tainable documents with particular attention to ipants will develop facility in using the library’s This course aims to offer the student a compre - format, structure, grammar and literary style. online database. Students will critically analyze hensive overview of terrorism and its impact on This course meets the requirements of the law- theoretical materials and review bibliographic humanity. It will also examine the demand that school preparation curriculum. Prerequisite: information. Using written assignments, partici - terrorism places on governments, particularly

436 Course Descriptions Criminal Justice and Legal Studies University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

the military and law enforcement. Particular technologies within the fields of criminal justice different levels of motivation and different prog - attention will be focused on the history of ter - and security. Topics will examine the use of noses of criminal behavior. Criminal behavior rorism and its impact on modern-day society computer and related technologies in committing will be presented as complex behavior with dif - both in the United States and abroad. Students crimes and conducting criminal investigations, ferent phenomenology, psychopathology and will also examine the ever-changing training and including intelligence gathering, crime-mapping dynamics. In addition to the study of topologies, preparedness that the criminal justice system and analysis, predictions, biometric and biologi - theories and research, a major focus will be on must continually engage in. The class will study cal (DNA) identification and personnel manage - criminal profiling through presentation of case and discuss other issues that governments must ment and administration. It will also examine material and case findings to further an under - address in their efforts to remain prepared to the motives of the cyber offender, the forensic standing of criminal behavior. respond to the horrific devastation that poten - analysis of a computer to assist in the develop - tially may occur as a result of terrorist actions. ment of a suspect’s psychological profile, the CRIM2250 role of computer forensics in investigations and 3 Credits CRIM2214 the protection and processing of digital data and Emerging Issues in Crime and 3 Credits computer crime scenes. Justice Criminal Procedure Law This course provides a rigorous examination of The objective of this course is to provide the stu - CRIM2230 emerging issues and controversies related to dents with the general principles of criminal 3 Credits crime and public policy, the criminal justice sys - procedure law as a whole, and how the United The Death Penalty tem and the administration of justice. Topics States Constitution’s guarantees of the rights of This course will examine the historical basis of such as the U.S. Patriot Act, capital punishment, individuals to life, liberty, privacy and property capital punishment, leading up to its practical drug policies and their enforcement, police are balanced against the government’s power to application today in the United States and in ethics and discretion, the use of force, recidi - enforce criminal law. The course will critically selected countries throughout the world. Stu- vism and discrimination will be addressed. examine the application of these principles to dents will be exposed to arguments for and real problems, specifically: 1) an individual’s against the death penalty and will be encouraged CRIM2700 right to due process of the law; 2) the balancing to critically assess their own feelings toward the 3 Credits of the end result versus the process by which ultimate sanction. Security Investigations and Case that end is achieved; 3) the requirements which Management must be met before there is a lawful invasion of CRIM2231 The objective of this course is to provide the stu - privacy by the government; and 4) remedies for 3 Credits dent/practitioner with a comprehensive over- constitutional violations. The Art and Science of Homicide view and understanding of how to conduct and Investigation effectively report background, incident and CRIM2215 Following along a literary theme of a Sir Arthur administrative investigations in a corporate envi - 3 Credits Conan Doyle “Sherlock Holmes” novel, this ronment. It will cover the use of appropriate Crime and Forensics Wroxton-based course will examine the art and investigative techniques as authorized by law. This course examines the philosophical consid - science of homicide investigation from a legal, Students will be provided with a working erations of the integration of forensic science criminological, forensic and operational per - knowledge of emergency planning and “risk disciplines with criminal investigation. It will spective. The course will be facilitated in col - analysis” as the means to provide for continued encompass an overview of crime scenes, physi - laboration with British police officials. It will operations. This course also will provide the cal evidence and the examination of the major feature field visits to a post-crime scene, a crimi - knowledge to appreciate the motivation and forensic subdisciplines of pathology, toxicology, nal investigative center, the London Metropoli - methodology of foreign and domestic terrorist odontology, anthropology, art, firearms, tool tan Police and Scotland Yard. A combination of groups as well as the means to protect personnel marks, criminalistics, serology, DNA and ques - academic, cultural and social experiences will and corporate personnel assets against terrorist tioned documents. provide for a holistic educational experience. attack.

CRIM2216 CRIM2235 CRIM3301 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Sex, Deviance and the Law Cyber Crime Computer Technology in the Criminal This course will examine the causes and treat - This course examines technology’s role in the Justice System ments of sexual offenders, beginning with an commission of financial crimes, identity theft, A comprehensive review of the use and applica - exploration of the historical perspectives of sex - computer hacking, terrorism, sexual exploitation tions of computer and information technologies ual behaviors, the etiology of sexual deviant of children and traditional offenses such as mur - within the criminal justice and private security behavior, the cycle of offending, types and der, arson and drug trafficking. It will explore fields. Topics will include the use of the comput er typologies of sexual offenses, juvenile offenders contemporary trends in computer crime, the and related technologies for criminal investiga - and victims. The course will also examine policy means in which technology is exploited for crim - tions, intelligence gathering, crime-mapping and implications of research outcomes, responses to inal endeavors, the motives of the cyber offend - analysis, predictions, biological (DNA) identifi - assessment and treatment of sexual offenders, er, the forensic analysis of a computer to assist cation, personnel management and administra - the management of sexual offenders in the com - in the development of a suspect’s psychological tion and other areas germane to the criminal munity and the future direction of research of profile, the role of computer forensics in investi - justice and security fields. sexual offenders. gations and the protection and processing of an electronic crime scene. CRIM3302 CRIM2218 3 Credits 3 Credits CRIM2240 Criminal Justice Management and Computer Technologies and Cyber 3 Credits Administration Crime Criminal Profiling A comprehensive overview of the dynamics of This course introduces students to the use and This course will examine crime and the criminal effective supervision, management, administra - application of computer, digital and information from the perspective of psychological profiles, tion and general human resource management

437 Course Descriptions Criminal Justice and Legal Studies University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

within various settings of the criminal justice logical perspective. The course will examine the which those organizations control illegal activi - system. This course will examine the major prin - criminal justice system’s response to the role of ties by using violence, bribery and corruption to ciples, practices and theories associated with the police and proactive arrest policies, aggres - overcome social control. personnel performance, assessment, productivi - sive case prosecution, court-issued restraining ty, motivation and leadership. orders and anti-stalking legislation. CRIM3312 3 Credits CRIM3303 CRIM3308 Comparative Criminal Justice 3 Credits 3 Credits Systems: United States and Criminal Justice Internship The Politics of Crime Great Britain Individually designed internships within federal, This course will examine the political influences This course, held at FDU’s Wroxton College in state and local police/law enforcement agencies, that directly and indirectly affect legislation, England, will conduct a comparative analysis of courts and adjudication and correctional agen - enforcement and remediation of crime within the criminal justice systems of the United States cies, including probation, parole and private American society. Topics will include victim and Great Britain. Taught in collaboration with security. Students develop hands-on experience rights, the politician’s influence on allegations of British criminal justice professionals and the fac - in all facets of the respective agency that they police brutality, sentencing, prison reform and ulty of Wroxton College, the course will examine select. The internship provides the students with other crime and policy issues. the respective social, cultural, historical, po litic- insight, experience and an available network of al, economic, geographical, operational and professional colleagues. Prerequisites: CRIM1101 CRIM3309 administrative components of both systems. The Introduction to Criminal Justice and CRIM1102 3 Credits course will feature field visits to local police con - Criminology and Social Theory. Introduction to Homeland Security stabularies, the London Metro politan Police The objective of this course is to provide the (Scot land Yard), British courts and British pris - CRIM3304 students with a comprehensive overview and ons. 3 Credits understanding of homeland security (HLS), the Criminal Justice Ethics Department of Homeland Security (DHS) and CRIM3313 An examination of the moral issues and dilem - its relevance to international and domestic law 3 Credits mas facing criminal-justice practitioners. An enforcement. Several acts of domestic and in- Analysis of Serial Killers understanding and appreciation of the principles ternational terrorism will be analyzed and dis - The topic of serial murder occupies a unique of justice will serve as a foundation for consider - cussed. Issues such as target hardening and niche within the criminal justice community. In ing case studies involving ethical decision-mak - preparedness will be studied. This course will addition to the significant investigative chal - ing in various criminal justice agencies. Issues re view case studies of past domestic and in- lenges they bring to law enforcement, serial mur - considered are discretionary decision-making, ternational terrorism attacks. In addition, this der cases attract an overabundance of attention corruption, use of force, race and gender dis - course will conduct an in-depth analysis of past from the media, mental health experts, acade - crimination and capital punishment. and current HLS and relevant policing models, mia and the general public. While there has practices, policies and programs as well as been significant, independent work conducted CRIM3305 examine the overall restructuring of the federal by a variety of experts to identify and analyze 3 Credits government agencies that now make up the the many issues related to serial murder, these Interviewing and Interrogation DHS. investigations prove to be a challenge for law This course examines strategies utilized in the enforcement. Serial murder is neither a new process of interviewing and interrogation. There CRIM3310 phenomenon nor is it uniquely American. is an emphasis on communication theory and 3 Credits Dating back to ancient times, serial murderers psychological issues. The differences between Criminal Justice Professional Lecture have been chronicled around the world. The interviewing and interrogation will be analyzed, Series issues relating to serial killers shall be studied and the general issues regarding eyewitness evi - In an effort to expose students to the practical from a multidisciplinary perspective. dence will be examined. side of criminal justice, this course utilizes crim - inal justice professionals and other service CRIM3314 CRIM3306 providers as weekly guest lecturers. Speakers 3 Credits 3 Credits are selected from a variety of criminal justice Comparative International Criminal White-collar Crime fields including policing; the courts (judges, Justice Systems This course will examine crimes committed by prosecution and defense); institutional correc - This course will conduct a comparative analy - governments, corporations and individuals. tions; probation; parole; and victim services. In sis between the United States criminal justice Specific topics include embezzlement, fraud, addition to providing students with a better system and those of other major countries extortion, forgery, conspiracy, bribery, perjury, understanding of the workings of the system, throughout the world. The course will examine obstruction of justice, official misconduct, the course also provides students with further contrasting social, cultural, religious, political, unfair trade practices and environmental/manu- insight into the various criminal justice disci - economic, geographic, operational and adminis - facturing/labor/administrative violations. Issues plines with a view toward future career choices. trative components that influence the mainte - relating to the investigation, enforcement and nance of social control and compliance with prosecution will be discussed. CRIM3311 civil and criminal laws. 3 Credits CRIM3307 Organized Crime CRIM3315 3 Credits This course is designed to expose students to the 3 Credits Domestic Violence history and impact of organized crime in its vari - Advanced Internship This course will take an interdisciplinary ap- ous guises. It briefly examines the economic and Students successfully completing CRIM3303 proach to examining domestic violence. The social conditions, which foster the initiation and Criminal Justice Internship may choose to con - cycle of violence, dominance and control among growth of criminal enterprises within diverse tinue to develop hands-on experience in the adults and intimate partners will be explored societies, the current status of traditional and criminal justice field. They may elect to accept from a sociological, criminological and psycho - nontraditional gangs and the means through more challenging responsibilities at their initial

438 Course Descriptions Criminal Justice and Legal Studies University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

internship site or progress to another internship skills and the development of sensory acuity in ing recidivism, addressing a wide range of prob - experience. Prerequisites: CRIM1101 Intro- communication. lem behaviors and easing transition from prison duction to Criminal Justice and CRIM3303 life into normal society. This course will examine Criminal Justice Internship. CRIM3321 the problems, contexts and techniques faced by 3 Credits criminal justice professionals charged with some CRIM3316 Drugs, Addictions and the Law facet of facilitating the rehabilitative process. 3 Credits Students will explore the nature of addictions Global Terrorism and substance abuse in terms of human neuro - CRIM3327 This course examines the causes, motives and physiology, drug properties and psychosocial 3 Credits effects of global terrorism from an international variables. An overview of treatment modalities File System Forensic Analysis and perspective. It explores strategies and counter - will be presented. Students will also focus on Investigation measures employed by government and private law-enforcement issues including drug identifi - This course is designed to introduce students to sectors that aim to prevent and mitigate terror - cation, detection and testing. computer file system storage, analysis and ism, including the role and responsibility of the retrieval. It provides an overview of computer media and the criminal justice system. This CRIM3322 foundations and associated investigative tech - course, conducted at FDU’s Wroxton College 3 Credits niques beginning with an illustrated overview of (United Kingdom), features field visits and guest Negotiation and Conflict contemporary volume and file systems, namely, lecturers with experience and expertise in the Management crucial information for discovering hidden evi - field of terrorism. Criminal justice professionals are regularly dence, recovering deleted data and validating placed in positions where they must diffuse computer forensic tools. Students will investigate CRIM3317 threats, negotiate between parties and bring and describe data structures, analyze examples 3 Credits calm to potentially explosive situations. This of disk images, provide advanced investigation Fraud Investigation course will examine the theoretical basis for and scenarios and use today’s most valuable open- This course offers students a comprehensive practice the skills and techniques for diffusing source file system analysis tools. Prerequisite: overview of fraud prevention and detection. threats, bringing calm, finding common ground CRIM2218 Computer Technologies and Cyber Learners will gain insight into the implementa - and creating the basis for agreement and coop - Crime, CRIM2235 Cyber Crime or CRIM3301 tion of effective fraud-investigation techniques eration in interpersonal, intergroup and other Computer Technology in the Criminal Justice while examining real-life fraud schemes used by problem contexts. System. employees, owners, managers and executives to defraud their customers. As a result, students CRIM3324 CRIM3330 will be able to identify and quantify the vulnera - 3 Credits 3 Credits bilities that permit frauds to succeed, and they Community Resource Management Dynamics of Leadership will appreciate the application or implementa - Criminal justice professionals regularly en- The objective of this course is to offer the stu - tion of deterrents, which may be mandated by counter people who are in need of a host of ser - dent a comprehensive overview of the skills nec - corporate policy and/or legislative guidelines. vices including crisis management, legal and essary to be an effective leader. The course will financial assistance, food, emergency housing or examine the various leadership styles that are CRIM3319 protective shelter, health care, mental health utilized by both public- and private-sector lead - 3 Credits care and substance-abuse treatment. This course ers. Particular attention will be focused on the Courts and Judicial Process will examine the kinds of problems typically impact of both effective and ineffective leader - This course will provide students with an under - encountered, the agencies that can supply these ship in an organization. The training and pre - standing of the process, organization and opera - needs, levels of service, eligibility criteria and paredness that both new and seasoned leaders tion of the judicial branch of government. The how to navigate the various sytems. undergo will be examined. judiciary is more than courtrooms, judges, lawyers and trials. There is a vast behind-the- CRIM3325 CRIM3700 scenes structure composed of other numerous 3 Credits 3 Credits employees and programs which are not fully Traumatic Injuries and Death Asset Protection, Vulnerabilities and understood by the public, police, attorneys or Investigation Technologies other users of the court system. The divisions of This course will focus on the forensic compo - In the context of new and developing roles of court and these programs will be examined in nents associated with traumatic injuries and security leaders, this course examines three detail as well as the corresponding job opportu - sudden deaths, whether sustained by accident, critical components for managing a security nities they provide to criminal justice majors. self-inflicted or by consequence of others. Fo- department: security-prevention methods, vul - rensic evidence, when properly identified and nerability and threat assessments, protection of CRIM3320 interpreted, serves as invaluable tools toward information and computer technologies. Topics 3 Credits the assessment, mitigation, treatment, presenta - covered include principles of prevention, man - Interviewing and Counseling tion and investigation of injuries and sudden agement systems, vulnerability and criticality, Strategies deaths. This course will examine the significance risk management, tactics and countermeasures, Effective communication lies at the heart of the and impact of forensic evidence from a sociolog - identification and disposition of abusers, loss criminal justice enterprise. Every profession that ical, psychological, legal, medical and criminal prevention, identification and controls and com - is linked to the system has a requirement for perspective. This course will be of particular puter security and countermeasures. skill in communication and the maintenance of interest to business, criminal justice, nursing resourceful states. Students will be expected to and psychology majors. CRIM3890 learn the strategies of successful communication 3 Credits and change in an open model that will serve CRIM3326 Legal and Analytical Reasoning them through their undergraduate and profes - 3 Credits The objective of this course is to examine the sional careers. This course focuses specifically Rehabilitative Strategies cognitive processes associated with critical on the development of oral communication Criminal justice professionals are often charged thinking and analytical reasoning, which repre - with facilitating diversionary sentences, reduc - sent important skills and competencies that

439 Course Descriptions Dance • Economics • Education University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

underscore the effectiveness of practitioners ment, leadership and supervision theories and EDUC1433 within America’s legal and criminal justice sys - practices. It provides a rigorous and comprehen - 1 Credit tem. While the concepts and principles of this sive understanding of the multidimensional Basic Technology for College course will be borrowed from formal logic, criti - aspects for effective and efficient supervision, Students cal thinking and a range of other disciplines, the management, administration and leadership of Software programs and hardware devices are application of these ideas are specific to the private security organizations. introduced to students for the purpose of assist - requirements of the Law School Admission Test ing them with a variety of difficulties. The over - (LSAT) and other standardized instruments CRIM4800 all focus is to help students get acquainted with required for graduate and law school admis - 1–3 Credits the types of technology that are available and to sions. Independent Study understand which products best fit their learn - Independent study under the direction of a spe - ing profiles. Note: Only open to Regional Center CRIM4010 cific faculty member after consultation with the for Learning Disabilities students. 3 Credits school director. Limited to a total of 6 credits. Computer Forensic, Software and EDUC2202 Hardware Applications 3 Credits This course examines the skills necessary to Dance Development of Children with and launch and complete a successful computer without Disabilities forensic investigation utilizing the latest soft - School of Art and Media Studies This course will provide an overview of the ware and hardware applications. Students will developmental changes that can be expected learn how to conduct high-tech investigations — DAN1230 from early childhood through adolescence and from acquiring digital evidence to reporting its 3 Credits the role that contexts, especially schools, play in findings. This course further highlights the World Dance Appreciation and promoting this development. Physical, linguistic, objectives of the International Association of Practice cognitive and socio-emotional development of Computer Investigative Specialists (IACIS) cer - This introductory course examines, through the - children and adolescents will be discussed. Nor - tification to provide credible, standards-based ory and practice, the techniques and philosophy mative development in these areas will be used information. Prerequisite: CRIM3327 File Sys - of various partnership dances. Students will as a standpoint from which to examine atypical tem Forensic Analysis and Investigation. learn the basic steps and turn patterns of various development (mild, moderate and severe dis - dances, emphasizing the central roles of lead - abilities, including autism spectrum disorders). CRIM4405 ing/following, rhythm familiarization and body This course will also provide an overview of the 3 Credits movement. role that families, peers and schools play in Criminal Justice Capstone Seminar influencing the development of children with This course is specifically designed for criminal and without disabilities. justice majors nearing completion of their Economics undergraduate studies. Designed to be highly EDUC2207 engaging and interactive, this course provides a School of Criminal Justice, Political 3 Credits cogent yet comprehensive synthesis, recapitula - Science and International Studies Introduction to Special Education tions and critical analysis of the criminal justice and Students with Disabilities system. The first half of the semester consists of ECON2103 Including Autism Spectrum Disorder a series of independent and collaborative re- 3 Credits This course will provide an overview of histori - search projects that will facilitate a critical anal- Introduction to Economies cal legislative decisions that mandate special ysis and critique of the Unites States criminal Survey of economic concepts and vocabulary education and discuss how these mandates drive justice system from a theoretical and operational that requires a minimal amount of mathematics. current practice in special education. Processes perspective. The second half of the semester is The course focuses on modern questions such as for referring, identifying and serving children designed to provide for an introspective reflec - markets and regulations, trade and tariffs, distri - who are eligible for special education services tion and assessment of a student’s undergradu - bution and redistribution, supply and demand, will be discussed. Physical, social, cognitive and ate studies and how that translates to planning fiscal and monetary policy and their roles in the behavioral characteristics of students with dis - and preparing for one’s personal and profession - global economy. abilities (including autism spectrum disorders) al life after college. will be described. Course participants will learn to plan, adapt and implement effective instruc - CRIM4430 Education tion and assessment to facilitate academic 1–3 Credits achievement for learners with disabilities. Selected Studies in Criminal Justice Peter Sammartino School of and Legal Studies Education EDUC2208 This course covers topics of special interest to 3 Credits criminal justice students for which no formal EDUC1108 Classroom Management and Positive course is offered. A full description of these 3 Credits Behavioral Supports courses can be obtained at the School of Seminar in Professional Practice I: This course will provide an overview of the Criminal Justice, Political Science and The Teacher’s Role in School and common types of school-based challenging International Studies. Community behavior and major theories of behavior. Best Seminar designed to integrate professional and practices in school-wide, classroom and individ - CRIM4700 personal development, professional practice and ual behavior management will be discussed, 3 Credits academic growth in the following areas: human with a focus on positive behavior interventions Security and Personnel Management relations in the school and community, educa - and supports as well as family involvement. This and Administration tion in American society and organizational course is designed to prepare educators to effec - This class is designed to give security personnel process and behavior within the context of the tively use functional behavior assessment to at all levels a fresh insight into current manage - school and community.

440 Course Descriptions Education University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

develop behavior management interventions Seminar in Professional Practice II: Teachers as United States and Japan. Students will observe when working with students with disabilities. Educational Leaders. instructional approaches and methodologies used in Japan and in the United States. The EDUC2209 EDUC3403 course requires seminar meetings on campus 3 Credits 2 Credits and a study-abroad portion to Japan. Prerequi - Seminar in Professional Practice II: Field Experience III sites: EDUC2401, EDUC2402 Field Experience Teachers as Educational Leaders On-site field experience (60 hours) in public I, II. Seminar designed to integrate professional and school classrooms, focusing on curricula, personal development, professional practice and instruc tion and students involved in the learning EDUC4430 academic growth in the following areas: teacher process; concurrent with junior-year graduate- 2 Credits as a reflective practitioner, teacher as a profes - level education course work in elementary or Metacognitive Strategies I sional and teacher as a leader in the school com - secondary specialization. Students are assigned An interdisciplinary course focusing on the munity. A 0-credit lab to be used for Praxis a teacher mentor and are expected to prepare development of metacognitive strategies which preparation. Prerequisite: EDUC1108 Seminar and teach formal lessons and conduct a stu dent facilitate academic learning, including note tak - in Professional Practice I: The Teacher’s Role in case study. Prerequisites: EDUC1108 Sem inar ing, time management, visualization techniques, School and Community . in Professional Practice I: The Teacher’s Role in relaxation techniques and critical decision- School and Community; EDUC2209 Seminar in making skills. Classroom instruction, discussion EDUC2294 Profes sional Practice II: Teachers as Educational and application. Note: Open only to Regional 2 Credits Leaders; EDUC2401, EDUC2402 Field Expe- Center for Learning Disabilities students. Metacognitive Skills II rience I, II; and EDUC3309 Seminar in Pro fes- Metacognitive skills include psychosocial topics. sional Practice III: The Functions of Teaching. EDUC4431 There are units on interpersonal skills, advocacy Corequisites: approved graduate education 1 Credit skills, motivation, relaxation techniques, stress courses in elementary or secondary specializa - Introduction to Research Skills management, behavior modification and tion. Developing research skills. Strategies for locat - metacognitive awareness of specific learning ing information, evaluating sources and writing disabilities in terms of affective and academic EDUC3404 citations. Formulating research questions and manifestations. The course includes a unit on 2–3 Credits developing literature reviews. Prerequisite: career planning. Note: Open only to Regional Field Experience IV: Applied Field EDUC2294 Metacognitive Skills II. Center for Learning Disabilities students. Research Spring Field experience in senior year designed as a cul - EDUC4432 minating experience to undergraduate course 1 Credit EDUC2401, EDUC2402 work prior to apprenticeship (student) teaching. English Language Structure: 1 Credit Each Semester Emphasis on application of field research and Application to Text Field Experience I, II the knowledge base developed in previous Structure, organization, logic and usage of the On-site field experiences (30 hours each) in course work and field experiences to classroom/ English language. Understanding of the English public schools and classrooms, focusing on their instructional practice. The student is placed in a language as it applies to encoding, decoding, function, structure and curricula. Prerequisite: school(s) with an assigned school-based teacher written expression and comprehension. Analysis corresponding seminar in professional practice. mentor. While in the field (minimum 60 hours), of the origin of the English vocabulary. the preservice teacher conducts a research study EDUC3309 on the topic of his/her choice (subject to adviser EDUC4800 3 Credits approval) and is required to prepare a final 1–3 Credits Each Semester Seminar in Professional Practice III: research report on the study and its application Independent Study in Education The Functions of Teaching to the class room and instructional practice. An Special projects, readings and research Seminar designed to integrate professional and on-site visit/observation of formal teaching also approved by the student’s academic adviser personal development, professional practice and is required by a School of Education faculty and the director of the School of Education. academic growth in the following areas: reflec - supervisor. Pre requisite: EDUC3403 Field tion and action research; diversity in the class - Experience III. Pre/Corequi sites: approved grad - Graduate Courses room; teacher as a decision-maker, planner, uate education courses in elementary or sec - Students will take selected graduate courses in manager and problem solver; curriculum, ondary specialization. education with the approval of the adviser, sub - instruction and assessment. Prerequisites: ject to review of the student’s academic standing EDUC1108 Seminar in Professional Practice I: EDUC3405 (cumulative GPR) and completion of appropri - The Teacher’s Role in School and Community 2–3 Credits ate prerequisites. Titles and sequence of and EDUC2209 Seminar in Professional Prac- Field Experience — Global graduate education courses taken in the junior tice II: Teachers as Educational Leaders. This course will give students the opportunity and senior years are listed in the Combined to conduct a field experience in a school outside Degrees /Accel erated Programs section in this EDUC3310 the United States. Students will interact with Bulletin . Interested students should see the 0 Credits staff and students in an international school and Graduate Studies Bulletin for a list of courses Praxis Review will be exposed to new teaching strategies. Pre - and descriptions . This course will focus on test-preparation skills requisites: EDUC2401, EDUC2402 Field Expe - and strategies that will help students prepare rience I, II. for the Praxis II Exam required for initial teacher certification in elementary education. EDUC3406 Prerequisites: EDUC1108 Seminar in 2–3 Credits Professional Practice I: The Teacher’s Role in Field Experience Global — Japan School and Community and EDUC2209 This course will give students the opportunity to conduct a comparative field experience in the

441 Course Descriptions Electrical Engineering University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

Laplace transform techniques. Frequency- response. Feedback. Oscillators. Digital elec - Electrical domain analysis. Z-transform analysis for dis - tronics. Integrated laboratory experience. crete systems. Integrated laboratory experience. Prerequisites: EENG2222 Signals and Systems Engineering Prerequisites: EENG2222 Signals and Systems II and EENG3266 Electronics II. (Equivalent to Lee Gildart and Oswald Haase II and MATH2210 Differential Equations (or EGTE3267 Electronics III.) permission of instructor). School of Computer Sciences and Fall Fee EENG3288 Engineering 3 Credits EENG3224 Lecture/Laboratory 4 Hours EENG2221 3 Credits Microprocessor System Design II 4 Credits Lecture/Laboratory 4 Hours Microprocessor and microcontroller architec - Lecture/Laboratory 5 Hours Digital Signal Processing tures. Input/output, interrupts and timers. Signals and Systems I Discrete-time signals and systems. Convolution. Programming of parallel ports, serial communi - Circuit elements and laws. DC Circuits. Analy - Z-transform. Discrete-time Fourier transform. cation interfaces. Integrated laboratory experi - sis methods. Network theorems. Operational Discrete Fourier transform (DFT). Design of ence. Prerequisite: EENG2287 Micro processor amplifiers. Energy storage elements. Transient digital filters. Applications. Integrated laborato - System Design I. and forced response. Integrated laboratory ry experience. Prerequisite: EENG3223 Linear Spring Fee experience. Pre requisites: MATH2202 Calculus Systems or permission of instructor. II and PHYS2204 University Physics II. Spring Fee EENG4260 Fall Fee 1 Credit EENG3244 2 Contact Hours EENG2222 3 Credits Preparation for Electrical Engineering 3 Credits Lecture/Laboratory 4 Hours Project Lecture/Laboratory 4 Hours Electromagnetic Fields and Waves Research on choosing a design project, incorpo - Signals and Systems II Electrical and magnetic fields, Maxwell’s equa - rating appropriate engineering standards and Sinusoidal forcing functions, phasors and tions, boundary conditions, plane waves, guid - multiple realistic constraints and writ ing a pro - impedance. Steady-state response. Power cal - ed waves in transmission lines and waveguides, ject proposal for the electrical engineering senior culations. Resonance. Coupled circuits. Intro - impedance matching by use of a Smith chart, project. Prerequisite: senior status. duction to Laplace transforms. Two-port antenna and radiation, considerations in high- Fall circuits. Integrated laboratory experience. Pre- frequency circuits. Integrated laboratory expe - requisites: EENG2221 Signals and Systems I rience. Prerequisites: MATH3341 Advanced EENG4268 and MATH2210 Differential Equations (or per - Engi neering Mathematics and PHYS2204 2 Credits mission of instructor). University Physics II. 2 Contact Hours Spring Fee Fall Fee Electrical Engineering Project An independent design project is carried out EENG2287 EENG3265 under the supervision of a faculty member. 3 Credits 3 Credits Prerequisite: EENG4260 Preparation for Lecture/Laboratory 4 Hours Lecture/Laboratory 4 Hours Electrical Engineering Project. Microprocessor System Design I Electronics I Spring Fee Introduction to microprocessors and micro - Basics of operational amplifiers. Selected opera - computers. Software architecture of proces - tional amplifier applications. Selected integrated EENG4321 sors: memory addressing, data types, register circuits and their applications. Integrated labo - 3 Credits organization. Assembly-language programming ratory experience. Prerequisite: EENG2222 Engineering Optics I and debugging. Integrated laboratory experi - Signals and Systems II or permission of instruc - Laws of reflection and refraction. Matrix treat- ence. Prerequisite: ENGR2286 Digital System tor. (Equivalent to EGTG2265 Electronics I.) ment of simple optical systems. Design of optical Design. instruments. Imaging errors. Waves and super - Fall Fee EENG3266 position. Interference of light. Wavefront and 3 Credits amplitude division interferometry. Diffrac tion. EENG2801 Lecture/Laboratory 4 Hours Polarization. Prerequisites: MATH2210 Differ- 3 Credits Electronics II ential Equations and PHYS2204 University Computer Engineering and Diodes and circuit applications. Bipolar junction Physics II. Telecommunications transistors and field effect transistors and their Fee AC and DC circuits. Integrated circuits and circuit applications. Low-frequency amplifiers amplifiers. Transducers and instrumentation. using small-signal models. Biasing, integrated EENG4322 Analog and digital systems. Microprocessors laboratory experience. Prerequisite: EENG3265 3 Credits and microprocessor systems. Transmission Electronics I or permission of instructor. Engineering Optics II media. Telecommunication systems and applica - (Equivalent to EGTE3266 Electronics II.) Topics of current interest in applied engineering tions. For nonelectrical engineering majors. optics. Introduction to lasers and fiber optical EENG3267 systems, optical interferometry and holography. EENG3223 3 Credits Design considerations in multilayer filters, 3 Credits Lecture/Laboratory 4 Hours F resnel’s equations, optical properties of materials Lecture/Laboratory 4 Hours Electronics III and Fourier optics. Prerequisite: EENG4321 Linear Systems Integrated circuit-building blocks. Multistage, Engineering Optics I. Classification of signals and systems. Linear differential and power amplifiers. Frequency Fee Time-Invariant Systems. Time-domain analysis.

442 Course Descriptions Electrical Engineering University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

EENG4325 EENG4342 digms for automated environments. Prerequi- 3 Credits 3 Credits sites: EENG4354 Knowledge Engineering I. Lasers Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Fee Basic principles of lasers and their applications Data Communications and Computer in optical communication systems. Laser sources, Networks EENG4362 laser operation, modulation and design of sys - Data encoding and transmission, error detec - 3 Credits tems incorporating lasers. Emphasis on lasers tion and correction, data encryption and net - Electronics Instrumentation useful in fiber optical systems such as solid-state work security. Network architecture and Study of circuits and functions of electronic infrared devices. Prerequisite: EENG3244 model. Circuit and packet switching, optimal instruments for indicating and monitoring. Electromagnetic Fields and Waves. routing, wide and local area networks. internet Electronic voltmeters and multimeters, poten - Fee protocols. Integrated laboratory experience. tiometer and galvanometer types of recorders, Prerequisite: Completion of sixth semester or transducers in industrial and research instru - EENG4326 permission of instructor. mentation, frequency and time standards and 1 Credit Fall Fee measurement, signal generators, pulse genera - Photonics Laboratory tors, swept frequency sources. Prerequisite: Experiments and projects selected from topics in EENG4347 EENG3265 Electronics I. optical design, digital image processing, optical 3 Credits signal processing, holography, optical filtering Wireless Communication EENG4375 and interferometry. Prerequisite: EENG4322 Practical and theoretical aspects of wireless 3 Credits En gi neering Optics II. Corequisites: EENG4328 communication, system design with particular Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Optical Design and EENG4392 Optical Com- emphasis on mobile communication, cellular Electrical Energy Conversion mu nications. concepts, multiuser channels, propagation char - General considerations of electromagnetic Fee acteristics, modulation and encoding. Pre- phenomena and magnetic circuits. Exercises requisite: completion of the sixth semester. with ferromagnetic loops and air gap. Trans- EENG4328 Spring Fee former theory — equivalent circuits and pha - 2 Credits sors. Regulation and efficiency evaluation, Optical Design EENG4353 rotating machinery, DC and three-phase sys - An introduction to the principles and appli ca- 3 Credits tems. Power relationships, operating character - tions of optical system design, including Computer Control and Interfacing istics. Prerequisite: EENG2222 Signals and com pu terized optical design. Prerequisite: Transducers and sensors, signal acquisition and Systems II or EGTE2216 Circuits II. EENG4322 Engi neering Optics II. Corequisite: conditioning, analog signal processing, data con - Fall EENG4326 Photonics Laboratory. version, A/D and D/A conversion, I/O ports, Fee interface design, process controllers, interrupts, EENG4376 higher-level languages for control. Prerequisite: 3 Credits EENG4335 EENG2287 Microprocessor System Design I. Power Control Systems 3 Credits Fee Technical aspects of electric systems that trans - Microelectronics and Fundamentals mit power from the generator to the loads. of Very Large Scale Integration EENG4354 Transmission-line calculations. Fault calculation. (VLSI) 3 Credits Power flow studies. Prerequisite: EENG4375 Basic processing technology, layout fundamen - Knowledge Engineering I Electrical Energy Conversion or permission of tals, passive components and their parasitic Structure of neural network and fuzzy logic instructor. effects, BJTs, MOSFETs, nMOS circuits. systems with applications in signal processing, Prerequisite: EENG3266 Electronics II. pattern recognition, process control and opti - EENG4381 mization. Prerequisite: completion of the sixth 3 Credits EENG4336 semester. Computer-aided Analysis 3 Credits Fee and Design I Very Large Scale Integration and Use of CAD software in analyzing and designing Projects EENG4355 both analog and digital circuits. Prerequisite: Circuit design and concepts, nMOS circuits, 3 Credits completion of the sixth semester. (Equivalent to layout guidelines, programmable logic arrays, Analog and Digital Control EGTE4381 Computer-aided Analysis and finite state machines, system design and timing, Closed loop feedback systems, general feedback Design.) design and testing of a VLSI circuit (project). theory, control system design, stability, sensi- Prerequisite: EENG4335 Microelectronics and tivity, error response, root-locus, compensation EENG4382 Fundamentals of Very Large Scale Integration techniques, digital control, discrete time sys - 3 Credits (VLSI). tems, design in Z-domain, controllability, opti - Computer-aided Analysis mal control. Prerequisite: EENG3223 Linear and Design II EENG4341 Systems. Use of CAD software and modern programming 3 Credits Fall languages in solving electrical engineering prob - Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours lems. Prerequisites: EENG4381 Computer-aided Communication Systems EENG4356 Analysis and Design I and completion of the Signal analysis, signal transmission, linear 3 Credits sixth semester. modulation, angle modulation, pulse modula - Knowledge Engineering II Fee tion, data transmission, multiplexing. Integrated Principles of robot design, search methods, laboratory experience. Prerequisite: EENG3223 automated assembly operations, learning para - Linear Systems. Spring Fee

443 Course Descriptions Electrical Engineering University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

EENG4385 EENG4800 niques using the library and the internet. 3 Credits 1–3 Credits Each Semester Prerequisite: ENWR1001 Composition I: Modern Manufacturing Systems Independent Study in Electrical Rhetoric and Inquiry . Basic engineering principles of analysis and Engineering Fall, Spring design of industrial robotic manipulators, Independent study under the direction of a spe - including configuration kinematics, motion cific faculty member after consultation with the ENGR2221 kinematics status, dynamics and control. school director. 3 Credits Statics EENG4392 EENG4875 Statics of particles and rigid bodies, equivalent 3 Credits 1–4 Credits force systems, equilibrium of rigid bodies, cen - Optical Communications Honors in Electrical Engineering troids and center of gravity, analysis of trusses Introduction to optical communications, sources Independent study in electrical engineering for and frames, forces in beams and machine parts, and detectors, fiber-optic systems, optical wave - students in the University Honors Program friction and moments of inertia. Prerequisites: guide components, switches and couplers, mul - under the direction of a specific faculty member MATH1201 Calculus I and PHYS2203 tiplexers, lasers, system design. Prerequisite: with approval of the school director. University Physics I. completion of the sixth semester. Prerequisite: admission to the University Honors Fall Program. EENG4394 ENGR2228 3 Credits ENGR1204 3 Credits Electronic Telecommunications 3 Credits Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Network and terminals, global reach, radio Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Strength of Materials channels, cables and waveguides, communica - Programming Languages in Shear, moments, stresses, bending, torsional tion satellites, digital channels and PCM, signal Engineering shear, moment and shear diagrams, deflections, composition, time division, options in network MATLAB programming applied to engineering stress strain, bolted and welded joints, combined design. Prerequisite: completion of the sixth problem solving. Integrated laboratory experi - loading and column. Prerequisite: ENGR2221 semester. ence. Statics. Fall, Spring Spring EENG4396 3 Credits ENGR1223 ENGR2286 Telecommunications Applications 2 Credits 3 Credits Introduction to the practical use of computer Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours networks and telecommunication technologies Introduction to CAD Digital System Design for business and instructional applications. Introduction to the practical use of computer Binary codes, gates and flip-flops, registers and Study of data communications and networking hardware and software for drafting applications. counters, adders and ALUs, analysis and de - design and analysis and communication equip - Corequisite: MATH1107 Precalculus or equiva - sign of combinational and sequential circuits. ment and services in the context of the work - lent. Logic simulation. Logic families. Integrated place. Use of the internet and the design and Spring Fee laboratory experience. (Equivalent to presentation of resources via the World Wide EGTG2286 Digital System Design.) Web. Prerequisite: basic knowledge of data ENGR1301 Fall, Spring Fee processing. 3 Credits Lecture/Laboratory 5 hours ENGR3000 EENG4421 Engineering Practices, Graphics and 3 Credits 3 Credits Design Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Honors Externship in Electrical Analytical techniques: equations, graphics, Modern Technologies: Principles, Engineering statistics. Introduction to computer-aided Applications and Impacts A supervised industrial experience for selected analysis software. Engineering applications. This course provides a systematic introduction students. Prerequisite: permission of the school Introduction to design. Fundamentals of graph - to modern technologies — their history, evolu - director. ics as applied to sketching and drafting. Pro - tionary development, principles and applica - fessionalism and ethics. Integrated laboratory tions. The influences, impacts and ethical impli - EENG4430 experience. cations of technology on the economy, politics, 3 Credits Each Semester Fall, Spring culture, environment, society and the world are Special Topics in Electrical investigated. Attention is given to the relation - Engineering ENGR2210 ships and connections of technology to other A study of subjects of current interest in electri - 3 Credits fields. Students learn the basic principles under - cal engineering. Technical Communications lying the technologies, how to apply and manage Overview of the writing, editing, research and technologies and assess their impacts. Critical EENG4498, EENG4499 design principles of technical and professional thinking and problem-solving skills used in 3 Credits Each Semester communication. Students will learn how to research, design, development, invention and Co-op in Electrical Engineering gather, organize and present information effec - innovation are emphasized. The laboratory Integration of classroom study with specific tively. Course includes business and technical experiences help the students develop the exper - planned periods of supervised learning in pro - documentation, including online tools; oral imental research, creative and design skills. ductive employment experiences. A develop - reports and public speaking; teamwork and Fall, Spring Fee mental process designed to combine progressive participation in group meetings; use of visuals learning on the job, University course work and to communicate material; professional, ethical career-development skills. Prerequisite: permis - and social responsibilities; and research tech - sion of director of co-op.

444 Course Descriptions Engineering Technology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ENGR3200 ENGR4000 hydraulic and pneumatic control amplification 3 Credits 3 Credits and power circuits. Introduction to fluidics. Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours History of Technology Prerequisite: ENGR2221 Statics. Corequisite: Advanced Engineering Programming Ways in which technology contributed to the MATH2210 Differential Equations. Use of computers for design, analysis, control building of a global society. Technology as a Fall and decision making. C++ concepts. Integrated central player in the larger political, cultural laboratory experience. Prerequisite: ENGR1204 and economic trends during various periods. ENGR4263 Programming Languages in Engineering. 3 Credits Fall ENGR4001 Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours 2 Credits Project Management in Engineering ENGR3211, ENGR3212 3 Contact Hours and Technology 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) FE/EIT Exam Preparation I This course covers the basic concepts, models Engineering Materials I, II First part of a two-course sequence that helps and applications for successful management of Two-course sequence covering properties of prepare students for the Fundamentals of projects in engineering and technology. This metals and alloys, semiconductors, ceramics, Engineering/Engineer in Training (FE/EIT) will include rationale for project management, glasses and polymers. Crystal structure, structur - Exam. This course serves as a review class and project-management process, project-selection al defects, alloying and phase diagrams. may include material not covered in the first strategy, organizational concepts, project plan - Prerequisite for ENGR3211 Engineering three years of students’ curricula. Prerequisite: ning, scheduling and resource allocation, cost Materials I is CHEM1201 General Chemistry I. senior standing. estimating, project monitoring, evaluation and ENGR3211 Engineering Materials I is a prereq - control, project-earned value management and uisite for ENGR3212 Engineering Materials II. ENGR4002 project termination. Emphasis will be on team - Fall (ENGR3211), Spring (ENGR3212) 1 Credit work and student-project presentation. 2 Contact Hours Fee ENGR3341 FE/EIT Exam Preparation II 3 Credits Second part of a two-course sequence that ENGR4432 Advanced Engineering Mathematics helps prepare students for the Fundamentals of 3 Credits Vector algebra, vector calculus, gradient, diver - Engineering/Engineer in Training (FE/EIT) Selected Studies in Engineering gence, curl. Line and surface integrals, Green’s Exam. This course serves as a review class and Selected studies of engineering topics or in an theorem, Stoke’s theorem, divergence theorem. may include material not covered in the first area of engineering. Vector spaces, dot products, matrices, linear three years of students’ curricula. Prerequisite: equations, determinants, eigenvalues, diagonal - ENGR4001 FE/EIT Exam Preparation I. ENGR4800 ization. Complex analysis, complex integration, 3 Credits power series, residue theorem. Prerequisite: ENGR4210 Independent Study in Engineering MATH2203 Calculus III or permission of 3 Credits Independent study of engineering topics or in instructor. Managerial and Engineering an area of engineering under the direction of a Spring Economic Analysis specific faculty member after consultation with Concepts and techniques to evaluate the worth the school director. ENGR3351 of technical systems, products and services in 3 Credits relation to their cost. Time value of money, cash Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours flow equivalence, economic decision making Engineering Applied Thermodynamics among alternative courses of action, deprecia - Introduction to the basic concepts of thermo - tion and taxes, replacement and break-even Technology dynamics. Zeroth Law. Work and heat. First analysis. Prerequisite: MATH2202 Calculus II or Law, Second Law, Carnot theorem and permission of instructor. (Equivalent to Lee Gildart and Oswald Haase entropy. Applications of gas and steam cycles EGTG4269 Management and Engineering School of Computer Sciences and to open- and closed-loop systems, such as gaso - Economics.) Engineering line and diesel engines, and steam turbines. Fall Principles of refrigeration and air conditioning. Prerequisites: CHEM1201 General Chemistry ENGR4221 Civil and Construction Engineering I, MATH2202 Calculus II and PHYS2204 3 Credits Technology University Physics II. Engineering Statistics and Reliability Spring Statistics, regression, probability. Normal dis - EGTC1205, EGTC1206 tribution. Poisson distributions and reliability 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) ENGR3431 as applied to engineering decisions, perfor - Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours 3 Credits mance and quality control. Corequisite: Surveying I and II Dynamics MATH2202 Calculus II or permission of Surveying as applied to the construction indus - Kinematics, kinetics, linear, angular, plane instructor. try. Such areas as layout and control of buildings motion. Work, energy, power, impulse and Spring and roads, earthwork measurements, horizontal momentum. Prerequisites: ENGR2221 Statics and vertical curves, superelevation on curves, and MATH2202 Calculus II. ENGR4254 computer applications to surveying and elec - Spring 3 Credits tronic measurements will be studied. Prerequisite Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours for EGTC1205 Surveying I is MATH1107 Precal - Fluid Mechanics culus. EGTC1205 Surveying I is a prerequisite Applied fluid mechanics, applications of for EGTC1206 Surveying II. Fall (EGTC1205), Spring (EGTC1206) Fee

445 Course Descriptions Engineering Technology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

EGTC1223 dance with current ACI code and standards. EGTC4242 2 Credits Prerequisite: EGTG2228 Strength of Materials. 3 Credits Lecture 1 hour; Laboratory 3 hours Fall Foundations Introduction to CAD Design of concrete and reinforced concrete foot - Introduction to the practical use of computer EGTC3261 ings and foundations and retaining walls. Bear - hardware and software for drafting applications. 3 Credits ing, friction and combined pile, pile caps and Corequisite: MATH1107 Precalculus. Estimating I sheet piling. Prerequisite: EGTC4241 Soil Spring Fee The development of a procedure (including Mechanics. check and balance) for preparing a quantity Spring EGTC1245 survey of materials, labor and equipment for 3 Credits both general and specialty contractors. Prereq- EGTC4260 Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours uisite: MATH1107 Precalculus. 3 Credits Construction Materials and Systems Fall Contracts and Specifications An introduction to the methods, equipment and A study of codes and specifications required in personnel employed in constructing buildings EGTC3262 engineering contracts. General contracts, sub - and subsystems of buildings such as founda - 3 Credits contracts, constructions management contracts. tions, walls, floors and roofs. The types and Estimating II Contract Law. Prerequisites: EGTC1245 physical properties of construction materials. A continuation of EGTC3261 Estimating I by Construction Materials and Systems and Fall, Spring adding the cost of production by summarizing EGTG2210 Technical Communications. overhead, expenses and profit to the sum of Spring EGTC2246 labor and materials cost. Prerequisite: 3 Credits EGTC3261 Estimating I. EGTC4263, EGTC4264 Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Spring 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) Timber Structures and General Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Building Systems EGTC3270 Project Management and Control Wood used in home building: columns, girders, 3 Credits I and II beams, joists, rafters, studs, joist and stud bridg - Environmental and Land-use Planning The use and management of equipment, per- ing. Use of charts and tables for practical appli - Environmental laws and pollution, environ- sonnel and materials for construction projects. cations of theory as to design, quality and mental-impact analysis, land-usage laws and Planning and control through the use of meth - strength of various industrial wood shapes. economics will be covered. Prerequisite: ods involving CPM, bar charts, purchasing, AutoCad applications in representing general ENGR1301 Engineering Practices, Graphics PERT and construction models. Labor relations building systems of timber structures, exterior and Design. and safety requirements (OSHA). Prerequisite: shell systems, conventional schematics of HVAC Spring EGTC3261 Estimating I or approval of adviser. and electric, plumbing, wastewater and drainage EGTC4263 Project Management and Control I systems. Prerequisites: EGTC1223 Introduction EGTC3271 is a prerequisite for EGTC4264 Project Manage - to CAD, EGTC1245 Construction Materials and 3 Credits ment and Control II. Systems and EGTG2228 Strength of Materials. Construction Labor Fall (EGTC4263), Spring (EGTC4264) Spring Fee A broad overview of the construction industry comparing and contrasting the current union EGTC4265 EGTC3250 and open-shop wages and work practices. Ap- 3 Credits 3 Credits pren ticeships, journeymen training programs; Construction Practices I Structural Analysis Davis-Bacon Act, business agents, organization Earthmoving, compaction and soil improve - Classical analysis methods of determinate and and jurisdiction of crafts; and work rules. ment. Construction dewatering, temporary and indeterminate structures. Deflection calcula - Pre requisite: EGTG2210 Technical Communica - earth-retaining structures. Rock drilling and tion of beams and trusses, work-energy meth - tions. explosives in construction. Construction inspec - ods, influence line concept for moving loads. tion and quality-control assurance. Equipment Prerequisite: EGTG2228 Strength of Materials. EGTC3274 selection and production. Temporary erosion Fall 3 Credits control. Construction safety and jobsite proce - Advanced Structural Analysis dures. Prerequisite: Seventh-semester standing EGTC3256 Elastic analysis of statically indeterminate struc - or approval of adviser. 3 Credits tures using force and deformation methods. Fall Steel Structures Prerequisite: EGTG2228 Strength of Materials. The application of the principles of statics and Spring EGTC4266 strength of materials in the design and analysis 3 Credits of structural steel beams, columns, trusses and EGTC4241 Construction Practices II frames, connections and base plates, all in 3 Credits Concrete practice: mixing, placing and curing. accordance with current AISC specifications. Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Concrete framework and form design. Paving Prerequisite: EGTG2228 Strength of Materials. Soil Mechanics and surfact treatments. Masonry, wood and steel Fall The mechanics of soil and rock masses as construction practices. Compressed air and applied to construction, with emphasis on foot - water systems. Lifting and rigging. Introduction EGTC3257 ing and pile foundations, retaining walls, bulk - to Green Building, LEED (Leadership in Energy 3 Credits heads, fills, embankments and the control of and Environmental Design) certification and Concrete Structures landslides. Identification, classification and test - sustainable construction. Stormwater manage - The analysis and design of reinforced concrete ing of the physical properties of soils. Prerequi- ment and water quality. Prerequisite: EGTC4265 beams, girders, slabs and columns, all in accor - site: EGTG2228 Strength of Materials. Construction Practices I or approval of adviser. Fall Fee Spring

446 Course Descriptions Engineering Technology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

EGTC4272 EGTC4323 EGTG2210 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Seismic Design Technical Communications Advanced Steel Design Response of simple structures to earthquake Overview of the writing, editing, research and Design of a complete structural steel frame motions. Design: general considerations. Lateral design principles of technical and professional building including beams, floors, columns and forces. Seismic forces for overturning moments communication. Students will learn how to connections; preparing design notes, structural and shear distribution. Damping. Horizontal and gather, organize and present information effec - drawings and structural drawings in accordance vertical excitation. Curtain wall buildings. Core tively. Course includes business and technical with codes, industry standards and AISC. LRFD walls. Detailing and quality control/computer documentation, including online tools; oral method used. Prerequisite: EGTC3256 Steel applications. Prerequisites: EGTC3257 reports and public speaking; teamwork and Structures. Concrete Structures and EGTG3431 Dynamics. participation in group meetings; use of visuals Spring Fee to communicate material; professional, ethical EGTC4384 and social responsibilities; and research tech - EGTC4276 1 Credit niques using the library and the internet. 3 Credits Lecture 1 hour; Laboratory 1 hour Prerequisite: ENWR1001 Composition I: Advanced Concrete Design Construction Technology Rhetoric and Inquiry . Design of a complete reinforced concrete build - Design Project Fall, Spring ing including beams, girders, slabs, columns and Students will be assigned a project with the footings; preparing set of design notes, struc- approval of the school director and to be con - EGTG2215 tural drawings and shop drawings. All in accor - ducted under the supervision of a faculty mem - 3 Credits dance with codes, industry standards and ACI. ber. Oral presentation. Prerequisites: EGTC42 41 4 Contact Hours Prerequisite: EGTC3257 Concrete Structures. Soil Mechanics, EGTC4263 Project Manage- Circuits I Spring ment and Control I, EGTG2 210 Tech nical Circuit laws and theorems, DC circuits, induc - Communications and eighth-semester standing. tance, capacitance. EGTC4320 Fee Fall 3 Credits Highway Design EGTC4385 EGTG2221 Highway and urban transportation systems. 1 Credit 3 Credits Organizations and associations. Planning. Lecture 1 hour; Laboratory 1 hour Statics Driver, vehicle, traffic and road alignment, Civil Technology Design Project Statics of particles and rigid bodies, equivalent sight distances. Intersection and interchange Students will be assigned a project with the force systems, equilibrium of rigid bodies, cen - design. Drainage details. Earthwork: calcula - approval of the school director and to be con - troids and center of gravity, analysis of trusses tions of volumes. Materials for roads and sur - ducted under the supervision of a faculty mem - and frames, forces in beams and machine parts, faces, bearing qualities. Computer applications. ber. Oral presentation. Prerequisites: Senior friction and moments of inertia. Prerequisite: Term and laboratory projects assigned. Prerequi- standing and EGTG2210 Technical PHYS2101 General Physics I. sites: EGTC1206 Surveying II, EGTC3257 Communications. Fall Concrete Structures and EGTG4254 Fluid Fee Mechanics. EGTG2228 General Technology 3 Credits EGTC4321 Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours 3 Credits Strength of Materials EGTG2201 Bridge Design Shear, moments, stresses, bending, torsional 3 Credits Loads. Maximum moments and shear in simple shear, moment and shear diagrams, deflections, Applied Calculus I and continuous spans. Steel bridges: floor sys - stress strain, bolted and welded joints, combined Applied differential and integral calculus tems, concrete and steel floors. Beam and plate- loading and column. Prerequisite: EGTG2221 stressing engineering applications. Prerequisite: girder bridges. Truss, concrete and prestressed Statics. MATH1107 Precalculus. concrete bridges. Railing design. Railroad Spring Fee bridges. Steel-plate-deck bridges, economic EGTG2202 considerations. Box girders. Computer appli- EGTG2265 3 Credits cations. Term project assigned. Prerequisite: 3 Credits Applied Calculus II EGTG2228 Strength of Materials. Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Continuation of applied integration and intro- Electronics I duction to functions of several variables. Em- EGTC4322 Basics of operational amplifiers. Selected opera - phasis on engineering applications. Pre requisite: 3 Credits tional amplifier applications. Selected integrated EGTG2201 Applied Calculus I or MATH1201 Hydraulic Design circuits and their applications. Integrated labo - Calculus I. Fluid flow in pipes, consideration for sewage ratory experience. Prerequisite: EGTE2216 and sludge. Special flow problems: culvert Circuits II or permission of instructor. EGTG2205 design and analysis, series and parallel pipe (Equivalent to EENG3265 Electronics I.) 3 Credits systems, pipe network. Drainage problems. Applied Ordinary Differential Flow-measuring devices. Hydraulic machines, EGTG2286 Equations types of pumps. Open-flow channel, weirs, 3 Credits Introduction to linear ordinary differential equa - retention basins. Computer applications. Term Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours tions, Laplace transforms and Fourier analysis. and laboratory projects assigned. Prerequisite: Digital System Design Prerequisite: EGTG2202 Applied Calculus II or EGTG4254 Fluid Mechanics. Binary codes, gates and flip-flops, registers and MATH2202 Calculus II. counters, adders and ALUs, analysis and de - sign of combinational and sequential circuits.

447 Course Descriptions Engineering Technology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

Logic simulation. Logic families. Integrated EGTG4002 EGTG4269 laboratory experience. (Equivalent to 1 Credit 3 Credits ENGR2286 Digital System Design.) 2 Contact Hours Management and Engineering Fall, Spring Fee FE/EIT Exam Preparation II Economics Second part of a two-course sequence that Concepts and techniques to evaluate the worth EGTG3211, EGTG3212 helps prepare students for the Fundamentals of of technical systems, products and services in 3 Credits Engineering/Engineer in Training (FE/EIT) relation to their cost. Time value of money, cash Materials Technology I, II Exam. This course serves as a review class and flow equivalence, economic decision making A two-course sequence covering properties of may include material not covered in the first among alternative courses of action, deprecia - metals and alloys, semiconductors, ceramics, three years of students’ curricula. Prerequisite: tion and taxes, replacement and break-even glasses and polymers. Crystal structure, structur - EGTG4001 FE/EIT Exam Preparation I or analysis. Prerequisite: EGTG2202 Applied al defects, alloying and phase diagrams. (Must approval of adviser. Calculus II or MATH2202 Calculus II or per - be taken in proper sequence.) Pre requisites: Spring mission of instructor. (Equivalent to ENGR4210 PHYS2101, PHYS2102 General Physics I, II. Managerial and Engineering Economic Fall (EGTC3211) EGTG4221 Analysis.) 3 Credits Fall EGTG3223 Engineering Statistics and Reliability 3 Credits Statistics, regression, probability. Normal distri - EGTG4340 Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours bution. Poisson distributions and reliability as 3 Credits Instrumentation applied to engineering decisions, performance Manufacturing Systems Introduction to the design of instrumentation and quality control. Corequisite: EGTG2202 An engineering-design approach to optimizing systems. Study of thermal, mechanical, optical Applied Calculus II or MATH2202 Calculus II a manufacturing system. Includes robotics, and magnetic sensor operation and applications. or permission of instructor. automation, just-in-time manufacturing for Design of analog and digital signal conditioning. Spring intermittent and continuous structures. Introduction to data-acquisition systems. Labor- atory experimentation involving the design, EGTG4224 EGTG4391 bread-boarding and testing of signal-condition - 3 Credits 3 Credits ing circuits and a selection of sensors and their Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Current Topics in Engineering applications. Prerequisites: EGTG2201 Applied Process and Electro/Mechanical Technology Calculus I or MATH1201 Calculus I and Control Systems Technology Study of special topics of current interest in the EGTG2265 Electronics I. The theory, components, operation and design area of engineering technology. Spring Fee of process and electro/mechanical control sys - tems. Laboratory experimentation involving the EGTG4432 EGTG3351 design, simulation and testing of control-system 1–3 Credits 3 Credits components and complete systems. Prerequi- Selected Studies in Engineering Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours sites: EGTG2202 Applied Calculus II and Technology Applied Thermodynamics EGTG3223 Instrumentation (or permission of Studies in an area of engineering technology. Introduction to the basic concepts of thermody - instructor). namics. Applications of gas and steam cycles to Fall Fee EGTG4498, EGTG4499 open- and closed-loop systems, such as gasoline 3 Credits Each Semester and diesel engines, and steam turbines. Princi- EGTG4225 Co-op in Engineering Technology ples of refrigeration and air conditioning. Pre- 3 Credits Integration of classroom study with specific requisites: PHYS2101, PHYS2102 General Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours planned periods of supervised learning in Physics I, II. Industrial Automation productive employment experiences. A develop - Spring Fee Manufacturing systems and their mechanization: mental process designed to combine progressive design and analysis on control systems for pro - learning on the job, University course work and EGTG3431 duction, materials handling and inventory logis - career-development skills. Pre requisite: permis - 3 Credits tics. Manufacturing automation and robotics sion of director of co-op. Dynamics technologies (requirements analysis and design). Fall, Spring Kinematics, kinetics, linear, angular, plane Electromechanical hardware and computer con - motion. Work, energy, power, impulse and trol. Economics of robotics and machine vision. EGTG4800 momentum. Prerequisite: EGTG2221 Statics. Prerequisite: EGTG4224 Process and Electro/ 1–3 Credits Spring Mechanical Control Systems Technology (or Independent Study in Engineering permission of instructor). Technology EGTG4001 Spring Fee Independent study under the direction of a spe - 2 Credits cific faculty member after consultation with the 3 Contact Hours EGTG4254 school director. FE/EIT Exam Preparation I 3 Credits First part of a two-course sequence that helps Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours EGTG4875 prepare students for the Fundamentals of Fluid Mechanics 3 Credits Engineering/Engineer in Training (FE/EIT) Applied fluid mechanics, applications of Honors: Engineering Technology Exam. This course serves as a review class and hydraulic and pneumatic control amplification Independent study in engineering technology may include material not covered in the first and power circuits. Introduction to fluidics. for students in the University Honors Program three years of students’ curricula. Prerequisite: Prerequisites: PHYS2101, PHYS2102 General under the direction of a specific faculty member senior standing. Physics I, II. with the approval of the school director. Fall Fall Fee

448 Course Descriptions Engineering Technology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

Electrical Engineering Technology EGTE3267 EGTE4052 3 Credits 3 Credits EGTE2216 Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours 3 Credits Electronics III Optical Measurements Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Integrated circuit-building blocks. Multistage, and Test Equipment I Circuits II differential and power amplifiers. Frequency Principles and applications of modern optical- Complex numbers, phasors, sinusoids, AC cir - response. Feedback. Oscillators. Digital elec - test procedures. Basic principles of light mea- cuits, resonance, transformers, three-phase cir - tronics. Integrated laboratory experience. surem ent. Photometric measurement; radiometric cuits, operational amplifiers. Pre requisite: Prerequisites: EGTE2216 Circuits II and measurement. Basic optical instruments: micro- EGTG2215 Circuits I. EGTE3266 Electronics II. (Equivalent to scope, telescope and comparator. Prerequ isite: Spring Fee EENG3267 Electronics III.) EGTE3051 Laser Technology. Fee EGTE2287 EGTE3288 3 Credits 3 Credits EGTE4054 Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours 3 Credits Microprocessor System Design I Microprocessor System Design II Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Introduction to microprocessors and microcom - Microprocessor and microcomputer architec - Optical Measurements and Test puters. Software architecture of processors: tures. Input/output, interrupts and timers. Equipment II memory, addressing, data types, register organi - Programming of parallel ports, serial communi - Interference methods and the interferometer zation. Assembly-language programming and cation interfaces. Integrated laboratory experi - optical instruments for fiber optics: OTDR, debugging. Integrated laboratory experience. ence. Prerequisite: EGTE2287 Micro processor polarization, beam profile, EIA test procedures. Prerequisite: EGTG2286 Digital System Design. System Design I. Prerequisite: EGTE4052 Optical Measurements Fall Fee Spring Fee and Test Equipment I. Fe EGTE3049 EGTE3439 3 Credits 3 Credits EGTE4342 Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours 3 Credits Fiber Optics Technology Computer-assisted Circuits Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours The principles and applications of fiber optic Computer analysis of various circuits using Data Communications and Computer technology. Review of optical laws; light propa - PSPICE and other software packages, analysis of Networks gation in a fiber. Fiber characteristics. Principles resonant circuits, operational amplifiers, passive Data encoding and transmission, error detec- of fiber optic communication. Fiber optic com - filters, active filters, detailed theoretical and tion and correction, data encryption and net- ponents. Optical sources for communication, computer analysis of Bode plots and Fourier work security. Network architecture and optical detectors. Design of a fiber optic com - analysis. Prerequisite: EGTE2216 Circuits II. model. Circuit and packet switching, optimal munication system. Fiber sensors. Prerequisite: routing, wide and local area networks, internet EGTE4049 Optical Technology II. EGTE4047 protocols. Integrated laboratory experience. Fee 3 Credits Prerequisite: completion of sixth semester or Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours permission of instructor. EGTE3051 Optical Technology I Fall Fee 3 Credits Geometrical optics. Laws of reflection and Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours refraction. Image formation by lenses and mir - EGTE4345 Laser Technology rors. Optical instruments. Physical optics, waves 3 Credits Principles and applications of laser technology. and superposition. Interference and diffraction Microwave Technology Physical basics of lasers. Laser characteristics. of light. Applications in modern technology, A study of microwave devices, techniques and Gas lasers, solid-state lasers, semiconductor such as fiber optics. Prerequisites: EGTG2201, applications. Topics include transmission lines, lasers, laser accessories. Low-power laser appli - EGTG2202 Applied Calculus I, II and Smith charts, generation and detection of micro- cations. High-power laser applications. Laser PHYS2101, PHYS2102 General Physics I, II. wave devices. Prerequisite: EGTG2202 Applied safety. Prerequisite: EGTE4049 Optical Fee Calculus II. Technology II. EGTE4049 Fee 3 Credits EGTE4381 Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours 3 Credits EGTE3266 Optical Technology II Computer-aided Analysis and Design 3 Credits Wave optics. Polarization: fiber-optic system Use of CAD software in analyzing and designing Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours design. Fiber-optic components. Optical both analog and digital circuits. Prerequisite: Electronics II sources. Optical detectors. Fiber-optic com- completion of the sixth semester. (Equivalent to Diodes and circuit applications. Bipolar junction munication. Fiber sensors. Applications of EENG4381 Computer-aided Analysis and transistors and field effect transistors and their diffraction theory. Holography. Matrix treat - Design I.) circuit applications. Low-frequency amplifiers ment of simple optical systems. Prerequisite: using small-signal models. Biasing, integrated EGTE4047 Optical Technology I. EGTE4387 laboratory experience. Prerequisite: EGTG2265 Fee 1 Credit Electronics I or permission of instructor. Lecture 1 hour; Laboratory 1 hour (Equivalent to EENG3266 Electronics II.) Electrical Technology Design Project Capstone design-project course in electrical technology. Student must be within 16 credits of graduation and have approval of project propos-

449 Course Descriptions English for Professional Success University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

al prior to registering. Oral presentation. Pre- air- distribution devices, air conditioning systems source of those ideas. Having taken a position requisites: EGTE3267 Electronics III or permis - and equipment, refrigeration systems and equip - on a topic, they will be able to speak and write sion of instructor and EGTG2210 Technical ment. Prerequisite: EGTG3351 Applied Ther - persuasively on the topic. Students will be able Communica tions. modynamics. to conduct interviews for research purposes, Fee perform assigned web quests constructed by the EGTM4041 instructor and post messages on a dedicated Mechanical Engineering 3 Credits electronic bulletin board on a regular basis as Heating, Ventilation and Air assigned. They will demonstrate an understand - Technology Conditioning and Refrigeration ing of American attitudes toward degree and Controls quantity by using correct expressions of compar - EGTM2232 Elements of control systems: sensors, operators, ison, number and extent. 3 Credits controls and control strategies (for HVAC&R) Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours will be covered. A brief review of the processing EPS0098 Mechanical Measurement and of moist air (psychrometrics) will be offered. 3 Credits Devices Finally, control systems for process control and Practical Academic English Study of measurement of distance, work, energy, the use of analog and direct digital controls will Students will be able to comprehend long lec - force, pressure and thermal quantities. Use of be applied to heating, ventilation, air condition - tures, conversations, narratives and debates; to testing machines and industrial mechanical com - ing and refrigeration. Prerequisite: EGTM4040 summarize the main ideas orally and in writing; ponents. Corequisite: MATH1105 College Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning or to take a stand on the topic and express that Algebra or higher. approval of adviser. position orally and in writing; to solicit opinions Fall Fee on a topic; to report and compare those opin - EGTM4356 ions orally and in writing; to express complex EGTM2235 3 Credits cause-and-effect relationships using convention - 3 Credits Stress and Vibration Analyses al essay formats; and to make inferences from Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours The differential equations of stress and strain, lecture materials and readings. Students will be Manufacturing Processes shear flow, virtual flow, energy principles, able to read classmates’ work for the purpose of Study of methods in manufacturing. Theory and curved beams, noncircular bars. Computer- editing. They will use the web to conduct re- practice of turning, machining, drilling, etc., of oriented problem solving. Analysis of motion search for oral reports and written assignments. metals and other materials. arising from lateral and torsional vibration of Students will demonstrate an understanding of Spring Fee systems, free and forced vibrations, damping, American attitudes toward private property, isolation, balancing. Prerequisites: EGTG2202 both material and intellectual, by using proper EGTM3248 Applied Calculus II, EGTG2228 Strength of possessive forms and by employing acceptable 3 Credits Materials and EGTG3431 Dynamics. annotation conventions for citing sources of Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Spring information in written work. Mechanical Technology Design I Principles of machine design, elements of stress EGTM4386 EPS0099, EPS0199 analysis, rivets, belt and chain drives, springs 1 Credit 4.5 + 1.5 Credits and synthesis of mechanical systems, materials Lecture 1 hour; Laboratory 1 hour Academic Writing Skills and their use in design. Prerequisites: Mechanical Technology Design Students will be able to understand more subtle EGTG2201 Applied Calculus I, EGTG2228 Project attitudes of a speaker or writer such as irony, Strength of Materials, EGTG3431 Dynamics Students will be assigned a project with the sarcasm and humor. They will be able to debate and PHYS2102 General Physics II. approval of the school director and conducted a point, give and solicit advice and present an Fall Fee under the supervision of a faculty member. extended oral report based on lectures and/or Oral presentation. Prerequisite: EGTG2210 research. They will recognize the difference EGTM3250 Technical Com munications. Corequisite: between fact and opinion and will be able to 3 Credits EGTM3250 Mechanical Technology Design II. identify different types of essays. Students will Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Fee be able to write argumentatively and to read Mechanical Technology Design II their own work objectively for editing and to Design of gears, clutches, shaft and couplings, attach and send written assignments to a bearings, brakes, lubrication and synthesis of English for class/partner for editing. Students will demon - mechanical systems. Prerequisites: EGTG2202 strate an understanding of the American atti - Applied Calculus II and EGTM3248 Mechani- Professional tude toward specificity by correctly using both cal Technology Design I. physical and lexical reference indicators orally Spring Fee Success (E.P.S.) and in writing.

EGTM4040 Programs in Language, Culture EPS1008, EPS1018 3 Credits and Professional Advancement 4.5+1.5 Credits Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Lecture 6 hours; Laboratory 3 hours Heating, Ventilation and Air EPS0097 Academic Writing Skills; Conditioning 3 Credits Academic Communication Skills An introduction to some of the essential knowl - Foundations of Academic English Non-native English-speaking students will be edge required to enter the field of HVAC&R Students will be able to recognize a speaker’s exposed to more subtle attitudes of a speaker or engineering. Topics include: physical principles, attitude or position on a topic from tone of writer in different genres. They will recognize heating loads, hydronic piping systems and voice and vocabulary used. They will be able to the difference between fact and opinion. terminal units, cooling-load calculations, psy - paraphrase ideas encountered in a lecture situa - Students will be able to write argumentatively chometrics, fluid flow in piping and ducts and tion or a reading passage and be able to cite the and to read their own work objectively for edit -

450 Course Descriptions English Language and Literature University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ing. They will demonstrate an understanding of ENGL1104 ENGL2202 the American attitude toward specificity. In 3 Credits 3 Credits addition, students will maintain a portfolio of American Masters Masterpieces of World Literature II work and participate in self reflection. EPS1018 Representative selections of American literature Representative works of world literature from is a corequisite lab for EPS1008 where students from the 19th and 20th centuries. the Middle Ages to the 20th century. engage in critical reading and thinking, as well Fall, Spring as speaking activities. Class activities may ENGL2000 include academic debates and persuasive pre - 3 Credits ENGL2203 sentations. Literary Analysis 3 Credits This course introduces students to the vocabu - British Literature I EPS1109, EPS1119 lary, techniques and critical theories involved in A survey of the literature of Britain from 3+1 Credits reading and writing about literature. Prerequi - Beowulf to the 18th century. Prerequisite: Lecture 3 hours; Laboratory 1.5 hours site: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and English for Occupational Purposes; Argument. Argument. English for Academic Purposes Fall Non-native English-speaking students will focus ENGL2004 on English proficiency for occupational purpos - 3 Credits ENGL2204 es. Students will develop their skills in profes - Introduction to Fiction 3 Credits sional writing, oral communication, research This course, intended for non-majors and ma- British Literature II and information literacy, group collaboration jors, is designed to develop the students’ appre - A survey of the literature of Britain from the and cross-cultural competencies. EPS1119 is a ciation and understanding of fiction. Reading 18th century to the modern period. Prerequisite: corequisite lab for EPS1109 where students will and interpretation of novels will be the central ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and focus on English proficiency for academic pur - focus of this introductory-level course. Prerequi - Argument. poses. Students will develop their skills in acad - site: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Spring emic research and writing and proficiency with Argument. APA and/or MLA format. ENGL2205, ENGL2206 ENGL2005 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) EPS1201 3 Credits Introduction to Critical Writing I, II 3 Credits Introduction to the Short Story The foundation for all further advanced courses English for Professional Success: The short story can be claimed as an American in English: an exercise in critical writing through Global Exchange — City as art form, created by writers who began to devel - the study of works unified by a common theme, a Classroom op the genre at the beginning of the 19th centu - topic or genre. Students may take either one or Perceived through the prisms of cultural ethnog - ry. The course will present representative short two semesters of this course. Prerequisite: raphy and the significance of everyday experi - stories and draw upon literary theory and biog - ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and ences, this course will utilize as a raphy to supplement the literary analysis. Pre - Argument. resource and a classroom to study cross-cultural requisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research understandings and misunderstandings. Stu- and Argument. ENGL2207 dents will study the multicultural aspects of the 3 Credits city in the context of modern life and situate ENGL2108 Oral and Written Reports their findings within a historical context. In 3 Credits Oral and written reporting techniques appropri - addition to studying cross-cultural issues in con - Global Literature ate to business. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Com - text, students will be improving their academic- The course examines works of fiction, drama position II: Research and Argument. language skills while exploring topics of interest and nonfiction as well as film and visual art to through a variety of activities and assignments. consider creative voices from Africa, Asia, ENGL2357 The course satisfies the language and culture Europe, Latin America and the United States. 3 Credits requirements for international and domestic stu - Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Introduction to Irish Literature dents. Research and Argument. This course will be an opportunity for students Experiential learning fees apply to become acquainted with the nature of Irish ENGL2140 literature, beginning with selected pieces of 3 Credits mythology and folk tales. Various genres will be English African-American Literature covered including such authors as William Car - The course will offer a survey of literature from leton, James Joyce, Liam O’Flaherty, W.B. Yeats, Language and spirituals and folktales through contemporary Frank O’Connor, Mary Lavin, Brian Friel and writers like Alice Walker and Toni Morrison. Edna O’Brien. Various aspects of Irish culture Literature Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: and traditions and their impact upon the litera - Research and Argument. ture will be explored. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 School of the Humanities Composition II: Research and Argument. ENGL2201 ENGL1103 3 Credits ENGL3007 3 Credits Masterpieces of World Literature I 3 Credits English Masters Representative works of world literature fo- Major British Writers I Representative selections of British literature cusing on the ancient classics. Each semester is devoted to representative works from Chaucer to the present. Fall, Spring by one or two outstanding figures whose achieve- ment is examined, not only for its intrinsic quali -

451 Course Descriptions English Language and Literature University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ties but also for its profound reflection of the ENGL3053 ENGL3200 dynamics of an age. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits 3 Credits Composition II: Research and Argument. Shakespeare and Film English Grammar While Shakespeare’s plays have been put on film A study of the basics of grammar with emphasis ENGL3008 since the invention of movies, recent years have on its relevance to clear and correct writing. 3 Credits witnessed a great increase in the production of Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Major British Writers II Shakespeare movies as demonstrated by popular Research and Argument . Each semester is devoted to representative works mainstream productions of “Othello,” “Hamlet,” by one or two outstanding figures whose achieve- “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” “Twelfth ENGL3307 ment is examined, not only for its intrinsic quali - Night” and “Romeo and Juliet.” Made in a vari - 3 Credits ties, but also for its profound reflection of the ety of production styles, these films have attract - 20th-century Literature dynamics of an age. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 ed a good deal of academic attention through The major American, British and continental Composition II: Research and Argument. college courses, articles, books and entire jour - writers of the 20th century viewed within the nals devoted to the subject. This course will context of the literary, social, political and scien - ENGL3024 cover a number of plays from text to realization tific forces that shaped them. Prerequisite: 3 Credits on film and ask students to consider issues of ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Studies in Poetry cinematic and literary style. Prerequisite: Argument. Intensive readings of poems from various peri - ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and ods and poets, with emphasis on the mastery of Argument. ENGL3315 poetry as a form. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits Composition II: Research and Argument. ENGL3056 American Jewish Novel 3 Credits American Jewish literature from its beginnings ENGL3044 Modernism through World War II to the present with some 3 Credits Introduction to the literary theory, form and attention to Israeli fiction. Prerequisite: The Environment in Literature and style of modernism, a literary movement which ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Culture dominated the first half of the 20th century and Argument. In the 21st century, the national environment continues to exert its influence over literature has become a source of global concern. The today, which, tellingly, is descibed by the label ENGL3321 impact of human activity on water, air and land post-modernism. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits is reflected in and represented by the stories cre - Composition II: Research and Argument. Psychological Fiction ated about the environment. The class will read Depth psychology (psychoanalysis) as a means literary narratives of the environment emerging ENGL3060 to determine the motivations of characters in through United Nations policy papers, news 3 Credits works by such authors as Melville, Kafka, Mann reports, documentaries, photographs and art - Post-modern Literature and Hesse. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 work. Such comparative and intertextual read - The Post-modern Age started a decade or two Composition II: Research and Argument. ings will help students understand not only how after World War II and continues to shape cul - they construct their relations to the environment ture. Through consideration of a range of fic - ENGL3322 but will also enable them to conceive of recon- tion, films, drama, poetry and essays from 3 Credits Psychological Novel II structing future alternatives. Prerequisite: around the world, students will confront the ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and challenges posed by post-modernism with its Depth psychology (psychoanalysis) as a means Argument. multiple voices, deeply ironic sense of humor, of determining the motivation of character in self-conscious storytelling and a richly allusive works by such authors as Hawthorne, Conrad, ENGL3047 range of references to past literature and cul - Camus and others. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits ture. Examination of the relationship of popular Composition II: Research and Argument. American Nature Writers culture with high culture will place these works ENGL3323 A study of the literature concerned with the in context. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits changing relationship of Americans to nature. Composition II: Research and Argument. Advanced Composition Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: English composition for students who wish to Research and Argument. ENGL3076 3 Credits improve their writing skills by continued practice in the four types of writing — descriptive, narra - ENGL3049 Special Stories — Super Cinema tive, expository and argumentative. Prerequisite: 3 Credits This course will examine the relationship ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Major American Writers I between several well-known novels and their Argument. A study of selected major figures, themes and popular movies. Genre, style and plot will be discussed. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 genres. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition ENGL3324 Composition II: Research and Argument. II: Research and Argument. 3 Credits Women in Literature ENGL3050 ENGL3131 3 Credits A course that explores poetry and fiction by and 3 Credits about women. Of particular focus will be issues Major American Writers II 20th-century American Worker in of class, sexuality, race and gender relations as A study of selected major figures, themes and Literature Students will explore American novels focusing they impact the issues and concerns that shape genres. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition women’s literature. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 II: Research and Argument. primarily on the world of work in America dur - ing the first half of the 20th century. Prerequi - Composition II: Research and Argument. site: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Argument.

452 Course Descriptions English Language and Literature University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ENGL3325 ENGL3336 ENGL3358 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Creative Writing I (Fiction) Creative Writing II (Scriptwriting) Shakespeare II Workshop providing sustained practice in Workshop dedicated to the craft of scriptwrit - Critical analysis of representative later plays. indi vid ual projects in fiction. Prerequisite: ing, focusing on the elements of drama (plot, Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and character, dialogue) and culminating in a one- Research and Argument . Argument. act script. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Argument. ENGL3359 ENGL3326 3 Credits 3 Credits ENGL3337 17th-century Literature Creative Writing II (Fiction) 3 Credits The major poetry and prose studied in relation A continuation of creative writing workshop Creative Writing I (Cross-genre) to the significant political, religious and literary providing sustained practice in individual proj- A themed workshop in creative writing and issues of the period. Authors such as Donne, ects in fiction. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 craft-focused reading, dedicated to providing Jonson, Herbert, Marvell, Milton, Dryden, Bacon, Composition II: Research and Argument. students with an opportunity to work with at Browne, Burton, Bunyan and Hobbes will be least two of the four major forms: prose/fiction, included. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 ENGL3327 poetry, scriptwriting and nonfiction. Themes Composition II: Research and Argument. 3 Credits will be decided by the individual professors and Creative Writing I (Poetry) announced in the School of the Humanities ENGL3361 Workshop providing sustained practice in course listings. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits individ ual projects in poetry. Prerequisite: Composition II: Research and Argument. Milton ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and A study of Milton’s artistic development in relation Argument. ENGL3338 to the various poetic styles and literary influences 3 Credits of the late Renaissance. Concentration on Para- ENGL3328 Creative Writing II (Cross-genre) dise Lost and Samson Agonistes with some atten - 3 Credits A workshop in creative writing and craft- tion given to the major prose and the lyric poetry. Creative Writing II (Poetry) focused reading, dedicated to providing students Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: A continuation of creative writing workshop with an opportunity to experiment with all four Research and Argument . providing sustained practice in individual proj- major forms: prose/fiction, poetry, scriptwriting ects in poetry. Prerequisite: ENGL3327 Creative and nonfiction. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 ENGL3363 Writing I (Poetry). Composition II: Research and Argument. 3 Credits 18th-century Literature ENGL3329 ENGL3351 A study of 18th-century literature with emphasis 3 Credits 3 Credits on the satires of Swift and others. Prerequisite: Advanced English Grammar Medieval Literature ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Advanced grammar providing a transition Medieval European literature in translation, fea - Argument. between the prescriptive approach and modern turing medieval epic and romance (especially descriptive grammar. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Arthurian), and writers such as Dante and ENGL3364 Composition II: Research and Argument. Boccaccio. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits Composition II: Research and Argument. 18th-century Literature II ENGL3333 The age of Johnson. 3 Credits ENGL3353 Creative Writing I (Nonfiction) 3 Credits ENGL3365 Workshop in writing that deals in a variety of Chaucer 3 Credits modes (e.g., narration, description and exposi - Selections from The Canterbury Tales and/or The Romantic Era I tion) with real people, events, relationships and Chaucer’s other major works. Prerequisite: The English Romantics, with special attention to experiences. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Compo - ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Blake, Wordsworth and Coleridge. Prerequisite: sition II: Research and Argument. Argument. ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Argument. ENGL3334 ENGL3355 3 Credits 3 Credits ENGL3366 Creative Writing II (Nonfiction) Renaissance Literature 3 Credits Advanced writing workshop that deals in a vari - Tudor prose and poetry from More, Skelton The Romantic Era II ety of modes (e.g., narration, description and and Wyatt to the age of Sidney, Spenser and The English Romantics, with special attention exposition) with real people, events, relation - Shakespeare. Humanism in England and its to Shelley, Keats and Byron. Prerequisite: ships and experiences. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Continental sources. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Composition II: Research and Argument. Composition II: Research and Argument. Argument.

ENGL3335 ENGL3357 ENGL3367 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Creative Writing I (Scriptwriting) Shakespeare I The Victorian Era I Workshop dedicated to the craft of scriptwrit - Critical analysis of representative early plays. Mid-19th-century literature: poetry, prose and ing, practicing the elements of drama (plot, Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: fiction. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition character, dialogue) through writing exercises Research and Argument . II: Research and Argument. for the stage and screen. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Argument.

453 Course Descriptions English Language and Literature University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ENGL3368 ENGL3376 cultural studies. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits 3 Credits Composition II: Research and Argument. The Victorian Era II Modern Drama II Late 19th-century literature: poetry, prose and Continental and British drama from Pirandello ENGL3386 fiction. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition and Lorca to the present. Prerequisite: 3 Credits II: Research and Argument. ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Special Topics in British or American Argument. Literature ENGL3369 Course in selected works from British and 3 Credits ENGL3377 American literary tradition. Prerequisite: American Literature I 3 Credits ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and A chronological study of American literary The Bible and Its Influence Argument. history beginning with the colonial figures and The Bible as a collection of many types of litera - concentrating on Puritanism, Unitarianism, ture, read from a literary point of view. Novels, ENGL3387 Romanticism and transcendentalism. Prereq- dramas and poems influenced by the Bible. 3 Credits uisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Special Topics in World Literature and Argument. Research and Argument . (Equivalent to Course in selected works from literary traditions HUMN3042 The Bible and Its Influence.) outside Britain, the United States and Europe. ENGL3370 Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: 3 Credits ENGL3380 Research and Argument . American Literature II 3 Credits A chronological study of American literary his - Literature of War ENGL3388 tory, with an emphasis on such modern develop - A variety of literary forms and genres addressing 3 Credits ments as realism, naturalism, Freudianism and warfare, its impact and aftermath. Prerequisite: Regionalism in American Literature existentialism. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and A study of American writers who thematically Composition II: Research and Argument. Argument. reflect the American terrain in their works. Pre- requisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research ENGL3371 ENGL3381 and Argument. 3 Credits 3 Credits Modern Novel I Popular Fiction ENGL3389 The American, English and Continental novel to Course in diverse genres that reflect popular cul - 3 Credits World War II. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 ture and taste, both in the United States and The Global Novel Composition II: Research and Argument. throughout the world. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 A study of some of the pertinent writers on the Composition II: Research and Argument. international scene. Works reflecting the cul - ENGL3372 tures of several countries will be included. 3 Credits ENGL3382 Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Modern Novel II 3 Credits Research and Argument. The American, English and Continental novel Special Topics in Black Literature since World War II. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Writings by authors of African descent from var - ENGL3390, ENGL3391 Composition II: Research and Argument. ious historical periods and regions, in English or 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) English translation. Particular offerings may be Contemporary Fiction I, II ENGL3373 unified around social or cultural themes, histori - A study of major developments in the forms and 3 Credits cal periods or aesthetic approaches. Prerequi- themes of fiction since the 1960s with emphasis Modern Poetry I site: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and on the last 20 years. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Selected works of significant American and Argument. Composition II: Research and Argument . British poets, including W.B. Yeats and ENGL3383 T.S. Eliot. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 ENGL3392 3 Credits Composition II: Research and Argument. 3 Credits Ethnic Literature in the United States International Literature ENGL3374 A study of works that reflect the ethnic, cultural A study of international writers of the past cen - 3 Credits and religious diversity of America. Prerequisite: tury whose works reflect both their specific cul - Modern Poetry II ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and tures and universal concerns. Prerequisite: Selected works of significant American and Argument. ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and British poets, including Wallace Stevens and Ted Argument. ENGL3384 Hughes. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition 3 Credits II: Research and Argument. ENGL3394 Postcolonial Literature 3 Credits ENGL3375 Selected works from the literatures of former Travel Literature 3 Credits European colonies: African, Indian, Caribbean, Travel writing as a unique literary expression; Modern Drama I Australian, Canadian, Latin American, etc. Pre- the travel writer as observer and cultural influ - Continental, English and American drama from requisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research ence. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Ibsen through Shaw. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 and Argument. Research and Argument . Composition II: Research and Argument. ENGL3385 3 Credits Literary Theory Study in and application of selected theories of literature from Plato to poststructuralism and

454 Course Descriptions English Language and Literature University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ENGL3396 ENGL3430 ENGL4404 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits South-African Literature, Sex, Contemporary African Literature Writing Seminar II Politics A sampling of writers from Africa, concentrat - A continuation of ENGL4403 Writing Seminar I. This course will explore the depictions of select ing on the postcolonial experience. Students will Prerequisites: ENGL4403 Writing Seminar I countries or regions of the African continent in read writers from a variety of cultures, in English and ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and a variety of different types of text written by or English translation, and in a variety of genres Argument. Africans and by newcomers or outsiders to (fiction, drama, poetry, folktales and memoirs). Africa. The aim will be to gain a sense of the Pre requisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: ENGL4406 diversity and multiplicity of “Africans” as creat - Research and Argument. 3 Credits ed by writers from different points of views, Interdisciplinary Study in Humanities with different relationships to Africa at different ENGL3451 Literature integrating fine arts, history and times. Students will read from among diaries, 3 Credits philosophy. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 memoirs, travel narratives, works of journalism, The Art of the Short Story Composition II: Research and Argument. movies, popular magazines and may also sample What distinguishes a short story from a novel? music and films. Pre requisite: ENWR1002 Starting with Chekhov, Joyce and Mansfield, the ENGL4420 Composition II: Research and Argument. course moves to consider contemporary writers 3 Credits focusing on the very different ways writers have Contemporary Psychological Novel ENGL3399 used this form. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 A psychosocial study of some of the leading fig - 3 Credits Composition II: Research and Argument. ures in American, Canadian and European fic - Continental Drift: Sex, Gender and tion who have emerged since World War II, Family in the South Asian Diaspora ENGL3500 with special emphasis on the last 20 years. A political and cultural study of literary and 3 Credits Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: autobiographical works created by two genera - Junior/Senior Integrative Seminar Research and Argument. tions of South Asians (including Salman A multidisciplinary course focusing primarily on Rushdie and Jhumpa Lahiri) who have chosen literary texts written in English but also integrat - ENGL4433 to make their lives and careers beyond the sub- ing works from at least two other disciplines. 1–3 Credits continent. The course centers on urban, cos - Prerequisites: ENWR1002 Composition II: Selected Studies in English and mopolitan and transnational stories, novels and Research and Argument and junior or senior American Literature films in English and touches upon topics such as standing. Studies in an area of English and American liter - gender roles, courtship, marriage, reproduction ature. Pre requisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: and child-rearing. FDU NetID (formerly ENGL3600 Research and Argument. Web mail) account re quired. Pre requisite: 3 Credits ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Literary Basics ENGL4436 Argument. (Equivalent to HUMN3399 This course offers a solid foundation in literary 3 Credits Continental Drift: Sex, Gender and Family in genre, technique and terminology. Highly rec - Nobel Prize: Authors the South Asian Diaspora.) ommended but not limited to students pursuing Short selections from the world’s most honored a teaching career. The course will provide criti - authors: Yeats, Eliot, Sachs, Neruda, Tagore, ENGL3409 cal background for passing the PRAXIS exam. Mistral, Solzhenitzen, Camus, Beckett, Soyinka, 3 Credits Pre requisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Milosz and Mahfouz. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Glory and Shame: America on Film Research and Argument. Composition II: Research and Argument. Film adaptations — many Academy Award win - ENGL4445 ners — such as “The Heiress” (class and greed in ENGL4400 3 Credits the 1910s), “Paths of Glory” (World War I), 3 Credits Caribbean Literature “Inherit the Wind” (evolution vs. creationism Postcolonial Shakespeare Focuses on the work of representative writers in the 1920s), “The Grapes of Wrath” (the This course discusses four of Shakespeare’s from the English-speaking Caribbean. Prereq - Depression), “Elmer Gantry” (political corrup - plays: The Merchant of Venice, Othello, Antony uisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research tion), “From Here to Eternity” (pre-World War II), and Cleopatra and The Tempest . The approach and Argument . “Watch on the Rhine” (World War II), “To Kill to these plays is through the use of postcolonial a Mockingbird” (racial justice, 1950s), “The Cru - perspectives, foregrounding the concerns of a ENGL4447 cible” (McCarthyism, 1950s), “A Raisin in the Renaissance world faced with changes brought 3 Credits Sun” and “Malcolm X” (black history), “Hair” about by exploration, travel and colonization, “The Tempest:” Music Rich and (1960s rebellion) and “Kramer vs. Kramer” (fam - slavery and freedom and a new sense of “us” Strange ily and gender identity, 1970s). Pre requisite: and “them” among them. Prerequisite: Shakespeare’s last play (1611) is full of strange ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and music, wild seas, magic, slavery, native inhabit- Argument. Argument. ants, romantic young lovers and a wide variety of ambitious nobles. After discussing the play, ENGL3410 ENGL4403 the class will study its film and animated 3 Credits 3 Credits versions, keeping in mind themes that flow from Modern Novels on the Screen Writing Seminar I the era of early Elizabethan exploration and A close critical study of the novels goes hand in Special writing projects to be determined by colonization. Pre requisite: ENWR1002 hand with an analysis of screen adaptations, the instructor. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Argument. including an examination of the various possibil - Composition II: Research and Argument. ities and limitations of the two media. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Argument.

455 Course Descriptions English Writing • Environmental Science University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ENGL4470 3 Credits English Writing Literature of Evil School of the Humanities ENWR1002 Examination of the treatment of evil in works by 3 Credits major writers. Authors will include Dante, Shake - Composition II: Research and All degree-seeking students take ENWR1001 speare, Hawthorne, Emily Bronte, Dostoevsky, Argument Composition I: Rhetoric and Inquiry and Melville, Graham Greene, Flannery O’Connor This course focuses on the study and practice of ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and and Cormac McCarthy. Pre requisite: writing as research-based argument. As a means Argument to satisfy University College’s six- ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and of arriving at and writing from committed credit writing requirement. Based on placement Argument. stances, students learn to seek out, engage and testing, students who would benefit from addi - interrogate a variety of sources. Students write tional support are enrolled in ENWR1000 ENGL4498 in academic, professional and/or public forms, Introduction to Composition prior to 3 Credits including academic essays and rhetorical analy - ENWR1001 Composition I: Rhetoric and Internship ses. Particular emphasis is placed on informa - Inquiry. Practical experience working in a business, tion literacy, source integration and appropriate govenment or nonprofit setting or in the publi - documentation. Prerequisite: ENWR1000 ENWR0098 cations field, applying academic knowledge. Introduction to Composition or ENWR1001 3 Credits Academic component includes weekly journals Composition I: Rhetoric and Inquiry. Fundamentals of Academic Writing I and semester-evaluative paper and frequent A developmental course focusing on skills in interaction with department mentor. Prerequi - written-language expression necessary for aca- site: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and dem ic success. Emphasis on structure of stan - Environmental Argument. dard English, basic writing processes, reading comprehension and essay writing. This is not a Science ENGL4700 credit-bearing course and is offered as pass/no 3 Credits School of Natural Sciences credit. The Eternal Search/Struggle for Identity ENWR1000 Courses for Nonmajors This course provides the student with the vast 3 Credits* experience of a university values seminar. The Introduction to Composition ENVR1001, ENVR1002 chosen texts and films have been selected to This introductory course concentrates on the 3 Credits direct the student’s focus on the influences (both fundamental writing skills necessary for acade - Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours internal and external) involved in one’s emerg - mic success. Students practice writing well-orga - Introduction to Environmental ing identity. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 nized, sensible and grammatically sound exposi - Science Composition II: Research and Argument. tory prose. Particular emphasis is placed on cul - An introduction to aspects of biology, chemistry, tivating effective processes for more thoughtful geology and physics that impact the environ - ENGL4800 and developed writing, revising to achieve unity ment. The overall themes are water and its 1–3 Credits Each Semester and coherence, and self-directed editing and involvement in each of the sciences and natural Independent Study in English and proofreading for clarity and appropriateness. hazards: earthquakes, volcanos, floods and hur - Comparative Literature Students also participate in peer review and ricanes. A laboratory science elective for non - Independent study under the direction of a become more critical readers. Note: Students science majors. specific faculty member after consultation with who receive a grade of C- or lower must repeat Fee the school director. Students may take one or the course. two semesters of this course. Prerequisites: ENVR1101, ENVR1102 ENGL2201, ENGL2202 Masterpieces of World ENWR1001 3 Credits Literature I, II or equivalent. 3 Credits Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Composition I: Rhetoric and Inquiry Physical Geology ENGL4875, ENGL4476 This course provides students with intensive The structure and composition of the earth and Variable Credits study and practice in process-oriented writing, the natural processes on and within it. Honors English critical reading and rhetorical inquiry. Students Fall, Spring Fee Independent study in English for students in the engage expository texts in order to describe and University Honors Program under the direction evaluate the choices writers make and then ENVR1105 of a specific faculty member with approval of apply that knowledge to their own composi - 3 Credits the school director. Prerequisite: admission to tions. Throughout the course, students give and Weather and Climate the University Honors Program. receive feedback, revise their work and reflect A study of the dynamic atmosphere, weather on their growth as writers. Note: Students who and climate and how they affect the natural ENGW4011 receive a grade of C- or lower must repeat the environment, as well as human affairs. Connect- 1 Credit course. ions are made toward management of weather Academic Research and APA Citation hazards, air pollution, impacts on the economy Designed for students in the social sciences, this and environmental and social implications of short course features academic-research skills climate change. Lectures are supplemented by including how to search and evaluate online current events and discussions and hands-on databases and websites and how to cite sources exercises. using APA format.

*Counts as free elective credit; does not satisfy writing requirement.

456 Course Descriptions French Language and Literature • Health Studies University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

ENVR1111, ENVR1112 access. It examines specific health care organi - 4 Credits French zation aspects such as the medical profession, Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 4 hours hospitals, managed-care organizations and gov - Oceanography Language and ernment health care programs. This course will An introduction to physical, chemical and bio - also discuss law and policy changes that have logical oceanography, and the geology of the sea Literature major impacts on American health care in the floor, ocean sediments and beaches. Field trips. past decade. Spring Fee School of the Humanities MEDT4303 ENVR1123 FREN1101, FREN1102 3 Credits 3 Credits 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) Global Health Natural Hazards Elementary French I and II This course will cover the main principles of The causes, locations, economics and sociology Conversational introduction to the language global health and introduce the students to the of natural hazards such as earthquakes, volcanic with comprehensive grammatical and phonetic world’s vast diversity of determinants of health eruptions, landslides and severe weather. explanations and the reading of simple French and disease. Current and emerging health priori - Intended to introduce the students to the sci - texts. ties such as infectious diseases, socioeconomic ence of these events and the effects that humans Fee status and health, human rights, culture and may have on their occurrence or impact, as well health, maternal and child health, water and as methods for the avoidance or mitigation of FREN2103, FREN2104 sanitation, parasitic diseases, health inequities their effects. 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) and major global initiatives for disease preven - Intermediate French I and II tion and health promotion. ENVR1205 More advanced conversational course, taking 3 Credits up again and completing the earlier one, and MEDT4307 Lecture 2 hours leading to a working knowledge of the language. 3 Credits The Great Pacific Northwest: Reading of more complex French literary texts. Health Studies Practicum Environmental Issues and Cultural Prerequisite: FREN1102 Elementary French II The health studies practicum is the capstone Perspectives or equivalent. course for the health studies major. The course Humans effect and are affected by natural envi - Fee will include an internship in the field. Current ronments. The class will study the ways in topics, scientific literature and advances in the which the Pacific Coast’s native and imported FREN4430 student’s area of interest will be covered in this European cultures evolved to make use of a 1–3 Credits Each Semester course. variety of environments, how Pacific coastal Selected Studies in French Language marine and forest environment are stressed by and Literature NURS2210 pollution and how various technologies stress or Studies in an area of French language and/or 3 Credits protect the natural resources upon which life literature. Pathophysiology depends. Corequisite: ENVR1215 The Great This course focuses on alterations in biologic Pacific Northwest: Environmental Issues and processes that affect the body’s homeostasis, Cultural Perspectives Laboratory. Health Studies including etiology, pathogenesis, clinical mani - Henry P. Becton School of Nursing festations and treatment of selected health prob - ENVR1215 lems. Knowledge of basic and clinical sciences is 0 Credits and Allied Health applied to simulated, clinical, nursing-practice Laboratory 2 hours situations. Prerequisites: BIOL2125, BIOL2126 MEDT4301 The Great Pacific Northwest: Microbiology for the Health Sciences; BIOL2203, 3 Credits Environmental Issues and Cultural BIOL2223 Human Anatomy and Physiology I; American Health Care Systems Perspectives Laboratory BIOL2204, BIOL2224 Human Anatomy and This class will examine and critically analyze the Experiments illustrating the topics discussed in Physiology II; and CHEM1107, CHEM1117 United States health care system, emphasizing ENVR1205 The Great Pacific Northwest: En- Chemistry for Health Sciences. Corequisites: the major trends and issues that have led the vironmental Issues and Cultural Perspectives. NURS2003 Fundamentals of Nursing I, country to where it is today. In addition to pro - Corequisite: ENVR1205 The Great Pacific NURS2113 Laboratory: Fundamentals of viding a historical perspective, this course will Northwest: Environmental Issues and Cultural Nursing I, NURS2200 Health Assessment and establish a context for analyzing the current, Perspectives. NURS2201 Health Assessment Laboratory. varied approaches to health care financing, delivery and reform. While this course will focus ENVR1800, ENVR2800, ENVR3800, NURS2217 on the U.S. health care system, the systems of ENVR4800 3 Credits other nations will be reviewed for comparison. Independent Study Information Systems and 4–24 Credits (1–6 Credits Each Semester) Applications in Health Care MEDT4302 Independent study in environmental sciences This course serves as an introduction to nursing 3 Credits (undergraduate). and health care informatics. Course content Health Care Law and Policy includes an overview of computer basics, infor - This class will analyze the complexity of the ENVR4821 matics, terminology, data integrity and manage - American health care system and the law and 1–3 Credits ment, informatics theory, system life cycle and policy issues that must be confronted to achieve Environmental Research clinical applications. The purpose of this course meaningful health care reform. Students will Senior-level environmental research at the is to provide a basic understanding of nursing gain an appreciation of the dilemmas facing Meadowlands Environmental Research Institute and health care informatics and to facilitate health care law and policymakers, providers, (MERI). An original research report is required. decision-making based upon data, information, patients and how to balance cost, quality and Open only to senior students. knowledge and wisdom.

457 Course Descriptions History University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

NURS3208 HIST2107 3 Credits History 3 Credits Introduction to Health Care School of the Humanities U.S. Economic History Economics Analysis of the periods of growth of the U.S. This course introduces the student to basic eco - HIST1114 economy. Industrial Revolution, impact of nomic concepts and theories to analyze selected 3 Credits World depression and the post-industrial devel - issues/problems in health care and to inform U.S. History to 1865 opment. decision making and policy development. Fiscal Significant themes (e.g., Puritanism, slavery, management and basic budgeting concepts also nationalism, sectionalism) in the development of HIST2108 will be covered. the American nation from discovery through the 3 Credits The American Presidency Civil War. NURS3351 Presidents and the presidency in U.S. history. 3 Credits HIST1115 Epidemiology in Health Care 3 Credits HIST2189 This course focuses on the study of the distribu - U.S. History Since 1865 3 Credits Selected Studies in U.S. History tion and determinants of health and disease in Significant themes (e.g., industrialization, human populations. Emphasis is on the natural pragmatism, government centralization) in the Studies in an area not covered by an existing history of disease, levels of prevention and inter - development of the United States from course. vention strategies. Indices of health and illness Reconstruction to the present. are discussed in relation to phases of the life HIST2198 cycle. Social policy issues are considered in rela - HIST1214 1–3 Credits Independent Study in U.S. History tion to epidemiologic and demographic trends 3 Credits worldwide. World History to 1500 Independent study under a faculty member’s Development of civilizations from prehistoric supervision; requires approval of the school NURS3353 times through the oriental, classical and director and the college dean. 3 Credits medieval ages. Ancient culture, government and Introduction to Normal and religion. Medieval elements. HIST2215 Therapeutic Nutrition 3 Credits Constitutional History This course will introduce nutrition students to HIST1215 the fundamentals of human nutrition as well as 3 Credits The evolution of the United States constitution the role of dietary intervention in the treatment World History Since 1500 and modern challenges. and management of chronic and acute medical Development of civilization from the Age of conditions. Revival and the Renaissance through the HIST2245 Enlightenment, to the rise of nationalism and 3 Credits Islamic History NURS4420 political democracy. Problems of 20th-century 3 Credits civilization. This course will examine the history of Islamic Health Care Management societies from Muhammad to the present. Major An exploration of the current health care envi - HIST2102 topics include the Arab conquests, Abbasid ronment with implications for beginning-level 3 Credits Golden Age, early modern empires, modern managers. Topics to be discussed include man - Sports in America reform movements and the impact of globaliza - aged care, health-care delivery models, interdis - The social history of American sports. tion on the Muslim world today. ciplinary team building, resource management, case management, performance improvement HIST2103 HIST2289 and conflict resolution. Prerequisite: faculty 3 Credits 3 Credits permission. New Jersey History Selected Studies in World History A survey of the Garden State’s history. Studies in an area not covered by an existing NURS4430 course. 3 Credits HIST2104 Nursing Research 3 Credits HIST2298 Students are introduced to the research process. United States Social and Cultural 1–3 Credits The course focuses on the professional health History Independent Study in World History care worker as a research consumer. Critical Social and cultural currents from the colonial Independent study under a faculty member’s appraisal skills are developed as a basis for eval - period to the present. supervision; requires approval of the school uating research findings for application to clini - director and the college dean. cal practice. Learning activities are designed to HIST2105 facilitate the students’ understanding of allied 3 Credits HIST2518 health research, the research-utilization process Crime in History 3 Credits China Since 1949 and professional-role development. Prerequisite: Crime and punishment in U.S. history. faculty permission. A history of China from the establishment of the HIST2106 People’s Republic in 1949 to the present. 3 Credits Includes the Communist experiment of Mao, Ethical Issues in History reforms under Deng Xiaoping and China’s rise Critical issues that have challenged and shaped as a world power. the American mind.

458 Course Descriptions History University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

HIST2519 HIST3129 HIST3205 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Imperialism in East Asia U.S. History 1890 –1945 History of Russia A history of imperialism in East Asia since U.S. political, economic and social history, Russian history in the 19th and 20th centuries, 1644, depicting China and Japan as both victims 1890 –1945. with emphasis on westernization, revolutionary and victimizers of imperialism. Includes movement, Marxism-Leninism and the rise and Western imperialism in East Asia and U.S. HIST3130 fall of the Soviet superpower. involvement in Korea and Vietnam. 3 Credits U.S. History Since 1945 HIST3206 HIST3101 U.S. political, economic and social history since 3 Credits 3 Credits 1945. Modern Revolutions American Immigration National revolutions since the 18th century. Immigration and its impact on American devel - HIST3133 opment. 3 Credits HIST3289 The Cold War 3 Credits HIST3102 The post-World War II struggle between the Selected Studies in World History 3 Credits United States and the Soviet Union until the lat - Studies in an area not covered by an existing Race in America ter’s dissolution in 1991. course. Race and race relations in American history. HIST3134 HIST3298 HIST3103 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits America in the 1950s Independent Study in World History Gender in U.S. History The political, economic and cultural history of Independent study under a faculty member’s The changing dynamics of gender in U.S. histo - the 1950s. supervision; requires approval of the school ry. The impact of gender on American identity, director and the college dean. public policy, foreign affairs and labor. HIST3137 3 Credits HIST3342 HIST3104 Vietnam Conflict 3 Credits 3 Credits United States military involvement in Southeast Religion and Nation Building U.S. Diplomatic History Asia, 1954 –1975. The historical background of Judaism, American diplomacy since 1890. Christianity and Islam; their organization, struc - HIST3189 ture, economic significance, political and social HIST3105 3 Credits impact and influence on civilization. 3 Credits Selected Studies in U.S. History U.S. Environmental History Topic varies with instructor. HIST3360 Nature, environment and environmentalism in 3 Credits American history. HIST3198 Modern African History 1–3 Credits A survey of the rise, fall and legacy of European HIST3106 Independent Study in U.S. History imperialism in Africa, c. 1850 –1960. Major 3 Credits Independent study under a faculty member’s topics include early European exploration and Culture and Technology in American supervision; requires approval of the school conquest, the development of colonial states, History director and the college dean. internal resistance and the rise of decolonization Technology and its effect on American culture. movements. Special attention will be paid to the HIST3201 impact of the Industrial Revolution, globaliza - HIST3107 3 Credits tion and the Cold War on the African continent. 3 Credits Britain, Ireland and the Empire- U.S. Constitutional History Commonwealth HIST4400 Constitutional issues and major Supreme Court The development of Britain and the Empire- 3 Credits rulings. Commonwealth since 1688. Senior Research Seminar Offered in the spring semester as a requirement HIST3120 HIST3202 for graduating majors, the course is designed to 3 Credits 3 Credits reinforce research and writing skills. Colonial and Revolutionary America Middle East The British colonies in America and the The Middle East after World War I. HIST4401 American Revolution. 3 Credits HIST3203 Honors History HIST3121 3 Credits Independent study for students in the University 3 Credits 19th-century Europe Honors Program; requires approval of the The Age of Jefferson and Jackson Political, social, economic and intellectual devel - school director and the college dean. Development of national institutions, 1787 opments in Europe from the Congress of Berlin through the 1830s. to World War I. HIST4476 3 Credits HIST3123 HIST3204 Honors History 3 Credits 3 Credits Independent study in history for students in the The U.S. Civil War and Europe in the 20th Century University Honors Program under the direction Reconstruction European political, social and intellectual devel - of a specific faculty member with approval of Sectionalism, war and post-war reconstruction. opments, 1914 –1945. the department chairperson.

459 Course Descriptions Honors • Humanities University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

HIST4498 the Battle of Actium (264–31 BC). Topics will HUMN2439 3 Credits include the Punic Wars, the Roman conquest of 3 Credits Internship the Mediterranean, the decline of the Republic, Radical Political Thought Practical experience working in a business, gov - the Roman Civil Wars, the dictatorship of This course explores major currents of political ernment or nonprofit setting or museum, apply - Julius Caesar and the emergence of Octavian/ radicalism both within and outside of the ing academic knowledge. Academic component Augustus. Readings will include selections from dominant Western political tradition. Topics includes weekly journals and semester-evalua - Roman historians (Livy), Roman political considered include antidemocratic radicalism, tive paper and frequent interaction with depart - figures (Cicero and Caesar) and Roman poets democratic radicalism, Marxian radicalism, ment mentor. (Catullus, Horace and Virgil). Prerequisite: radical feminism, radical individualism and ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and post-colonial radicalism. Prerequisite: Argument. ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Honors Argument. (Equivalent to PHIL2439 Radical University Honors Program HUMN2253 Political Thought.) 3 Credits The Search for Meaning: Religious HON3301 HUMN2440 Responses 3 Credits 3 Credits Junior Honors Seminar Examination of the religious thought of two Human Rights Introduction to the methods of research; litera - Jewish and two Christian 20th-century figures. This course will examine several major themes ture searches using computer and web databases; Through an analysis of the writings of Elie and problems in contemporary human rights, proposal development; organization and presen - Wiesel, Abraham Heschel, Dorothy Day and including the meaning of human rights, its tation of research data; development of the hon - Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the student will explore origins, philosophical justifications and its ors thesis. HON3301 Junior Honors Seminar is structures of religious experience in two mono- enabling documents. It also will discuss current a University-wide course. For other University theistic traditions. Special attention will be paid philosophical debates arising from cultural Honors Program courses please contact the to the roles of religious ways of knowing in the relativism, religious claims and the assertion University Honors Program director on your formation of social and political philoso phies. of group rights. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 campus. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Composition II: Research and Argument. Research and Argument. (Equivalent to (Equivalent to PHIL2440 Human Rights.) HON4401 PHIL2253 The Search for Meaning: Religious 3 Credits Responses.) HUMN2443 Senior Honors Thesis 3 Credits Senior honors thesis for students in the HUMN2254 African-American Political Thought University Honors Program under the direction 3 Credits This course explores the contributions of of a specific faculty member with approval of War and Peace in Christianity, African-American political thinkers to the the school director. Judaism and Islam development of American political thought, Survey of key aspects of the thought and prac - considers the tensions and conflicts within HON4402 tice of the three monotheistic traditions with African-American political thought and explores 3 Credits regard to issues surrounding war and peace. the significance of these thinkers to the under- Senior Honors Research Both scriptural writings and the writings of con - standing of contemporary race relations. Senior honors research for students in the temporary religious thinkers will be analyzed. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: University Honors Program under the direction Selected interreligious conflicts in the contem - Research and Argument. (Equiv alent to of a specific faculty member with approval of porary period will be discussed. Prerequisite: PHIL2443 African-American Political Thought). the school director. ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Argument. (Equivalent to PHIL2254 War and HUMN2444 Peace in Christianity, Judaism and Islam.) 3 Credits Technology and Its Critics Humanities HUMN2255 Modern technologies have aroused both intense School of the Humanities 3 Credits admiration and violent opposition. This course Person, Gender and Sexuality: will provide a philosophical analysis of some of HUMN2241 Judaism, Christianity and Islam the issues raised by critics of modern technology 3 Credits This course, an interfaith endeavor taught by such as Aldous Huxley, Lewis Mumford and Greek Civilization professors from the Jewish, Christian and Neil Postman. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 This course will explore the history and culture Muslim traditions, will trace the historical devel - Composition II: Research and Argument. of Greece during the 5th century BC. Topics will opment of the meaning and value of person, (Equivalent to PHIL2444 Technology and Its include Greek constitutional history (especially gender and sexuality in these traditions. Critics.) the development of Greek democracy), the Per - Emphasis will be placed on understanding the sian Wars, the rise of the Athenian empire and cultural, historical and theological basis of these HUMN2445 the Peloponnesian Wars. Prerequisite: terms, the convergences of the meanings of 3 Credits ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and these terms in the three traditions and the con - Democracy in America Argument. temporary applicability of these concepts from a This course explores the theory and practice of global perspective. (Equivalent to RELI2255 American democracy from the 19th century to HUMN2243 Person, Gender and Sexuality: Judaism, the present day through a mixture of philo- 3 Credits Christianity and Islam.) sophi cal, historical, literary and social scientific Roman Civilization readings and a variety of documentary and Hol - This course will explore the history and culture lywood films. Questions include: What are the of Rome from the outbreak of the Punic Wars to theoretical foundations of American democra - cy? How does the practice of democracy in

460 Course Descriptions Humanities University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

America deviate from these foundations? How position II: Research and Argument. (Equiva - HUMN2545 has American democracy evolved? Why do so lent to PHIL2450 History and Methods of Sci - 3 Credits many Americans appear to hate politics? How ence.) The American Mind should democratic citizens be educated? Prereq - This course explores some of the main sources uisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research HUMN2452 of American social and political thought from and Argument. (Equivalent to PHIL2445 3 Credits the 18th century to the present, with particular Democracy in America.) Ancient Political Thought emphasis on the relationship between demo- This course examines some of the foundational, cratic and individualistic principles. It also will HUMN2446 political and social ideas of Western and Eastern investigate other major themes and problems in 3 Credits civilizations in historical context and compara- American social and political thought, including Religion and Human Rights tive perspective. Topics include the origins of federalism, individualism, democracy, citizen- This course will survey contemporary issues in democracy, the degeneration of the ancient poli - ship, American nationalism, etc. Prerequisite: the relationship between religion and human ty and the rebirth of the ancient conception of ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and rights. Among the topics examined will be the politics during the Renaissance. Readings Argument. (Equivalent to PHIL2545 The values in various religious traditions, in par tic u- encompass history, philosophy and literature, American Mind.) lar Hinduism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, including selections from Confucius, Thucy- which may underlie the protection of human dides, Plato, Aristotle, Aristophanes, Cicero, HUMN3001 rights. The course will also look at the per se- Livy and Machiavelli. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits cution of religious minorities in today’s world, Composition II: Research and Argument. The Nature of Nature the role of religion in suppressing human (Equivalent to PHIL2452 Ancient Political Nature and culture are opposites, or are they? Is rights and how religion has served, in various Thought.) the very concept of nature a cultural construct? instances, to champion human rights. Prerequi - Or isn’t it? Is nature the same thing for the site: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and HUMN2454 scientist, artist, poet, naturalist and philoso- Argument. (Equivalent to PHIL2446 Religion 3 Credits pher? Do the world’s religions understand and Human Rights.) Music, Power and Freedom nature in the same way? Prerequisite: An introduction to political philosophy through ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and HUMN2447 music, this course will explore the concepts of Argument. 3 Credits freedom and constraint, individualism and tra - Ecology for Life: Building a Lifestyle dition, anarchy and order, equality and authen - HUMN3041 for a Sustainable Planet ticity, relating them to current issues including 3 Credits This course will provide the student with a basis censorship and parental-advisory labels, the Technology and Values for making lifestyle choices that are consistent MP3 file-sharing controversy and musical sub - The course will include, but will not be limited with the goal of building a society that sustains version, from Shostakovich to Iranian hip-hop. to, a short history of industrial and post- the resources of the Earth for future genera- Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: industrial technology, technology as value tions. The principles of environmental society Research and Argument. neutral and value-laden, positive and negative and practical applications are covered. Prerequi - ethical consequences of technology, ethical site: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and HUMN2455 challenges created by technology (e.g., genetic Argument. 3 Credits engineering, cloning, artificial intelligence), American Jazz and the Movement for ethics and responsibility in a high-tech age and HUMN2448 Civil Rights humanism vs. science and technology. Ethical 3 Credits This course explores the many historical, cultur - issues in a computerized society will also be Comparative Religions al and political connections between jazz and examined, e.g. privacy, private property, power A study of the great religions of the world, with the American civil rights movement. The course concerns related to the global information emphasis on how they affect events in the world draws upon jazz musical selections as well as highway, quality of work, work possibilities in a today. The course explores components and readings on jazz and the struggle for civil rights computer age and computers and the self. meanings of Hinduism, Buddhism, Confu- to see how music reflects the social and political Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: cianism, Taoism, the theistic Western religions context of music makers and listeners and vice Research and Argument. (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) and some less versa. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: common religions. Subjects to be covered Research and Argument. HUMN3042 include religious ideas and institutions, cosmo- 3 Credits logies, systems of meaning and salvation. Ex- HUMN2456 The Bible and Its Influence tensive material on the web will be assigned. 3 Credits The Bible as a collection of many types of lit- Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Dissent in Popular Culture: From erature, read from a literary point of view. Research and Argument. (Equivalent to Inception to Iraq Novels, dramas and poems influenced by the PHIL2448 Comparative Religions.) The United States was born and thrives in a Bible. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: culture of dissent that has become an insep- Research and Argument. (Equivalent to HUMN2450 arable part of the American experience. This ENGL3377 The Bible and Its Influence.) 3 Credits course will explore the mutually beneficial History and Methods of Science relationship between the media and dissent in HUMN3220 An interdisciplinary survey of the history of American culture, touching upon music, liter- 3 Credits Western science from its roots in the ancient ature, television and film. Prerequisite: Political and Social History of Music Greek natural philosophy up to the present ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and An introduction to music appreciation and his - time. Although the course will cover topics in Argument. tory that emphasizes the political, cultural and the philosophy and history of all the sciences, social influences on music from antiquity to the emphasis will be placed on methodological 20th century. Contents include sacred and secu - developments. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Com - lar, vocal and instrumental and folk and art

461 Course Descriptions Humanities University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

music from across the Western world, including the rise of Islam, cultural continuities in the Research and Argument. (Equivalent to modern popular song. No previous musical Middle East and the legacy of the ancient Near RELI3321 The Book of Job and Its experience necessary. All course materials, East in western civilization. Students will engage Interpreters.) including textbooks, are included. Prerequisite: in a variety of methodological approaches in the ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and humanities as they learn of the rich cultural and HUMN3322 Argument. religious heritage of Iraq and consider important 3 Credits questions about its future. FDU NetID (formerly Latin-American Women Authors HUMN3221 Web mail) account re quired. Prerequisite: A study in English translation of Latin-American 3 Credits ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and women authors from Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz Coming of Age in America Argument. (Equivalent to RELI3316 Babylon to the present day. Emphasis will be placed on This course is a sociocultural examination of the the Great: Culture, Religion and Con flict in more recent writers. (Equivalent to LANG3322 teenager as expressed in American film. The Iraq.) Latin-American Women Authors.) course follows the development of the concept of teenagers in American society over the past HUMN3317 HUMN3334 five decades in order to gain an understanding 3 Credits 3 Credits of the role of the teenager in influencing and Ancient Egypt: Mummies/Myth/ Religion and Politics directing social change. Prerequisite: Magic This course explores the controversial and ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and This course provides an introduction to the sometimes bloody crossroads between politics Argument. religion, history, society and culture of ancient and religion. Specific topics may include religion Egypt, which was one of the most sophisticated as a political construct and instrument of power HUMN3307 and long-lived civilizations in world history. in society, the role of biblical traditions in the 3 Credits Special attention will be given to funerary development of church-state relations in the Slavery and Global Ethics literature and religion, cults, magic and ritual, United States, prophetic rhetoric and liberation This course will analyze 17th- and 18th-century religious art and architecture, the sacred writing theologies as public modes of discourse for fictional and nonfictional representations of race system and the religion of daily life. (Equivalent social justice, morality, ethics and the just-war and enslavement in tandem with the rise of to RELI3317 Ancient Egypt: Mummies/Myth/ debate and the development of a suitable politi - Enlightenment political and ethical philosophy. Magic.) cal theology for contemporary society. Students will read texts by authors from North Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: and South America, Europe and West Africa, HUMN3318 Research and Argument. Equivalent to each predicting economic and ethical conse - 3 Credits RELI3334 Religion and Politics. quences of the rise of the global economy. Jerusalem: The Holy City Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: A study of Jerusalem, the sacred city for three HUMN3350 Research and Argument. (Equivalent to different world religions, is fundamental to a 3 Credits PHIL3307 Slavery and Global Ethics.) rich understanding of the history and religions Social Life On and Off the Internet of the Middle East. Beginning in antiquity and This web-enhanced course addresses social HUMN3315 continuing through the medieval and modern change at the interpersonal level and within 3 Credits periods, this course will chronicle the rise, fall frameworks that include family, friendship, Jerusalem in Jerusalem and reconstruction of Jerusalem many times partner formation, religion, work and health. The course will explore the centrality of the city over. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: It examines the degree of overlay between of Jerusalem in the life of Judaism, Christianity Research and Argument. e-communications and face-to-face and tele - and Islam. The course will provide the student phone contact and traditional letter writing. with the complex history of the city in the life of HUMN3319 Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: the monotheistic traditions through the scholar - 3 Credits Research and Argument. ship of Karen Armstrong and through discus - The Holocaust: Philosophical Issues sions led by the interfaith team of instructors. An introduction to the Holocaust through the HUMN3396 The capstone of the course will be a two-week use of philosophical and religious essays, 3 Credits visit to the city of Jerusalem, which will include historical accounts, memoirs, novels, short South-African Literature hands-on visits to the holy sites of the three tra - stories and plays. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 This course will explore the depictions of select ditions, lectures by Jerusalem-based experts and Composition II: Research and Argument. countries or regions of the African continent in journal selections of the students. The course (Equivalent to PHIL3319 The Holocaust: a variety of texts written by Africans and by will challenge the participants to allow knowl - Philosophical Issues.) newcomers or outsiders to Africa. It aims to edge and experience to inform and shape the provide a sense of the diversity and multiplicity students’ visions of both their own lives and the HUMN3321 of “Africas” as created by writers from different life of the world. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 3 Credits points of view, with different relationships to Composition II: Research and Argument. The Book of Job and Its Interpreters Africa at different times. Students will read This course will examine the Biblical book of from among diaries, memoirs, travel narratives, HUMN3316 Job as a work of literature and religious thought histories, works of journalism, popular maga - 3 Credits and will develop the analysis historically in com - zines and may also sample music and film. Babylon the Great: Culture, Religion parison with ancient near Eastern, classical, and Conflict in Iraq medieval and modern philosophical discussions HUMN3399 This course is an introduction to the cultural and theological commentaries of the Joban tradi - 3 Credits and religious history of Iraq beginning in the tion. In this class, students will wrestle with Continental Drift: Sex, Gender and fourth millennium BCE and continuing through such themes as theodicy, piety, evil, suffering Family in the South Asian Diaspora the present day. Topics will include the inven- and the nature of the divine-human experience. A political and cultural study of literary and tion of writing, the origin of cities, Mesopota- Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: autobiographical works created by two genera - mian law and religion, the Epic of Gilgamesh, tions of South Asians (including Salman

462 Course Descriptions Information Technology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

Rushdie and Jhumpa Lahiri) who have chosen Wroxton College, the course also will feature Bollywood was crucial to the creation and rein - to make their lives and careers beyond the sub- field visits to art and history museums, nature forcement of the nation’s changing images of continent. The course centers on urban, cos - walks in rural England and excursions to itself and its people. This study of Indian film mopolitan and transnational stories, novels and cultural and intellectual centers such as Oxford, reflects these changes and looks at the ways that films in English, and touches upon topics such Stratford-upon-Avon and London. Among the cultural identities are shaped with reference to as gender roles, courtship, marriage, reproduc - imaginary worlds that will be discussed are popular art, technology, history and contempo - tion and child-rearing. FDU NetID (formerly those depicted in Arthurian legends, Swift’s rary politics. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Web mail) account re quired. (Equivalent to Gulliver Travels , the science fiction of H.G. Composition II: Research and Argument. ENGL3399 Continental Drift: Sex, Gender and Wells, Tolkien’s Middle-Earth and J.K. Rowling’s (Equivalent to COMM4468 Bollywood and Family in the South Asian Diaspora.) Harry Potter series. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Beyond: India in Film.) Composition II: Research and Argument. HUMN4310 HUMN4470 3 Credits HUMN4431 3 Credits Modern Political Thought 1–3 Credits The Nature of Evil This course introduces students to recurring Selected Studies in Humanities Examination of the treatment of evil in works by themes and major problems of modern political Studies in an area of humanities. Prerequisite: major writers. Authors will include Dante, Shake - and social thought. These include the nature and ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and speare, Hawthorne, Emily Bronte, Dostoevsky, significance of politics, the meaning of freedom, Argument. Melville, Graham Greene, Flannery O’Connor the value of citizenship, the nature of legitimate and Cormac McCarthy. Prerequisite: authority, the connection between religion and HUMN4432 ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and politics, the nature of individual rights, the dis - 3 Credits Argument. tinction between nationalism and patriotism and Gandhi: His Life, Philosophy and the connection between economic and political Legacy HUMN4498 life. Particular emphasis will be given to the An examination of Gandhi’s life and work as the 3 Credits retrieval of classical political ideas by modern leader of India’s freedom movement. A critical Internship thinkers and the development of distinctly mod - evaluation of his philosophy and techniques of Practical experience working in a business, gov - ern political ideas. The course is organized more nonviolent protest, as well as his impact on lead - ernment or nonprofit setting or museum, apply - or less chronologically so these themes can be ers such as Martin Luther King, Jr., Nelson ing academic knowledge. Academic component examined historically as well as theoretically. Mandela and others. The relevance of Gandhi’s includes weekly journals and semester-evalua - Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: ideas in the contemporary world will be dis - tive paper and frequent interaction with depart - Research and Argument. (Equivalent to cussed. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition ment mentor. PHIL4310 Modern Political Thought.) II: Research and Argument. (Equivalent to PHIL4432 Gandhi: His Life, Philosophy and HUMN4408 Legacy.) Information 3 Credits The British Mind HUMN4438 Technology An interdisciplinary introduction to 19th- 3 Credits century British political thought, literature and Ethics and Public Affairs Lee Gildart and Oswald Haase scientific achievement held at FDU’s Wroxton Does morality matter for politics? Or is power School of Computer Sciences and College in England. Taught in collaboration with the only thing that really counts? This course Engineering prestigious guest lecturers and Wroxton College explores the nature and validity of arguments faculty, the course will examine central figures for contemporary public policy issues such as INFO1101 of 19th-century British intellectual and literary abortion, capital punishment, racial profiling 3 Credits life such as Charles Darwin, John Stuart Mill, and the rules of war. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Herbert Spencer, William Wordsworth, Charles Composition II: Research and Argument. Computer Concepts and Technology Dickens and Rudyard Kipling. The course also (Equivalent to PHIL4438 Ethics and Public This course introduces the concepts of comput - will feature visits to art, scientific and natural Affairs.) er hardware organization and operating systems. history museums; ecological walks in rural A survey of various operating systems including England; and excursions to cultural and intel- HUMN4439 Windows, Mac-OS, Unix, Sun-OS and Linux is lectual centers such as Oxford, Stratford-upon- 3 Credits conducted. Students learn about the current Avon and London. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Questioning Religion developments in computers. Topics covered Composition II: Research and Argument. A discussion class with readings from atheists, include Boolean algebra, digital system design, skeptics, saints, scoffers, believers, doubters, sci - buses and addressing, memory systems, micro - HUMN4409 entists and theologians to explore problems of processors, computer peripherals, interfacing 3 Credits reason, faith and questioning in the major reli - techniques and performance evaluation. The British Imagination: gious traditions — and in one’s own life. From King Arthur to Harry Potter Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: INFO1105 British writers have created a variety of imag- Research and Argument. (Equivalent to 3 Credits inary worlds that not only entertain but also PHIL4439 Questioning Religion and RELI4439 Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours foster criticism, analysis and understanding of Questioning Religion.) Software Applications in Business the real world. This interdisciplinary course and Technology examines the continued relevance of the mythic, HUMN4468 This course introduces the students to the soft - utopian and dystopian literatures of Great 3 Credits ware used in business and technology, which Britain. Held at FDU’s Wroxton College in Bollywood and Beyond: India in Film includes word processing, spreadsheets, data - England and taught in collaboration with As India responded to major cultural and tech - bases, graphic presentations and computing- prestigious guest lecturers and the faculty of nological shifts during the 20th century,

463 Course Descriptions Information Technology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

software packages. Students learn how to use and social networking. Students learn how to INFO4101 the word processor to create business reports, create and publish web pages using eXtensible 3 Credits brochures, newsletters and other applications. HyperText Markup Language (XHTML) and Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours They prepare and conduct oral presentations Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) and construct and Data Communications and Computer with the aid of presentation software. Spread- maintain a website. Networks I sheet, visualization and computing software are This course provides a comprehensive overview used to analyze and evaluate data. Students cre - INFO2106 of data communications and computer net - ate databases, queries, forms and reports using 3 Credits works, with emphasis on network simulation the database-development software. Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours and network protocols. The topics to be covered Website Design and Management include network components and model, net - INFO1201 This course introduces students to the principles work services and applications, network trans - 3 Credits of website design and management, business port architectures, routing and switching, local Information Technology applications and security and e-commerce. area networks, mobile networks and network This course introduces the students to the career Students study graphic web-design concepts security and management. Integrated laboratory opportunities, current and emerging technolo - such as usability, accessibility and scalability. experience. Prerequisite: INFO1101 Computer gies and the scientific and engineering principles They learn how to create interactive web appli - Concepts and Technology. behind information technology. Students study cations, enhance web pages with dynamic Fee the impact of information technology in the images, implement a web server and integrate global society. Areas of current interest covered the website with a database management sys - INFO4102 include telecommunications, computer net - tem. Prerequisite: INFO2105 Internet and Web 3 Credits works, the internet and World Wide Web, multi - Applications. Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours media, e-commerce applications, desktop pub- Fee Data Communications and Computer lishing, computer-based systems and instruction Networks II technology. INFO3201 This course builds upon the networking con - 3 Credits cepts introduced in INFO4101 Data Commu - INFO2101 Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours nications and Computer Networks I. Topics 3 Credits Human Computer Interface covered include system administration, commu - Lecture/Laboratory 5 hours This course introduces the students to the cur - nications software, network technologies, LAN Computer Programming for rent theories and issues in human-computer models, Ethernet, switches, routers, bridges and Information Technologists I interactions. Students learn the techniques and hardware components used in a converged net - Elements of algorithm design and problem solv - technologies needed for the analysis, design and work. Students learn how to establish and ing. Elementary data types and arrays. Basic con - implementation of human-computer interfaces. maintain a local area network and extend their trol structures: sequential, conditional, iterative. They also study usability testing and rapid pro - learning to network convergence including Assignment statements. Basic input/output. totyping. Prerequisite: INFO2101 Computer media transmission, quality of services and Elements of methods. Design, coding and imple - Programming for Information Technologists I. network performance. Integrated laboratory mentation of programs in various areas using a experience. Prerequisite: INFO4101 Data language such as Java. Prerequisites: CSCI1105 INFO3205 Communications and Computer Networks I. Survey of Computers and Computer Software 3 Credits Fee and INFO1101 Computer Concepts and Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Technology. (Equivalent to CSCI1201 Computer Digital Media Publishing INFO4201 Programming I.) This course provides an overview of the design 3 Credits principles of desktop and multimedia publica - Information Technology Needs INFO2102 tions. Students study the proper rules and pro - Assessment and Management 3 Credits cedures for creating publications. They learn This course introduces students to the funda - Lecture/Laboratory 5 hours how to create interactive multimedia content for mental concepts of needs assessment and man - Computer Programming for both CD-ROM and the World Wide Web using agement as applied to information technology. Information Technologists II authoring software packages. Topics covered Students study how to integrate, maintain and Stepwise refinement as a programming tool. include audio, image and video processing and manage information technology in modern orga - Objects and classes. Inheritance polymorphism. compression. Prerequisite: INFO2105 Internet nizations. They learn how to systematically Character string manipulation. Advance input/ and Web Applications. assess customer needs and problems and pro - output. Elements of debugging and testing. vide them with cost-efficient and effective solu - Design, coding and implementation of programs INFO3308 tions. Prerequisite: senior standing. in various areas using a language such as Java. 3 Credits Prerequsite: grade of C or better in either Emerging Communications INFO4205 CSCI1201 Computer Programming I or Technologies 3 Credits INFO2101 Com puter Programming for This course surveys the historical, current and Information Technology Capstone Information Technol ogists I. (Equivalent to emerging communications technologies. Stu- Project CSCI1202 Computer Programming II.) dents learn how the emerging communications Senior students are required to successfully technologies operate and how they fit in a com - complete an information technology project by INFO2105 puter/communications network. The intended utilizing their past course work and design expe - 3 Credits applications of these technologies and their rience, by following professional practice and by Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours advantages and disadvantages are studied. The exercising sound judgment. The capstone proj- Internet and Web Applications course considers both wire-based and wireless ect must be approved and supervised by a fac- This course provides an introduction to internet communications. ulty member. Students must be within 16 credits services, the World Wide Web, accessibility, of graduation to take this course. search-engine optimization (SEO), multimedia

464 Course Descriptions Italian • Language and Culture Studies University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

INFO4278 INFO4875 3 Credits 3 Credits Language and Operating Systems Honors in Information Technology This course presents an introduction to the fun - Independent study in information technology for Culture Studies damental principles of operating systems in students in the University Honors Program School of the Humanities terms of resource management and machine vir - under the direction of a specific faculty member tualization. Topics include system services, with the approval of the school director. This LANG2201 process management, process synchronization, course can be taken in lieu of INFO4205 3 Credits threads, CPU scheduling, memory, device and Information Technology Capstone Project. Cultural Awareness and Languages file management and security. Integrated labora - Prerequisite: admission to the University Honors This course will focus on the role of language in tory experience. Prerequisites: ENGR2286 Program. culture, the interaction of languages globally and Digital System Design and INFO2101 Com- at home and the development of a repertoire of puter Programming for Information Technol- INFO4891 adaptive behaviors in order to be able to experi - ogists I. (Equivalent to CSCI3278 Operating 3 Credits ence success in communication with others in Systems.) Network and Information Security the workplace and in the community. Coverage of potential threats to a stand-alone or INFO4410 networked computer. The course includes LANG3301 3 Credits strategies to harden the system against these 3 Credits Foundations of Cybersecurity threats and discusses the liability of the network The World of Language The topic of Information Assurance and Secur- administrator for crimes committed via the net - Introduction to the concept of language and ity (IAS) has become increasingly important as work. Business issues considered include social exploration of the great variety of languages computer systems are being subjected to contin - engineering, continuity, data backup and recov - surrounding us, its interrelationship and its uous and more sophisticated attacks. This course ery and risk analysis. Prerequisite: CSCI3240 political, sociological and cultural impact. presents an introduction to the application and Computer Networks, EENG4342 Data management of mechanisms for cybersecurity Communications and Computer Networks or LANG3303 and information assurance in computing, com - INFO4101 Data Communications and Com- 3 Credits munication and organizational systems. Topics puter Networks I. (Equivalent to CSCI3391 Myths and Folk Tales of Continental covered include malware and social engineering, Network and Information Security.) Europe vulnerability assessments, network security, Knowledge and beliefs embodied in the myths authentication, basic cryptography and risk and folk tales of various Western cultures. analysis. Prerequisite: CSCI3240 Computer Italian Networks, EENG4342 Data Communications LANG3304 and Computer Networks or INFO4101 Data School of the Humanities 3 Credits Communications and Com puter Networks I. Nobel Prize Winners as (Equivalent to CSCI3410 Foundations of Cyber- ITAL1101 Representatives of Their Cultures security.) 3 Credits Elementary Italian I The works of Gide, Camus, Garcia Marquez, Mistral, Mann and Boll, seen against the back - INFO4498, INFO4499 An introduction to contemporary spoken and ground of their particular cultures. 6 Credits (3 Credits Each Semester) written Italian. Co-op in Information Technology LANG3306 Integration of classroom study with specific ITAL1102 3 Credits planned periods of supervised learning in pro - 3 Credits Literature and Culture in ductive employment experiences. A develop - Elementary Italian II Fin-de-Siècle Europe mental process designed to combine progressive A continuation of ITAL1101 Elementary Italian Cultural crises as reflected in the artistic and learning on the job, University course work and I. Prerequisite: ITAL1101 Elementary Italian I literary movements in continental Europe. career-development skills. Prerequisite: permis - or equivalent. sion of director of co-op. ITAL2103 LANG3307 3 Credits INFO4844 3 Credits The Age of Romanticism in 3 Credits Intermediate Italian I Continental Europe Programming for the Internet A continuation of the study of contemporary Romantic style as manifested in different This course introduces students to the funda - spoken and written Italian. Prerequisite: European cultures with particular emphasis on mentals of Microsoft.NET framework, the ITAL1102 Elementary Italian II or equivalent. the literature of France, Spain and Germany. ASP.NET web-development environment and C# programming. It also covers XML web ser - ITAL2104 LANG3308 vices, SQL Server database and Microsoft web 3 Credits 3 Credits server IIS (Internet Information Services). Stu- Intermediate Italian II Images of Women in European dents study how to develop powerful websites Continuation of ITAL2103 Intermediate Italian Literature and web applications that access databases I. Prerequisite: ITAL2103 Intermediate Italian I The myth of femininity chosen from such using dynamic, server-side programming in C#. or equivalent. writers as Goethe, Flaubert, Gide, Garcia Lorca, They also learn how to deploy such applications Brecht, de Beauvoir, Colette, George Sand and over various servers. Prerequisites: CSCI3268 ITAL4430 Christa Wolf. Database Systems and INFO2106 Website 1–3 Credits Spring Design and Management. (Equivalent to Selected Studies in Italian CSCI3444 Programming for the Internet.) Studies in an area of Italian language and/or lit - erature.

465 Course Descriptions Marine Biology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

LANG3311 LANG3335 MBIO1128 3 Credits 3 Credits 0 Credits 20th-century French, German and Contemporary Arabic Thought and Laboratory 4 hours Spanish Theater Cultures Laboratory: Beach Ecology The theater of Brecht, Artaud, Genet and Garcia This course will provide opportunities for stu - Fieldwork and experiments illustrating the top - Lorca, among others. dents to become familiar with Arab history and ics discussed in MBIO1118 Beach Ecology. culture and open up avenues for exploring the Corequisite: MBIO1118 Beach Ecology. LANG3312 Arab world. Fee 3 Credits Latin-American Novel LANG3336 MBIO1209 Readings from the works of Carlos Fuentes, 3 Credits 4 Credits Manuel Puig, Ariel Dorfman, Alejo Carpentier, Russian Culture/Modern Era Lecture 2 hours Jose Donoso and Mario Vargas Llosa. This class covers Russian culture — including Introduction to Marine Biology Spring food, dance, music, history, architecture, litera - Basic study of the marine environment, with ture and customs — from the period of the emphasis on the ecological aspects of the ocean. LANG3319 czars to contemporary times. This course offers Types and characteristics of marine organisms 3 Credits the overview and study of the Russian modern and their interactions with one another as well Short Story: Reflection of Language culture and civilization. The focus of this course as with the physical, chemical and geological and Culture will be to provide the students with the tools sectors of the ocean. Corequisite: MBIO1219 A study of French, German, Italian, Russian and and methodology of studying culture in histori - Laboratory: Introduction to Marine Biology. Ukrainian short stories. cal, geographic, social and political contexts as it relates to changes and traditions associated with MBIO1219 LANG3321 the Russian-speaking world. 0 Credits 3 Credits Laboratory 4 hours Linguistics: Origin of Languages LANG3340 Laboratory: Introduction to Marine This course includes, among other issues, the 3 Credits Biology fundamental concepts and origins of language. French Language and Culture: Experiments illustrating the topics discussed in It will emphasize comparisons, modern in- Global Perspective MBIO1209 Introduction to Marine Biology. fluences and idioms in modern languages. A study of the influence of the French language Corequisite: MBIO1209 Introduction to Marine and culture in Francophone countries; represen - Biology. LANG3322 tations of major Francophone writers from the Fee 3 Credits Caribbean islands to the African continent. Latin-American Women Authors MBIO3200 A study in English translation of Latin-American LANG3344 4 Credits women authors from Sor Juana Ines De La Cruz 3 Credits Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours to the present day. Emphasis will be placed on The World Wars and European Tropical Marine Vegetation more recent writers. (Equivalent to HUMN3322 Languages An introduction to the realm of marine vege- Latin-American Women Authors.) A study of the great literature that emerged tation. The main objectives of this course are from the horror and heroism of World Wars I (1) to teach the student field and laboratory LANG3324 and II. Students will analyze the content of vari - techniques for research on the biology, taxono - 3 Credits ous literary works. my and ecology of marine vegetation; (2) to The Latin-American Short Story review the taxonomy and distribution of marine Close readings of short stories from a variety of LANG4450 plants, macro-algae, seagrasses, marsh plants time periods and nationalities, mainly from 3 Credits and mangroves; and (3) to acquire applied Latin America. Focus will be on the uses of lan - Literary Classics in Translation knowledge of the ecology and physiology of guage and techniques to reflect on culture, com - Readings from the works of Milosz, Chekhov, marine plants by running field experiments. munities and historical contexts. Prerequisite: Turgenev, Mauriac, Dumas fils, Boccaccio, Prerequisites: BIOL1251, BIOL1253 General ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Goethe and Hoffman. Biology I and BIOL1252, BIOL1254 General Argument. Biology II or a semester of botany. Fee LANG3333 Marine Biology MBIO3400 3 Credits 4 Credits Chinese Language Through Literature School of Natural Sciences Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours This course is designed to familiarize students Tropical Marine Invertebrates with major Chinese literary forms, works and MBIO1118 A study of the evolution, reproduction, develop - authors in the context of cultural and social his - 3 Credits ment, behavior, anatomy, physiology and ecolo - tory through language. Does not require knowl - Lecture 2 hours gy of marine invertebrate taxa. The laboratory edge of Chinese literature or language. Beach Ecology will include dissections, collections, identifica - Visits to various coastal marine environments tions and experimentation on tropical marine studied in MBIO1128 Laboratory: Beach invertebrates. Prerequisites: MBIO1209 Ecology. Identification and experiments on Introduction to Marine Biology and MBIO1219 marine organisms to gain an understanding of Laboratory: Introduction to Marine Biology. their way of life. Corequisite: MBIO1128 Fee Laboratory: Beach Ecology.

466 Course Descriptions Mathematics University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

MBIO3650 MBIO4201 MATH1105 4 Credits 3 Credits 4 Credits Lecture 3 hours Marine Biology Research I College Algebra Physiology of Marine Animals Students will select, design and execute and col - Signed numbers, algebraic expressions, factoring, Osmoregulatory, respiratory and sensory physi - lect data for a research project in marine biology. fractions, first-degree equations, radicals, graph - ology of selected marine invertebrates and verte - Fall Fee ical methods, quadratic equations, quadratic brates. Prerequisites: BIOL1251, BIOL1253; systems, binomial theorem. Prerequisites: ele - BIOL1252, BIOL1254 General Biology I, II and MBIO4202 mentary algebra and geometry. MBIO1209 Introduction to Marine Biology and 1 Credit MBIO1219 Laboratory: Introduction to Marine Marine Biology Research II MATH1107 Biology. Corequisite: MBIO3651 Laboratory: Students will analyze data and write a scientific 4 Credits Physiology of Marine Animals. research paper in marine biology from data Precalculus Fall, Spring collected in MBIO4201 Marine Biology Re- Algebraic operations, functions and graphs, search I. Prerequisite: MBIO4201 Marine trigonometric functions, graphs of trigonometric MBIO3651 Biology Research I. functions, factoring, exponents, radicals, loga - 0 Credits Spring Fee rithms, trigonometric relations, oblique trian - Laboratory 4 hours gles, sets of equations, quadratic equations, Laboratory: Physiology of Marine equations of higher degree. Prerequisite: inter - Animals Mathematics mediate algebra. Experiments illustrating the topics in Fall, Spring MBIO3650 Physiology of Marine Animals. Lee Gildart and Oswald Haase Measurement of water content, oxygen uptake School of Computer Sciences and MATH1109 and phototaxis of selected marine invertebrates. Engineering 4 Credits Prerequisites: BIOL1251 General Biology I, Geometry Fundamentals BIOL1252 General Biology II, BIOL1253 MATH0198 This course is designed for current and prospec - Laboratory: General Biology I, BIOL1254 4 Credits* tive middle-school and elementary-school teach - Laboratory: General Biology II, MBIO1209 Computation and Algebra Skills ers. Possible topics include: basic geometry Introduction to Marine Biology and MBIO1219 Precollege mathematics: basic numerical con - theorems and constructions; polygons and poly- Laboratory: Introduction to Marine Biology. cepts, fractions, operations with signed numbers, hedra; the Pythagorean Theorem; symmetry, Corequisite: BIOL3650 Physiology of Marine introductory algebra, graphs, operations on similarity and scaling; dynamic geometry using Animals. polynomials, simple and simultaneous linear computer software and the internet; properties Fee equations. MATH0198 Computation and of two- and three-dimensional spaces; coordi - Algebra Skills is designed for students with defi - nate geometry and measurement; analytical MBIO3700 ciencies in both computational mathe matics and and transformational geometry; and history of 3 Credits elementary algebra. Placement in MATH0198 geometry. Prerequisite: teacher certification, Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Computation and Algebra Skills is made by the MATH1101 Comprehensive Mathematics or Tropical Marine Ecology Academic Resource Center and Academic higher-number mathematics course. The course discusses the interrelationship of Advising based on performance on a screening marine organisms within their environments. test. No credit toward graduation requirements. MATH1201 The course covers measurement of the biogeo - Prerequisite credit only. 4 Credits chemical paramaters which define marine Fall, Spring Calculus I ecosystems such as substrate, light, salinity, oxy - Slope, equations of lines, slope of a curve, rate of gen and nutrients. Emphasis will be given to MATH0298 change of a function, derivatives of algebraic understanding the properties of seawater as a 3 Credits* and trigonometric func tions, maxima and mini - medium for life, spatial and temporal variation Algebra Skills ma, the Mean Value Theorem, indeterminate in physical factors, nutrient links, inverted pyra - Precollege mathematics: basic arithmetical con- forms , the Fundamental Theorem of Calculus, mids of standing biomass, tropical marine food cepts, graphs and charts, introductory algebra. basic techniques of integration. Prerequisites: webs, intertidal zonation, abundance and prod - No credit toward graduation requirements. intermediate algebra and trigonometry or a ucts. Prerequisites: MBIO1209 Introduction to Prerequisite credit only. grade of C- or better in MATH1107 Precalculus. Marine Biology and MBIO1219 Laboratory: Fall, Spring Fall, Spring Introduction to Marine Biology. Fee MATH1101 MATH2202 MBIO3900 3 Credits 4 Credits 4 Credits Comprehensive Mathematics Calculus II Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Selected topics from logic, set theory, combina - Indefinite and definite integral, methods of inte - Tropical Marine Vertebrates torics, probability, matrices, systems of linear gration. Infinite series. Taylor Series. Polar coor- A study of the evolution, reproduction, develop - equations, linear programming, graphs. dinates, parametric equations. Prerequisite: a ment, behavior, anatomy, physiology and ecolo - Fall, Spring grade of C- or better in MATH1201 Calculus I. gy of marine vertebrate taxa. The laboratory will Fall, Spring include dissections, collections, identifications and experimentation on tropical marine verte - MATH2203 brates. Prerequisites: MBIO1209 Introduction 3 Credits to Marine Biology and MBIO1219 Laboratory: Calculus III Introduction to Marine Biology. Lines and planes in 3-space. Vectors, functions *Prerequisite credits are credits that do not count Fee toward graduation nor are averaged into the cumulative grade point ratio (CGPR).

467 Course Descriptions Mathematics University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

of several variables, partial derivatives, multiple MATH3220 ming and the transportation algorithm. Addi- integrals, line integrals. Prerequisite: a grade of 3 Credits tional topics to be selected from nonlinear C- or better in MATH2202 Calculus II. Linear Algebra programming, queuing theory and Markov Vector spaces and linear transformations; systems processes. Prerequisite: knowledge of matrices MATH2210 of linear equations, bases, matrix representations and probability. 3 Credits of linear transformations, matrix algebra, eigen - Differential Equations values and eigenvectors, determinants, canoni - MATH3316 First-order linear differential equations, linear cal forms, inner product spaces. Prerequisite: 3 Credits differential equations with constant coefficients, MATH2202 Calculus II. Partial Differential Equations variation of parameters, undetermined coeffi - Fall, Spring Fourier series, derivations and solutions of the cients, Laplace transforms, solutions in terms of partial differential equations satisfying auxiliary power series, numerical solutions with predic - MATH3225 conditions as applied to equations of classical tor-corrector and Runge-Kutta methods. Prereq- 3 Credits mathematical physics in one and several dimen - uisite: MATH2202 Calculus II. Abstract Algebra sions, orthogonal functions and eigenfunctions. Groups, cyclic groups, subgroups, product and Prerequisite: MATH2210 Differential Equations. MATH2243 quotient groups, homomorphisms and isomor - 3 Credits phisms. Rings, integral domains and fields. MATH3331 Statistical Programming Prerequisite: MATH2202 Calculus II. 3 Credits This is an in-lab SAS programming course, Higher Geometry including importing and exporting files, MATH3230 Axiomatics, groups of transformations and predictive data modeling and exploration 3 Credits invariants. Erlanger Program, Euclidean and (mixed-models analyses, multivariate statistical Analysis Lobachevskian geometry, special topics. analysis, longitudinal analysis and survival Completeness of real numbers, convergence of analysis) and a programming approach to report sequences and series, topology of the real num - MATH3335 writing. Prerequisites: MATH1105 College ber line, limits and continuity of functions, dif - 3 Credits Algebra and elementary knowledge of a ferentiation, integration, proofs of the major Complex Variables programming language. theorems of elementary calculus. Prerequisite: Analytic functions. Cauchy’s integral theorem MATH2202 Calculus II. and consequences, calculus of residues, entire MATH2255 and meromorphic functions, conformal mapping. 3 Credits MATH3237 Prerequisite: MATH3230 Analysis. Discrete Structures 3 Credits Logic, sets, functions, algorithms. Integers, Probability and Statistics I MATH3341 induction and recursion. Relations, posits, Sample spaces, discrete and continuous random 3 Credits equivalence relations, digraphs and matrix rep - variables. Point and Interval Estimation. Tests of Advanced Engineering Mathematics resentations. Boolean algebra, applications to Statistical Hypotheses. Prerequisite: MATH2202 Vector algebra, vector calculus, gradient, diver - logic, Boolean identities, Boolean functions, Calculus II. gence, curl. Line and surface integrals, Green’s minimization of circuits. Graphs. Trees. Pre- theorem, Stokes’ theorem, divergence theorem. requisite: MATH2202 Calculus II or permission MATH3238 Vector spaces, dot products, matrices, linear of instructor. 3 Credits equations, determinants, eigenvalues, diagonal - Probability and Statistics II ization, complex analysis, complex integration, MATH2337 A continuation of MATH3237 Probability and power series, residue theorem. Prerequisite: 3 Credits Statistics I including Goodness of Fit Tests, MATH2203 Calculus III. Applied Statistics I Linear Models, Markov Chains, optional topics. An introductory course that covers basic proba - Prerequisite: MATH3237 Probability and MATH3350 bility, descriptive statistics and inferential statis - Statistics I. 3 Credits tics as applied to biology and health care. Topics Applied Mathematics emphasize problems in design, randomization, MATH3240 Operators, function spaces, applications to analysis and interpretation of real experiments 3 Credits ordinary and partial differential equations. An and surveys. Analyses focus on tests of hypothe - Introduction to Numerical Methods introduction to the theory of distributions and ses (using normal and binomial methods) and and Analysis operational calculus. Prerequisite: MATH3220 correlation and regression analysis. MATLAB-based introduction to numerical Linear Algebra. methods. Introduction to MATLAB, analysis of MATH2338 numerical error and algorithmic convergence MATH4430 3 Credits rates, root-finding methods, curve fitting and 1–3 Credits Each Semester Applied Statistics II interpolation, least squares and model optimiza - Selected Studies in Mathematics This follow-up course to MATH2337 Applied tion, numerical differentiation and integration, Advanced studies in special fields of mathemat - Statistics I covers a wider range of applied sta tis - numerical solution of ordinary differential equa - ics. tical techniques, analysis of variance (ANOVA), tions. Prerequisite: MATH2210 Differential factor and cluster analysis, multiple linear reg- Equations. MATH4475, MATH4476 ression, cross-tab and distribution-free analysis. Variable Credits The course would touch upon more advanced MATH3275 Honors Mathematics topics such as modeling, experimental design, 3 Credits Independent study in mathematics for students error correction, rare events and graphical Mathematics of Operations Research in the University Honors Program under the methods. Prerequisite: MATH2337 Applied An introduction to mathematical programming direction of a specific faculty member with Statistics I. through the Simplex Method for linear program -

468 Course Descriptions Mechanical Engineering University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

approval of the school director. Prerequisite: MENG3155 MENG4041 admission to the University Honors Program. 3 Credits 3 Credits Heat Transfer Heating, Ventilation and Air MATH4498 Three modes of heat transfer: conduction, con - Conditioning and Refrigeration 3 Credits vection and radiation. Steady and transient Controls Co-op Mathematics heat conduction. Forced and free convection. Elements of control systems: sensors, operators, Integration of classroom study with specific Radiation heat transfer. Heat-exchanger princi - controls and control strategies (for HVAC&R) planned periods of supervised learning in paid ples. Prerequisites: ENGR3351 Applied will be covered. A brief review of the processing and relevant employment experiences. Co-op Thermodynamics, ENGR4254 Fluid of moist air (psychrometrics) will be offered. education combines learning on the job, Mechanics and MATH2210 Differential Finally, control systems for process control and University course work and career development Equations. the use of analog and direct digital controls will skills. be applied to heating, ventilation, air condition - Students are encouraged to complete two com - MENG3230 ing and refrigeration. Prerequisite: MENG4040 plementary co-op courses. 3 Credits Heating, Ventilation and Air Conditioning or Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours permission of instructor. MATH4800 Computer-aided Design and Spring 1–3 Credits Each Semester Manufacturing Independent Study in Mathematics Concepts and methods of computer-aided MENG4248 Independent study under the direction of a spe - design and manufacturing (CAD/CAM). 3 Credits cific faculty member after consultation with the Design, modeling and simulation. Solid model - Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours school director. ing software. Introduction to finite element Mechanical Engineering Design I analysis. Part, assembly and mechanism design. Principles of machine design, elements of stress 3-D solids, surfaces and models. 2- and 3-D analysis, rivets, belt and chain drives, springs Mechanical drawings. Generating computer numerical con - and synthesis of mechanical systems, materials trol (CNC) sequences for CAM. Application to and their use in design. Prerequisites: Engineering engineering projects. Prerequisites: ENGR1223 ENGR2228 Strength of Materials and Introduction to CAD, ENGR2228 Strength of ENGR3431 Dynamics. Lee Gildart and Oswald Haase Materials, MATH3220 Linear Algebra or per - Fall School of Computer Sciences and mission of instructor and MENG2235 Engineering Manufacturing Processes. MENG4250 Spring 3 Credits Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours MENG2232 MENG3288 Mechanical Engineering Design II 3 Credits 3 Credits Design of gears, clutches, shaft and couplings, Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours bearings, brakes, lubrication and synthesis of Mechanical Measurement and Microcontroller System Design mechanical systems. Prerequisite: MENG4248 Devices Microcontroller architectures. Input/output, Mechanical Engineering Design I. Study of measurement of distance, work, ener - interrupts and timers. Programming of parallel Spring gy, force, pressure and thermal quantities. Use ports, serial communication interfaces. Integrat - of testing machines and industrial mechanical ed laboratory experience.Prerequisite: MENG4355 components. Corequisite: MATH1105 College ENGR1204 Programming Languages in Engi - 3 Credits Algebra or equivalent. neering, ENGR2286 Digital System Design or Analog and Digital Control Fall Fee permission of instructor. Closed-loop feedback systems, general feedback Spring Fee theory, control-system design, stability, sensi- MENG2235 tivity, error response, root-locus, compensation 3 Credits MENG4040 techniques, digital control, discrete-time sys- Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours 3 Credits tems, design in Z-domain, controllability, Manufacturing Processes Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours optimal control. Prerequisites: EENG2221 Study of methods in manufacturing. Theory Heating, Ventilation and Air Signals and Systems I and MATH2210 and practice of turning, machining, drilling, Conditioning Differential Equations. etc., of metals and other materials. An introduction to some of the essential knowl - Fall Spring Fee edge required to enter the field of HVAC&R engineering. Topics include: physical principles, MENG4356 MENG3150 heating loads, hydronic piping systems and 3 Credits 3 Credits terminal units, cooling-load calculations, psy - Stress and Vibration Analyses Thermal Systems Analysis and Design chometrics, fluid flow in piping and ducts and The differential equations of stress and strain, Analysis, design, modeling, simulation and air- distribution devices, air conditioning systems shear flow, virtual flow, energy principles, optimization of thermal systems as applied to and equipment, refrigeration systems and equip - curved beams, noncircular bars. Computer- heat exchange, power generation, air condi - ment. Prerequisite: ENGR3351 Applied Ther - oriented problem solving. Analysis of motion tioning and refrigeration. Economic analysis. modynamics. arising from lateral and torsional vibration of Thermoeconomic analysis and evaluation. Fall systems, free and forced vibrations, damping, Prerequisite: ENGR3351 Applied isolation, balancing. Prerequisites: ENGR2228 Thermodynamics. Strength of Materials, ENGR3431 Dynamics Fall and MATH2202 Applied Calculus II. Spring

469 Course Descriptions Medical Technology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

MENG4360 MEDT4302 3 Credits Medical 3 Credits Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours Health Care Law and Policy Industrial Automation Technology This class will analyze the complexity of the Manufacturing systems and their mechanization: Henry P. Becton School of Nursing American health care system and the law and design and analysis on control systems for policy issues that must be confronted to achieve production, materials handling and inventory and Allied Health meaningful health care reform. Students will logistics. Manufacturing automation and gain an appreciation of the dilemmas facing robotics technologies (requirements analysis and MEDT1130 health care law and policymakers, providers, design). Electromechanical hardware and 3 Credits patients and how to balance cost, quality and computer control. Economics of robotics and Bioethics access. It examines specific health care organi - machine vision. Prerequisites: MENG2230 An interdisciplinary exploration of ethical issues zation aspects such as the medical profession, Manufacturing Processes; MENG4355 Analog in today’s health care practice with particular hospitals, managed-care organizations and gov - and Digital Control or permission of instructor. emphasis on the role of the professional in ethi - ernment health care programs. This course will Spring cal decision making. Topics include values clari - also discuss law and policy changes that have fication, ethical theories and principles, human major impacts on American health care in the MENG4365 subjects in research, informed consent, ad- past decade. 3 Credits vanced directives, euthanasia and physician- Advanced Fluid Mechanics assisted suicide. Work assignments include case MEDT4303 Mass, momentum and energy-conservation analysis using ethical decision-making models. 3 Credits equations. Navier-Stokes equation for viscous Prerequisite: faculty permission. Global Health flows. Lubrication theory. Boundary layer flow. This course will cover the main principles of Potential flow. Turbulent flow. Compressible MEDT1201 global health and introduce the student to the flow. Pumps and blowers. Piping systems. 3 Credits world’s vast diversity of determinants of health Prerequisite: ENGR4254 Fluid Mechanics. Lecture 3 hours and disease. Current and emerging health priori - Introduction to Medical Technology ties such as infectious diseases, socioeconomic MENG4375 Hospital laboratory, relationship of medical status and health, human rights, culture and 3 Credits technology to patient and community health, health, maternal and child health, water and Lecture/Laboratory 4 hours organization and role of each clinical laboratory sanitation, parasitic diseases, health inequities Electrical Energy Conversion department, introduction to diseases, medical and major global initiatives for disease preven - General considerations of electromagnetic terminology. tion and health promotion. phenomena and magnetic circuits. Exercises with ferromagnetic loops and air gap. Trans- MEDT4205, MEDT4206 MEDT4305 former theory — equivalent circuits and pha- 32 Credits (16 Credits Each Semester) 3 Credits sors. Regulation and efficiency evaluation, Clinical Laboratory Education I, II Current Topics in Health Science I rotating machinery, DC and three-phase The student technologist rotates through the This is part one of the capstone course in the systems. Power relationships, operating char- hospital departments, gaining didactic and prac - student’s allied health discipline. The course will acteristics. Prerequisite: EENG2221 Signals and tical experience under supervision in tests and cover current topics/advances in the student’s Systems I. procedures in clinical chemistry, hematology, discipline. Students will review scientific litera - Fall coagulation, blood banking, serology, microbiol - ture on current advances and analyze the impact ogy, immunohematology and clinical micro- on the future of their allied health discipline. MENG4384 scopy. Written examinations cover each phase 1 Credit of the work. Prerequisites: for MEDT4205 MEDT4306 2 Contact Hours Clinical Laboratory Education I, six semesters of 3 Credits Preparation for Senior Design Project appropriate college work; MEDT4205 Clinical Current Topics in Health Science II Research on choosing a design project, incor- Laboratory Education I is a prerequisite for This is part two of the capstone course in the porating appropriate engineering standards and MEDT4206 Clinical Laboratory Education II. student’s allied health discipline. The course will multiple realistic constraints and writing a proj- Fee cover current topics/advances in the student’s ect proposal for the mechanical engineering discipline. Students will review scientific litera - senior project. Prerequisite: Senior status. Co- MEDT4301 ture on current advances and analyze the impact requisite: MENG4248 Mechanical Engineering 3 Credits on the future of their allied health discipline. Design I. American Health Care Prerequisite: MEDT4305 Current Topics in Fall This class will examine and critically analyze the Health Science I. United States health care system, emphasizing MENG4386 the major trends and issues that have led the MEDT4307 2 Credits country to where it is today. In addition to pro - 3 Credits 2 Contact Hours viding a historical perspective, this course will Health Studies Practicum Senior Design Project establish a context for analyzing the current, The health studies practicum is the capstone Students work on capstone design projects varied approaches to health care financing, course for the health studies major. The course using the knowledge gained through past course delivery and reform. While this course will focus will include an internship in the field. Current work, following professional practice, applying on the U.S. health care system, the systems of topics, scientific literature and advances in the design methodologies and exercising sound other nations will be reviewed for comparison. student’s area of interest will be covered in this engineering judgment. Prerequisite: MENG4384 course. Preparation for Senior Design Project. Spring

470 Course Descriptions Music • Nursing University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

NURS4420 cultures and what influence it will have on NURS2113 Laboratory: Fundamentals of 3 Credits the future. Nursing I. Health Care Management An exploration of the current health care envi - MUSIC1111 NURS2004 ronment with implications for beginning-level 3 Credits 3 Credits managers. Topics to be discussed include man - Development of Music I Lecture 2 hours aged care, health-care delivery models, interdis - Music of Western civilization from ancient Fundamentals of Nursing II ciplinary team building, resource management, Greece to 1750, with some attention to signifi - This course focuses on the theoretical basis of case management, performance improvement cant historical and cultural influences. (Not open essential fundamental psychomotor skills neces - and conflict resolution. Prerequisite: faculty to those who take MUSIC1102 Music History sary for professional nursing practice. Prerequi - permission. and Literature or MUSIC1103 Music History.) sites: NURS2003 Fundamentals of Nursing I, Fee NURS2113 Laboratory: Fundamentals of NURS4430 Nursing I, NURS2200 Health Assessment, 3 Credits MUSIC1112 NURS2201 Health Assessment Laboratory and Nursing Research 3 Credits NURS2210 Pathophysiology. Corequisite: Students are introduced to the research process. Development of Music II NURS2114 Laboratory: Fundamentals of Nurs - The course focuses on the professional health Music of Western civilization from 1750 to the ing II. care worker as a research consumer. Critical contemporary period presented with an emphasis appraisal skills are developed as a basis for eval - on stylistic differences. (Not open to those who NURS2005 uating research findings for application to clini - take MUSIC1102 Music History and Literature 3 Credits cal practice. Learning activities are designed to or MUSIC1103 Music History.) Prerequisite: Lecture 2 hours facilitate the students’ understanding of allied MUSIC1111 Development of Music I. Professional Communication Skills: health research, the research-utilization process Fee Individual, Family and Groups and professional-role development. Prerequisite: This course builds on the development of criti - faculty permission. MUSIC3301 cal-thinking skills to assist students in defining 2 or 3 Credits who they are, as individuals, in relation to atti - American Jazz and Popular Music tudes to self and interactions with others, Music American popular music styles. Ballads through including one’s family. Topics include an assess - ragtime, blues and various idioms of jazz. Third ment of self, stress management, empowerment, School of Art and Media Studies credit requires additional research. family-systems concepts, cultural awareness and be reavement. Prerequisites: NURS2003 Funda- MUSIC1102 mentals of Nursing I, NURS2113 Lab oratory: 3 Credits Nursing Fundamentals of Nursing I, NURS2200 Health Music History and Literature Henry P. Becton School of Nursing Assessment, NURS2201 Health Assessment Music from Gregorian chant to present-day forms Laboratory, NURS2210 Pathophysiology and presented through use of musical illustration. and Allied Health PSYC1103 General Psy chology. (Not open to those who take MUSIC1111, MUSIC1112 Development of Music I, II.) NURS1101 NURS2007 Fee 2 Credits 3 Credits A Preview of Professional Nursing Pharmacotherapeutics MUSIC1103 This course will introduce the student to nurs - This course provides the students with current 2 Credits ing. The focus is on the history of nursing, knowledge concerning the wide spectrum of Music History overview of theories and frameworks used in pharmacologic agents. Emphasis is placed on Music from the Middle Ages to the present. professional nursing practice, standards of the the administration of safe and therapeutically Styles, forms and characteristics of vocal and profession including legal, ethical and moral effective drug therapy. Major drug classifications instrumental music of each period. (Not open dimensions and professional roles. are discussed in relation to administration meth - to those who take MUSIC1111, MUSIC1112 ods, pharmacologic effects, toxicity and nursing Development of Music I, II.) NURS2003 precautions and implications. Pharmacothera - 3 Credits peutics is discussed in relation to life-span de- MUSIC1107 Lecture 2 hours velopment changes, religious preferences and Fundamentals of Nursing I 3 Credits cultural customs. Prerequisites: NURS2003 World Music Focuses on the development of critical-thinking Fun damentals of Nursing I, NURS2113 Labora - A course of music appreciation to acquaint the skills in order to formulate independent judg - tory: Fundamentals of Nursing I, NURS2200 student with an overview of the global music ments, make decisions essential for nursing Health Assessment, NURS2201 Health Assess - scene. practice and develop fundamental professional ment Laboratory and NURS2210 Pathophysiol - attitudes and values. To this end, students are ogy. Corequisites: NURS2004 Fundamentals of MUSIC1108 introduced to critical-thinking skills, nursing Nursing II and NURS2114 Laboratory: Funda- 3 Credits theory, the nursing process, role socialization mentals of Nursing II. From Elvis to J. Lo: and the nursing curriculum’s conceptual model Pop Music of the Past 50 Years of caring as it applies to the well elderly popula - NURS2113 The class will involve the study of the develop - tion. Prerequisites: BIOL2125, BIOL2126 0 Credits ment of popular music in America during the Microbiology for the Health Sciences; Laboratory 6 hours past half century in its cultural and historical BIOL2203, BIOL2223 Human Anatomy and Laboratory: Fundamentals of contexts. The focus will be on the music itself — Physiology I; BIOL2204, BIOL2224 Human Nursing I how and why it came about, its significance to Anatomy and Physiology II; CHEM1107, This nursing practicum is designed to provide youth and the broader American and world CHEM1117 Chem is try for Health Sciences; and students with opportunities to apply the nursing MATH1105 College Algebra. Corequisite:

471 Course Descriptions Nursing University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

process in a geriatric setting. Health promotion Health Sciences. Corequisite: NURS2003 Microbiology for the Health Sciences; and health maintenance are emphasized, as well Fundamentals of Nursing I, NURS2113 BIOL2203, BIOL2223 Human Anatomy and as adaptations in self-care required as a result of Laboratory: Fundamentals of Nursing I and Physiology I; BIOL2204, BIOL2224 Human age-related changes. Prerequisites: BIOL2125, NURS2200 Health Assessment. Anatomy and Physiology II; and CHEM1107, BIOL2126 Microbiology for the Health Sci - CHEM1117 Chemistry for Health Sciences. ences; BIOL2203, BIOL2223 Human Anatomy NURS2210 Corequisites: NURS2003 Fun damentals of and Physiology I; BIOL2204, BIOL2224 Hu- 3 Credits Nursing I, NURS2113 Laboratory: Fundamentals man Anatomy and Physiology II; and Pathophysiology of Nursing I, NURS2200 Health Assessment, CHEM1107, CHEM 11 17 Chemistry for Health This course focuses on alterations in biologic NURS2201 Health Assessment Laboratory and Sciences. Corequisite: NURS2003 Fundamen - processes that affect the body’s homeostasis, NURS2210 Pathophysiology. tals of Nursing I. including etiology, pathogenesis, clinical mani - festations and treatment of selected health prob - NURS3300 NURS2114 lems. Knowledge of basic and clinical sciences 5 Credits 0 Credits is applied to simulated, clinical, nursing-practice Lecture 4 hours Laboratory 6 hours situations. Prerequisites: BIOL2125, BIOL2126 Medical-Surgical Nursing I Laboratory: Fundamentals of Microbiology for the Health Sciences; BIOL2203 , This course focuses on selected health needs of Nursing II BIOL2223 Human Anatomy and Physiology I; adult clients and integrates physiologic, socio- This nursing practicum is designed to provide BIOL2204, BIOL2224 Human Anatomy and cultural and behavioral alterations throughout. students with opportunities for continued dis - Physiology II; and CHEM1107, CHEM1117 A broad, scientific knowledge base is presented, cussion and application of the nursing process Chemistry for Health Sciences. Corequisites: with an emphasis on prevention, caring, with adult clients in a variety of clinical settings. NURS2003 Fundamentals of Nursing I, empowerment and critical thinking. Current Prerequisites: NURS2003 Fundamentals of NURS2113 Laboratory: Fundamentals of nursing therapies for managing care of adults Nursing I, NURS2113 Laboratory: Funda - Nursing I, NURS2200 Health Assessment and with pathophysiologic alterations are presented. men tals of Nursing I, NURS2200 Health NURS2201 Health Assessment Laboratory. Prerequi sites: NURS2004 Fundamentals of Assess ment, NURS2201 Health Assessment Generic: Fall Nursing II; NURS2005 Professional Laboratory and NURS2210 Pathophysiology. Communication Skills: Individual, Family and Corequisite: NURS2004 Fundamentals of NURS2217 Groups; NURS2007 Pharmacotherapeutics; Nursing II. 2–3 Credits NURS2114 Laboratory: Fundamentals of Information Systems and Nursing II; and NURS3209 Bioethics. NURS2200 Applications in Health Care Corequisite: NURS3301 Medical-Surgical 4 Credits This course serves as an introduction to nursing Nursing Lab-oratory I. Lecture 3 hours and health care informatics. Course content Health Assessment includes an overview of computer basics, infor - NURS3301 This course focuses on the development of mation terminology, data integrity and manage - 0 Credits comprehensive health-assessment skills. Mea- ment, informatics theory, system life cycle and Laboratory 7 hours sures of physical and functional status and clinical applications. The purpose of this course Medical-Surgical Nursing health-promotion strategies for each body is to provide a basic understanding of nursing Laboratory I system will be discussed. Prerequisites: and health care informatics and to facilitate This nursing practicum provides students with BIOL2125, BIOL2126 Microbiology for the decision-making based upon data, information, opportunities to apply the nursing process in Health Sciences; BIOL2203, BIOL2223 Human knowledge and wisdom. adult acute-care settings. Prerequisites: Anatomy and Physiology I; BIOL2204, NURS2004 Fundamentals of Nursing II; BIOL2224 Human Anatomy and Physiology II; NURS3208 NURS2005 Professional Communication Skills: and CHEM1107, CHEM1117 Chemistry for 3 Credits Individual, Family and Groups; NURS2007 Health Sciences. Corequisites: NURS2003 Introduction to Health Care Pharmacotherapeutics; NURS2114 Laboratory: Fundamentals of Nursing I, NURS2113 Economics Fundamentals of Nursing II; and NURS3209 Laboratory: Fundamentals of Nursing I and This course introduces the student to basic eco - Bioethics. Coreq uisite: NURS3300 Medical- NURS2201 Health Assessment Laboratory. nomic concepts and theories to analyze selected Surgical Nursing I. issues/problems in health care and to inform NURS2201 decision making and policy development. Fiscal NURS3310 0 Credits management and basic budgeting concepts also 5 Credits Laboratory 4 hours will be covered. Lecture 4 hours Health Assessment Laboratory Psychiatric Nursing This nursing practicum provides students with NURS3209 Within the context of exploding knowledge, opportunities to apply the nursing process in 3 Credits increasing client acuity and the increasing primary health care. Students obtain a health Bioethics demand for professional accountability, this history and perform physical-assessment skills An interdisciplinary exploration of ethical issues course focuses on the application of crucial the - with a peer and another well adult. Data col- in today’s health care practice with particular oretical and clinical issues essential to the prac - lected are systematically categorized and criti- emphasis on the role of the professional in ethi - tice of psychiatric-mental health nursing in the cally analyzed to formulate nursing diagnoses cal decision making. Topics include: values clari - 21st century. Prerequisites: NURS2004 Fun- and develop a nursing-care plan. Prerequisites: fication, ethical theories and principles, human damentals of Nursing II; NURS2005 Profes- BIOL2125, BIOL2126 Microbiology for the subjects in research, informed consent, sional Communication Skills: Individual, Family Health Sciences; BIOL2203, BIOL2223 Human advanced directives, euthanasia and physician- and Groups; NURS2007 Pharmacotherapeutics; Anatomy and Physiology I; BIOL2204, assisted suicide. Work assignments include case NURS2114 Laboratory: Fundamentals of Nurs - BIOL2224 Human Anatomy and Physiology II; analysis using ethical decision-making models. ing II; and NURS3209 Bioethics. Corequisite: and CHEM1107, CHEM1117 Chemistry for Prerequisites: BIOL2125, BIOL2126 NURS3311 Psychiatric Nursing Laboratory.

472 Course Descriptions Nursing University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

NURS3311 Corequisite: NURS3341 Nursing Care of the NURS3371 0 Credits Child and Family Laboratory. 3 Credits Laboratory 7 hours The Professional Nurse in the Psychiatric Nursing Laboratory NURS3341 21st Century This nursing practicum provides students with 0 Credits As the first offering of the sequence for the RN opportunities to apply the nursing process in a Laboratory 7 hours student, this course serves as a bridge from the psychiatric setting, educating clients and com - Nursing Care of the Child and Family RN’s prior education to the B.S.N. program. munities to help prevent or correct actual or Laboratory The focus of the course is to develop the pro - potential health problems related to dysfunc - This practicum provides students with opportu - fessional self as the baccalaureate-prepared tional coping. Prerequisites: NURS2004 nities to apply the nursing process to pediatric nurse in today’s changing health care system; Fundamentals of Nursing II; NURS2005 clients in a variety of health-care settings. Pre- examine the evolving health care delivery system Professional Communication Skills: Individual, requisites: NURS3300 Medical-Surgical Nursing and the context in which delivery takes place; Family and Groups; NURS2007 I, NURS3301 Medical-Surgical Nursing Lab- and ex plore the issues, opportunities and con - Pharmacotherapeutics; NURS2114 Laboratory: oratory I, NURS3310 Psychiatric Nurs ing and straints the profession faces today and into the Fundamentals of Nursing II; and NURS3209 NURS3311 Psychiatric Nursing Laboratory . next century. Bioethics. Corequisite: NURS3310 Psychiatric Corequisite: NURS3340 Nursing Care of the Nursing. Child and Family. NURS4410 5 Credits NURS3320 NURS3345 Lecture 4 hours 5 Credits 3 Credits Community Health Nursing Lecture 4 hours End of Life This course emphasizes holistic care of clients in Women’s Health Nursing The course will explore the role of the nurse in the community, considering families and individu - This course focuses on women’s health and its providing palliative care and improving the als in a variety of settings, e.g., home, workplace, impact on families. Students address the health- quality of life for patients and their families at school and clinics. Prerequisites: NURS3320 care needs of women throughout their life span, the end of life. The basic principles of pain Women’s Health Nursing, NURS3321 Women’s and nursing-care needs of the childbearing fami - assessment and management at the end of life Health Nursing Laboratory, NURS3340 Nursing ly, from conception through the puerperium. will be reviewed. Topics will also include symp - Care of the Child and Family and NURS3341 Among the topics covered are the reproductive tom management, key ethical issues and legal Nursing Care of the Child and Family Laborato - years, women’s interface with the health care concerns, culture, communication, ry. Corequisite: NURS4411 Community Health system, health problems unique to women, grief/loss/bereavement and care at the actual Nursing Laboratory. health care issues that affect women and women’s time of death. The loss experiences of the nurse role within the family. Prerequisites: NURS3300 will also be examined. The course will follow NURS4411 Medical-Surgical Nursing I, NURS3301 Medical- the End of Life Nursing Education Consortium 0 Credits Surgical Nursing Laboratory I, NURS3310 (ELNEC) curriculum. Students will be designat - Laboratory 7 hours Psychiatric Nursing and NURS3311 Psychiatric ed “ELNEC trained” at the completion of the Community Health Nursing Nursing Laboratory . Corequisite: NURS3321 course. Laboratory Women’s Health Nursing Laboratory. This nursing practicum is designed to provide NURS3352 students with an opportunity to practice inde - NURS3321 3 Credits pendently and interdependently in a community 0 Credits Complementary Alternative Therapy health agency and in client homes. Students also Laboratory 7 hours This course provides an introduction to a variety select and conduct a primary-prevention teach - Women’s Health Nursing Laboratory of commonly practiced alternative modalities. ing project with a lay group in a community. This nursing practicum provides students with Topics such as acupuncture, homeopathy and Prerequisites: NURS3320 Women’s Health opportunities to apply the nursing process to aromatherapy will be discussed and evaluated Nursing, NURS3321 Women’s Health Nursing female clients and their families in a variety of based upon current evidence-based research. Laboratory, NURS3340 Nursing Care of the health care settings. Prerequisites: NURS3300 Child and Family and NURS3341 Nursing Care Medical-Surgical Nursing I, NURS3301 Medical- NURS3353 of the Child and Family Laboratory. Corequisite: Surgical Nursing Laboratory I and NURS3310 2 Credits NURS4410 Community Health Nursing. Psychiatric Nursing and NURS3311 Psychiatric Introduction to Normal and Nursing Laboratory . Corequisite: NURS3320 Therapeutic Nutrition NURS4420 Women’s Health Nursing. This course will introduce nursing and allied 3 Credits health students to the fundamentals of human Health Care Management NURS3340 nutrition as well as the role of dietary interven - An exploration of the current health care envi - 5 Credits tion in the treatment and management of chron - ronment with implications for beginning-level Lecture 4 hours ic and acute medical conditions. managers. Topics to be discussed include Nursing Care of the Child and Family managed care, health-care delivery models, In this course, students analyze the nursing-care NURS3360 interdisciplinary team building, resource man - needs of the child from infancy to young adult - 3 Credits agement, case management, performance hood within the context of a family. Emphasis is Intimate Violence improvement and conflict resolution. placed on the application of knowledge from the This course will provide a multidisciplinary Prerequisites: NURS3208 Introduction to biological sciences, social sciences, humanities focus on victims and victimizers of intimate vio - Health Care Economics, NURS3320 Women’s and nursing to clinical nursing practice. Prereq - lence. Issues addressed will include child abuse, Health Nursing, NURS3321 Women’s Health uisites: NURS3300 Medical-Surgical Nursing I, battering, rape, the witnessing of violence and Nursing Laboratory, NURS3340 Nursing Care NURS3301 Medical-Surgical Nursing Labora- the long-term effects of trauma. of the Child and Family and NURS3341 tory I and NURS3310 Psychiatric Nursing and Nursing Care of the Child and Family NURS3311 Psychiatric Nursing Laboratory . Laboratory.

473 Course Descriptions Philosophy University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

NURS4430 better understanding of leadership techniques PHIL1105 3 Credits and principles and assist them to identify leader - 3 Credits Nursing Research ship strengths within themselves. World Religions in America Students are introduced to the research process. This course is an exploration of the changing The course focuses on the professional nurse as NURS4460 multi-religious landscape of the United States, research consumer. Critical appraisal skills are 1 Credit looking at the history and dynamic interaction developed as a basis for evaluating research Preparation for Success of the various religious traditions that now com - findings for application to clinical practice. This course will focus on the application of criti - pose the American religious scene, with special Learning activities are designed to facilitate the cal-thinking skills to the comprehensive emphasis on the religious life of Buddhists, students’ understanding of nursing research, the NCLEX-RN preparation program. Managing Hindus, Sikhs, Jains and Muslims. Prerequisite: research-utilization process and professional- text anxiety and building confidence needed to ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and role development. Prerequisites: NURS3320 pass the NCLEX-RN examination are an inte - Argument. (Equivalent to RELI1105 World Women’s Health Nursing, NURS3321 Women’s gral part of this course. Prerequisites: Religions in America.) Health Nursing Laboratory, NURS3340 Nursing NURS4410 Com munity Health Nursing, Care of the Child and Family, NURS3341 Nurs - NURS44 11 Community Health Nursing PHIL1110 ing Care of the Child and Family Laboratory Laboratory, NURS4420 Health Care 3 Credits and PSYC2201 Statistics or faculty permission. Management and NURS4430 Nursing Philosophical Problems Research. Corequisites: NURS4440 Medical- Basic problems of philosophical thought: NURS4440 Surgical Nursing II and NURS4441 Medical- mind/body, nature of reality, nature of science, 8 credits Surgical Nursing Laboratory II. existence of God, right and wrong, aesthetic Lecture 6 hours Fee experience. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Medical-Surgical Nursing II Composition II: Research and Argument. This capstone course focuses on i llness-manage - NURS4800 ment strategies that integrate information from 1–3 Credits PHIL2000 nursing, medicine, surgery and pharmacothera - Independent Study in Nursing 3 Credits peutics. Current therapies and interventions are Independent study in nursing under the direction Logical Thinking explored. Prerequisites: NURS4410 Community of a specific faculty member after consultation A course to sharpen logical thinking and persua - Health Nursing, NURS4411 Community Health with the school director. sive argument through the study of deductive Nursing Laboratory, NURS4420 Health Care and inductive logic, common errors in reasoning Management and NURS4430 Nursing Re- (fallacies), problem-solving strategies and the search. Corequisite: NURS4441 Medical- Philosophy critical analysis of reasoning in the law, science Surgical Nursing Laboratory II. and politics. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 School of the Humanities Composition II: Research and Argument. NURS4441 0 credits PHIL1000 PHIL2101 Laboratory 16 hours 3 Credits 3 Credits Medical-Surgical Nursing The Life of the Mind Ancient and Medieval Philosophy Laboratory II Do other people matter? What are the limits of Central issues in the history of Western philoso - This nursing practicum provides students with toleration? Can we be citizens of the world? phy from the sixth century B.C. through the opportunities to apply the nursing process to This inquiry-based introduction to the study of 13th century A.D. Philosophers to be studied multiple adults experiencing acute and/or philosophy emphasizes the importance of criti - include the pre-Socratics, Plato, Aristotle, the chronic illness in a variety of health-care set - cal thinking, moral reasoning and cross-cultural Stoics, Epicureans, Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas tings. The course includes synthesizing and understanding for citizenship, professional life and others. Prerequisite: one course in philoso - applying leadership and management principles and scholarship across academic disciplines. phy or permission of instructor. Prerequisite: as a member of a health-care team to delivering Prerequisite: ENWR1001 Composition I: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and nursing care to groups of patients. Prerequisites: Rhetoric and Inquiry. Argument. NURS4410 Community Health Nursing, Fall, Spring NURS4411 Community Health Nursing PHIL2105 Laboratory, NURS4420 Health Care PHIL1101 3 Credits Management and NURS4430 Nursing 3 Credits Current Moral and Social Issues Research. Corequisite: NURS4440 Medical- Introduction to Logic This course explores some of the most urgent Surgical Nursing II. Principles of correct reasoning for understanding, and divisive issues in contemporary global soci - analyzing and criticizing a variety of deductive ety, such as human rights, terrorism and torture, NURS4444 and inductive arguments. Prerequisite: abortion and euthanasia, genetic engineering 0–3 Credits ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and and cloning, the moral standing of animals and Nursing Leadership Development Argument. attitudes toward love and sexuality. Prerequisite: This course examines the leadership process and ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and assists nursing students to develop as nursing PHIL1103 Argument. leaders by participating in leadership develop - 3 Credits ment activities throughout the semester. Ethics PHIL2202 Students will be encouraged to model leadership Moral problems and theories. The good life and 3 Credits behaviors, communicate effectively with their its goals: health, pleasure, divine approbation, Modern Philosophy peers and explore opportunities for nursing obedience to natural law, utility. Moral concepts Central issues in 17th- and 18th-century phi- leadership within health-care organizations. such as good, virtue and duty. Prerequisite: losophy. Rationalism (Descartes, Spinoza and This course will assist every student to develop a ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Leibniz). Empiricism (Hobbes, Locke, Berkeley Argument.

474 Course Descriptions Philosophy University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

and Hume). Kant. Prerequisite: one course in present day. The development of Zionism, secu - Maimoedes, Jewish mysticism, Judaism and philosophy or permission of instructor. larism and Yiddishism, the European Shtetl, the Christianity, Judaism and Islam. Prerequisite: Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: emigration experience and the formation of ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Research and Argument. American Judaism, Orthodox, Conservative, Argument. Reform and Reconstructionist; reactions to the PHIL2203 Holocaust; ideologies of the state of Israel, the PHIL2321 3 Credits resurgence of the kabbalah and Judaic ap- 3 Credits Contemporary Philosophy proaches to medical ethics. Prerequisite: African Philosophy Movements in 20th-century philosophy such as ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Readings in and discussion of traditional and positivism, pragmatism, phenomenology, exis - Argument. oral (e.g., sagacity), colonial (e.g., negritude) tentialism, logical analysis and ordinary language and postcolonial thought from Africa and about analysis studied through representative works. PHIL2253 Africa with an emphasis on the contemporary. Prerequisite: one course in philosophy or per - 3 Credits Consideration of a variety of philosophical sub - mission of the instructor. Prerequisite: The Search for Meaning: jects but especially aesthetics and sociopolitical ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Religious Responses thought. Exploration of the quandaries raised Argument. Examination of the religious thought of two about the meaning of “African” and of “phi- Jewish and two Christian 20th-century figures. losophy.” Prerequisite: ENWR1002 PHIL2205 Through an analysis of the writings of Elie Composition II: Research and Argument. 3 Credits Wiesel, Abraham Heschel, Dorothy Day and Social and Political Philosophy Dietrich Bonhoeffer, the student will explore PHIL2439 Plato’s Republic and Laws . Aristotle’s political structures of religious experience in two mono- 3 Credits realism. Thomas Aquinas and the theory of the theistic traditions. Special attention will be paid Radical Political Thought natural law. Machiavelli’s power politics. Social to the roles of religious ways of knowing in the This course explores major currents of political contract theories. Hobbes, Locke and Rousseau. formation of social and political philosophies. radicalism both within and outside of the dom - Classic English liberalism. Hegel’s historical Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: inant Western political tradition. Topics con - idealism and Marx’s historical materialism. Research and Argument. (Equivalent to sidered include antidemocratic radicalism, Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: HUMN2253 The Search for Meaning: Religious democratic radicalism, Marxian radicalism, radi - Research and Argument. Responses.) cal feminism, radical individualism and post- colonial radicalism. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 PHIL2206 PHIL2254 Composition II: Research and Argument. 3 Credits 3 Credits (Equivalent to HUMN2439 Radical Political Aesthetics War and Peace in Christianity, Thought.) Theories of art from Plato to Dewey. Psycho- Judaism and Islam logical and social determinants of art. Genres Survey of key aspects of the thought and prac - PHIL2440 of art. Aesthetic appreciation and criticism. tice of the three major monotheistic traditions 3 Credits Art’s relation to society, morality and science. with regard to issues surrounding war and Human Rights Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: peace. Both scriptural writings and the writings The course examines several major themes and Research and Argument. of contemporary religious thinkers will be ana - problems in contemporary human rights, includ - lyzed. Selected interreligious conflicts in the ing the meaning of human rights, its origins, PHIL2207 contemporary period will be discussed. Prereq - philosophical justifications and its enabling doc - 3 Credits uisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research uments. It also will discuss current philosophical Philosophy of Religion and Argument. (Equivalent to HUMN2254 War debates arising from cultural relativism, reli - God’s existence and attributes, problem of evil, and Peace in Christianity, Judaism and Islam.) gious claims and the assertion of group rights. religious truth, religious views of history, myth Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: and language systems, meaning in religion. PHIL2256 Research and Argument. (Equivalent to (Equivalent to RELI2207 Philosophy of 3 Credits HUMN2440 Human Rights.) Religion.) Fundamentalism in Religious Practice This course examines the history and philosophy PHIL2443 PHIL2251 behind fundamentalism and extremes in various 3 Credits 3 Credits sects of Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Stu- African-American Political Thought Basic Jewish Thought dents will explore both ancient examples and This course explores the contributions of Study of major concepts in Judaism and their modern trends in each of the religion’s faiths, African-American political thinkers to the devel - relationship to basic texts. Origins and nature including Hasidism, Haredi movements in opment of American political thought in gener - of Jewish practice, including holiday observance. Israel, Jihad, terrorism, missionaries and evan - al, considers the tensions and conflicts within Overview of the thought of contemporary gelical movements. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 African-American political thought and explores American denominations. Study of major ideas Composition II: Research and Argument. the significance of these thinkers to the under - in Zionist thought. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 standing of contemporary race relations. Prereq - Composition II: Research and Argument. PHIL2262 uisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research 3 Credits and Argument. (Equivalent to HUMN2443 PHIL2252 History of Jewish People I African-American Political Thought.) 3 Credits This course will examine the history of the Judaism and Modernity Jewish people from the destruction of the sec - PHIL2444 Jewish life and thought, self-understanding and ond temple in 70 C.E. through the expulsion 3 Credits survival from the 17th century, enlightenment of the Jews from Spain in 1942. Topics will Technology and Its Critics and emancipation of the Jews of Europe to the include the development of Jewish literature, Modern technologies have aroused both intense admiration and violent opposition. This course

475 Course Descriptions Philosophy University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

will provide an analysis of some of the issues PHIL2450 probability theory. Theory of evidence and con - raised by critics of modern technology such as 3 Credits cept formation in the natural sciences. Aldous Huxley, Lewis Mumford and Neil History and Methods of Science Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Postman. This course meets exclusively online. An interdisciplinary survey of the history of Research and Argument. FDU NetID (formerly Web mail) account re - Western science from its roots in the ancient quired . Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition Greek natural philosophy up to the present PHIL3302 II: Research and Argument. (Equivalent to time. Although the course will cover topics in 3 Credits HUMN2444 Technology and Its Critics.) the philosophy and history of all the sciences, Symbolic Logic emphasis will be placed on methodological Sentential and predicate logics: syntax, semantics PHIL2445 developments. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 and metalogic. Undecidability and incomplete - 3 Credits Composition II: Research and Argument. ness theorems for arithmetic. Prerequisite: Democracy in America (Equivalent to HUMN2450 History and ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and This course explores the theory and practice of Methods of Science.) Argument. American democracy from the 19th century to the present day through a mixture of philosophi - PHIL2452 PHIL3307 cal, historical, literary and social scientific 3 Credits 3 Credits readings and a variety of documentary and Ancient Political Thought Slavery and Global Ethics Hollywood films. Questions include: What are This course examines some of the foundational, This course will analyze 17th- and 18th-century the theoretical foundations of American democ - political and social ideas of Western and Eastern fictional and nonfictional representations of race racy? How does the practice of democracy in civilization in historical context and comparative and enslavement in tandem with the rise of America deviate from these foundations? How perspective. Topics include the origins of demo- Enlightenment political and ethical philosophy. has American democracy evolved? Why do so cracy, the degeneration of the ancient polity and Students will read texts by authors from North many Americans appear to hate politics? How the rebirth of the ancient conception of politics and South America, Europe and West Africa, should democratic citizens be educated? during the Renaissance. Readings encompass each predicting economic and ethical conse - Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: history, philosophy and literature, including quences of the rise of the global economy. Research and Argument. (Equivalent to selections from Confucius, Thucydides, Plato, Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: HUMN2445 Democracy in America.) Aristotle, Aristophanes, Cicero, Livy and Research and Argument. (Equivalent to Machiavelli. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 HUMN3307 Slavery and Global Ethics.) PHIL2446 Composition II: Research and Argument. 3 Credits (Equivalent to HUMN2452 Ancient Political PHIL3310 Religion and Human Rights Thought.) 3 Credits This course will survey contemporary issues in Human Perspectives in a the relationship between religion and human PHIL2545 Computerized Society rights. Among the topics examined will be the 3 Credits An examination of the ethical, social and eco - values in various religious traditions, in particu - The American Mind nomic implications of computer technology as it lar Hinduism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, This course explores some of the main sources challenges traditional values and man’s image of which may underlie the protection of human of American social and political thought from himself. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition rights. The course will also look at the persecu - the 18th century to the present, with particular II: Research and Argument. tion of religious minorities in today’s world, the emphasis on the relationship between democrat - role of religion in suppressing human rights and ic and individualistic principles. It also will PHIL3311 how religion has served, in various instances, to investigate other major themes and problems in 3 Credits champion human rights. Prerequisite: American social and political thought, including The Ethics of Food ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and federalism, individualism, democracy, citizen- This course examines the ethical dimensions Argument. (Equivalent to HUMN2446 Religion ship, American nationalism, etc. Prerequisite: of food production and consumption and and Human Rights.) ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and explores contemporary food issues including Argument. (Equivalent to HUMN2545 The vegetarianism, animal rights, global food secu - PHIL2448 American Mind.) rity and sustainability, poverty and hunger, the 3 Credits industrialization of food production, biotechnol - Comparative Religions PHIL3300 ogy and genetic engineering. Students will apply A study of the great religions of the world, with 3 Credits ethical theories to cases on food ethics. Prereq - emphasis on how they affect events in the world Business Ethics uisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research today. The course explores components and Primarily designed for the major in business, and Argument. meanings of Hinduism, Buddhism, Confu- with emphasis on ethical problems confronting cianism, Taoism, the theistic Western religions today’s personnel in the marketplace. A brief PHIL3316 (Judaism, Christianity, Islam) and some less history of the moralities underlying business; 3 Credits common religions. Subjects to be covered techniques in solving ethical dilemmas; some Plato include religious ideas and institutions, cosmo- theory of the relation between self-interest and Lecture and seminar in Plato’s Dialogues designed logies, systems of meaning and salvation. Ex- community concerns. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 to train the student in interpretation of Platonic tensive material on the web will be assigned. Composition II: Research and Argument. texts and in metaphysical argumentation. Empha - Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: sis on metaphysics, theory of knowledge and Research and Argument. (Equiva lent to PHIL3301 philosophy of mind and their relations to ethics, HUMN2448 Comparative Religions.) 3 Credits politics and speculative psychology. For upper- Philosophy of Science division students only. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Theories of scientific meaning, deductive proof Composition II: Research and Argument. theory, formal systems, causal explanation,

476 Course Descriptions Physical Education University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

PHIL3317 PHIL4432 PHED1133 3 Credits 3 Credits 1 Credit Theory of Knowledge Gandhi: His Life, Philosophy and Personal Fitness Nature, extent and forms of human knowledge. Legacy Basic knowledge of exercise and diet in relation The roles of sense-perception and reason. The An examination of Gandhi’s life and work as the to weight control and development of various nature of truth and reality. Examination of vari - leader of India’s freedom movement. A critical areas of the body. Games, jogging and universal ous forms of skepticism. Prerequisite: evaluation of his philosophy and techniques of gym facility used to develop fitness levels. ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and nonviolent protest, as well as his impact on lead - Spring Argument. ers such as Martin Luther King, Jr., Nelson Mandela and others. The relevance of Gandhi’s PHED1157 PHIL3318 ideas in the contemporary world will be dis - 1 Credit 3 Credits cussed. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition Yoga Existentialism II: Research and Argument. (Equivalent to Hatha Yoga as a means of achieving a healthy Introduction to the study of human conscious - HUMN4432 Gandhi: His Life, Philosophy and body and inner tranquillity. The understanding ness through the philosophical and literary Legacy.) and practice of relaxation, controlled breathing works of existential thinkers such as Kierkegaard, techniques and yoga postures (asanas). Nietzsche, Heidegger, Jaspers, Marcel, Camus, PHIL4438 Fall, Spring Sartre, Merleau-Ponty and Tillich. Prerequisite: 3 Credits ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Ethics and Public Affairs PHED1167 Argument. Does morality matter for politics? Or is power 1 Credit the only thing that really counts? This course Weight Training PHIL3319 explores the nature and validity of arguments Use of nautilus machines and dumbbells for 3 Credits for contemporary public policy issues such as strengthening and toning major muscle groups. The Holocaust: Philosophical Issues abortion, capital punishment, racial profiling Fall A study of the Holocaust through the use of and the rules of war. FDU NetID (formerly philosophical and religious essays, historical Web mail) account re quired . Prerequisite: PHED1180 accounts, memoirs, novels, short stories and ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and 1 Credit plays. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Argument. (Equivalent to HUMN4438 Ethics Stress Management Research and Argument. (Equivalent to and Public Affairs.) Students will identify the sources and symptoms HUMN3319 The Holocaust: Philosophical of stress in their lives and be responsible for Issues.) PHIL4439 developing their own personalized stress-man - 3 Credits agement programs. Topics covered include exer - PHIL4310 Questioning Religion cise, nutrition, time management, relaxation 3 Credits Discussion of readings from atheists, skeptics, techniques and assertiveness. Students will uti - Modern Political Thought saints, scoffers, believers, doubters, scientists lize the resources available in the Wellness and theologians to explore issues of doubt and This course introduces students to recurring Center Stress Lab to help them identify and faith, reason and religion, for and against the themes and major problems of modern political achieve health-enhancing lifestyle goals. major religious traditions and in people’s own and social thought. These include the nature and Fall significance of politics, the meaning of freedom, lives. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and Argument. (Equivalent to the value of citizenship, the nature of legitimate PHED1422 HUMN4439 Questioning Religion and authority, the connection between religion and 1 Credit RELI4439 Questioning Religion.) politics, the nature of individual rights, the dis - Current Topics in Nutrition tinction between nationalism and patriotism and This course will cover principles of applied PHIL4800 the connection between economic and political nutrition as well as explore currently “hot” top - 1–3 Credits Each Semester life. Particular emphasis will be given to the ics related to nutrition and health. Topics to be Independent Study in Philosophy retrieval of classical political ideas by modern covered include, but are not limited to the fol - Independent study under the direction of a spe - thinkers and the development of distinctly mod - lowing: role of macro/micronutrients, including cific faculty member after consultation with the ern political ideas. The course is organized more proteins, carbohydrates, fat, vitamins and min - school director. or less chronologically so these themes can be er al water; nutrition for optimal physical and examined historically as well as theoretically. mental performance; weight control: myth vs. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: reality; and nutritional supplements and assess - Research and Argument. (Equivalent to Physical ment of the validity of health and nutrition HUMN4310 Modern Political Thought.) information. Education Fall PHIL4431 Department of Physical Education 1–3 Credits Each Semester PHED2422 Selected Studies in Philosophy PHED1125 3 Credits Studies in an area of philosophy not offered 1 Credit Health and Nutrition regularly. Descriptions of these courses can be Karate The importance of well-being as it relates to obtained at the School of the Humanities office. Koekian Karate, the art of empty-hand defense. nutrition and health. The course will go into Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: Exercise for the development of firm, flexible detail on topics of the body’s major fuel sources Research and Argument. muscles, weight control and overall coordination. and how exercise contributes to the healthy Instructors are members of the All Japan Karate- person. This class will include lecture and Do Federation and the Amateur Athletic Union laboratories. (A.A.U.). Spring Fall

477 Course Descriptions Physics • Political Science University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

PHED4436 PHYS2101 PHYS2204 2 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits CPR and Emergency First Aid Lecture 3 hours Lecture 4 hours This course teaches the student the knowledge General Physics I University Physics II and practical skills needed to respond to various The first semester of a survey of physics: me- The second half of a two-semester, calculus- emergency situations: burns, wounds, respiratory chanics, heat, sound, optics. A quantitative, based physics course. Topics normally covered and cardiac problems, broken bones, poisoning, noncalculus treatment. For engineering technol - include: waves and sound, geometrical and etc. Certification upon successful completion of ogy students only. Prerequisites: intermediate physical optics, electrical forces and fields, elec - course. algebra and trigonometry. Corequisite: tric potential, current and resistance, circuits, PHYS2201 Physics Laboratory I. capacitance, magnetic forces and fields, force on PHED4800 a moving charge, magnetic field of a current, 1–3 Credits PHYS2102 electromagnetic induction, electromagnetic Independent Study in Physical 3 Credits oscillations and waves, alternating currents, spe - Education Lecture 3 hours cial relativity, quantization and modern physics. Independent work on a specific problem relating General Physics II Prerequisite: a grade of C- or higher in to a lifetime sport, dance or physical skill. The The second semester of a survey of physics: elec- PHYS2203 University Physics I. Corequisite: problem, activity and solution must be approved tricity, magnetism, waves, light, modern physics. PHYS2202 Physics Laboratory II. by the coordinator. Prerequisites: completion of A quantitative noncalculus treatment. For engi - a beginning-level course and/or permission of neering technology students only. Not for science PHYS3205 the coordinator. majors. Prerequisite: a grade of C- or better in 3 Credits Fall, Spring PHYS2101 General Physics I. Corequisite: Lecture 3 hours PHYS2202 Physics Laboratory II. Modern Physics The optional third semester of a calculus-based Physics PHYS2201 physics sequence for science and engineering 1 Credit majors. Topics normally include special rela- School of Natural Sciences Laboratory 3 hours tivity, end of classical physics, photons and Physics Laboratory I quantization, wave functions and uncertainty, PHYS1114 Experiments from mechanics, heat, sound and one-dimensional quantum mechanics, atomic 3 Credits fluids. Measurement and data analysis. Coreq- physics, nuclear physics and elementary parti - Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours uisite: PHYS2101 General Physics I or cles. Prerequisites: MATH2202 Calculus II and Physics for Radiography PHYS2203 University Physics I. PHYS2204 University Physics II. After a brief discussion of concepts from mech- Fall Fee anics and thermodynamics needed in radiogra - PHYS4430 phy, the course will focus on electromagnetism, PHYS2202 1–3 Credits Each Semester atomic structure, ionizing radiation, electric 1 Credit Selected Studies in Physics circuits, the x-ray tube, etc. Laboratory 3 hours Studies in special areas of current interest to Physics Laboratory II physics. PHYS1125, PHYS1025 Experiments from electricity, magnetism, cir - 3 Credits cuits, waves, optics, light, modern physics. PHYS4800 Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours Measurement and data analysis. Corequisite: 1–3 Credits Each Semester Astronomy PHYS2102 General Physics II or PHYS2204 Independent Study in Physics Orbital motion, telescopes, stellar astronomy, University Physics II. Independent study under the direction of a spe - celestial coordinates, the solar system and its evo - Spring Fee cific faculty member with approval of the school lution, types of stars, galaxies and the universe. director. Prerequisites: elementary algebra and geometry. PHYS2203 Fee 3 Credits Laboratory 4 hours Political Science PHYS1126, PHYS1026 University Physics I 3 Credits The first half of a two-semester, calculus-based School of Criminal Justice, Political Lecture 2 hours; Laboratory 2 hours physics course for science and engineering Science and International Studies Earth Physics majors. Topics normally covered include: units A laboratory science elective intended for liberal and dimensions, forces and motion in one and POLS1101 arts students, life science and non-science majors. two dimensions, vectors, momentum and center 3 Credits Can be taken before or after PHYS1125, of mass, work, kinetic energy and the work- Introduction to Political Science PHYS1025 Astronomy or GEOL1101, energy theorem, potential energy and the con - The basic concepts of the discipline, its schools GEOL1111 Introductory Geology*. A topical servation of energy, rotation and moment of of thought, its subfields and terminologies. treatment, not highly mathematical. The origin of inertia, torque and angular momentum, gravita - the earth as a member of the solar system, com - tion, oscillations, elasticity, fluids, kinetic theory POLS1102 position and internal structure of the earth, geo - of gases, thermodynamics. Corequisite: 3 Credits physics, the hydrosphere, the atmosphere, physi - MATH1201 Calculus I and PHYS2201 Physics Geography and World Issues cal oceanography and the related question of nat - Laboratory I. This course investigates the linkage among geo - ural and artificial pollutants. graphical factors, political process and economic systems. This class will focus on that relation - ship as it impacts the political, economic and human environment of this diverse geopolitical *Open to Vancouver Campus students only. world.

478 Course Descriptions Political Science University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

POLS2010 POLS2231 POLS3011 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Nationalism and Ethnic Violence Comparative Government and Human Rights in Global Environment This course provides students with a broad Politics Introduction to the developing systems, laws overview of the major theories of nationalism, Comparison of the development and functions and norms for the promotion and protection of paying particular attention to ethnic violence of governmental institutions of selected modern human rights in the world today. Understanding and conflict. Emphasis is on the critical evalua - political systems. legal, political and economic aspects of human tion of different theories of both nationalism rights. The course will discuss ideological and and ethnic conflict, with case studies illustrating POLS2232 cultural perspectives, sources of violations, the competing theories. 3 Credits women’s rights and the role of nongovernmental Political Thought and Theory organizations. POLS2204 Evolution of political ideas and institutions from 3 Credits antiquity to modern times, and their interrela - POLS3201 International Relations tionship with the societal environment. 3 Credits The state system and the basic principles regu - Developing a Sustainability Mindset lating international relations; power and use and POLS2234 in a Globalized World threat of force; nationalism, imperialism; diplo - 3 Credits Developing a sustainability mindset through macy, the transnational economy, international Political Geography project-based action exercises utilizing the law and organization. Concepts basic to political geography. Elements United Nations Sustainable Development Goals of state/geographical characteristics: core, (UNSDG) platform. The course will introduce POLS2205 domain, boundaries, pressure points, location, three perspectives of sustainability mindset: sys - 3 Credits climate, raw materials. Relation of political tems perspective, innovative thinking and being Comparative Legal Systems organization to people and culture. Nature and orientation. Students will select one UNSDG Comparisons and contrasts of the Anglo- limitations of sovereignty. and develop a project-based plan of action to American and major European legal traditions. achieve specific targets to make a difference in a POLS2251 globalized world. POLS2206 3 Credits 3 Credits Foreign Policy of the United States POLS3202 American Minority Politics Constitutional and political factors that deter - 3 Credits The course will examine the goals and political mine the formulation, execution and substance United Nations: Institutions and strategies of women, blacks and Hispanics. It of American foreign policy. Global Governance will consider the influence of political participa - The course provides students with an in-depth tion (voting and protests) and office holding POLS2253 understanding of the United Nations core insti - (appointed and elected) on public policies which 3 Credits tutions and policies, engagements in problem benefit specific minorities. The course will focus American Government solving and challenges in international civil on minority politics from the 1960s to today. Federalism, with emphasis on the national order and global governance in historical and government, politics and the relation of the contemporary contexts. The course has two POLS2211 individual to the central government. components: it combines class lecture and dis - 3 Credits cussion, individual research and group work, International Organization POLS2254 with participatory weekly onsite visits to the Origin and development of international organi - 3 Credits United Nations. zations: the League of Nations, United Nations, Public Policy regional organizations. This course is issue-oriented and focuses on sub - POLS3311 stantive issues of public policy that significantly 3 Credits POLS2212 affect the life of every American. The American Presidency 3 Credits The role of great presidents in the expansion of International Law POLS2606 presidential power. Development and principles of international 3 Credits law, nature of diplomatic relationship, interna - Ethics and Politics POLS3312 tional agreements, jurisdiction over persons and This course is concerned with ethical issues in 3 Credits property, tariff and shipping relations, arbitra - modern politics, both national and global. The American Congress tion of disputes; operations of international Ethical questions and dilemmas such as the use The organization and procedures of Congress. institutions. of violence, government secrecy, deception, civil disobedience, public good, corruption, ethics, POLS3313 POLS2219 activist politics and justice are among the possi - 3 Credits 3 Credits ble topics for discussion. Problems in International Politics Global Scholars Seminar in Political Identification and analysis of significant current Studies POLS3010 problems in the international arena. Should global interests precede national inter - 3 Credits ests? What goals should states pursue? Are Nationalism and the Modern State POLS3324 states obsolete? Will soft power compete with military power? Is the clash of civilizations pre - Focuses on the nature, causes and consequences 3 Credits American Minority Groups diction or unfolding of reality? The competency of national identity as a collective phenomenon measure of the seminar is a field experience that and the manifestation of nationalism as a form The major American racial, ethnic and relig ious examines the impact of perception on political of politics. groups, their historical development, adjustment, and social construction of images in the 21st assimilation, contemporary problems and century. trends.

479 Course Descriptions Political Science University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

POLS3327 POLS3354 World War II. Selected problem areas affecting 3 Credits 3 Credits Africa’s relations with the U.S. and the world. Civil Rights and Liberties Political Parties and Pressure Groups The development and present status of rights Organization and operation of political parties POLS3368 and liberties in religion, politics, association, in the United States. 3 Credits speech, the press and assembly, the rights of Africa in World Affairs II minorities and women. POLS3355 Examination of the development of major 3 Credits regions of Africa since World War II. Selected POLS3331 American Constitutional Law I problem areas affecting Africa’s relations with 3 Credits Basic issues and cases in American constitution - the U.S. and the world. American Political Thought al law, with emphasis on the role of the Supreme The main theme of this course will be the Court; political and theoretical contributions of POLS3501 American dream, versions of which permeate the Court to American development. 3 Credits American political thought. To capture some - Globalization and World Citizenship thing of the richness and diversity of American POLS3356 This course examines the impact of globaliza - political thought with reference to this theme, 3 Credits tion and the case for world citizenship. Students short selections representative of major American Constitutional Law II will study the elements of globalization and the American political and social movements, Basic issues and cases in American constitution - evolving networks that transcend the nation- including the abolitionist movement, the al law, with emphasis on the Supreme Court and state. They also will explore the foundation for women’s rights movement, etc, will be read. The current decisions. world citizenship and the potential rights, course is orga nized roughly chronologically, so responsibilities and opportunities belonging to themes and movements may be examined histor - POLS3361 world citizens. ically as well as conceptually. 3 Credits Politics of East Asia I POLS3502 POLS3334 Historical and political development of East 3 Credits 3 Credits Asia, with emphasis on China and Korea. Politics and the Global Economy The Soviet Union and Russia Studies the relationship between political events The events and results that ended the rule of the POLS3362 and economic actions on the international superpower. The current role of Russia in inter - 3 Credits economy. national affairs. Politics of East Asia II The history and political development of East POLS4320 POLS3338 Asia, with emphasis on Japan, Indochina and 3 Credits 3 Credits Indonesia. Women’s America India and Its Neighbors This course focuses on the role of women in the Survey of institutional structures of, and rela - POLS3363 American political system from colonial times to tions among, the South Asian countries includ - 3 Credits the present. It focuses on their participation, ing: India, Pakistan, Nepal, Bhutan, Bangladesh Middle East Politics nonparticipation and successes over the years. and Myanmar. Political, social and economic development of Political analysis will be the prime methodology. Middle Eastern states. POLS3345 POLS4341 3 Credits POLS3364 3 Credits Modern Ideologies 3 Credits Political Leadership and Changing Ideologies of modern times including Liber- Middle East in World Affairs International Order alism, Nationalism, Democratic Socialism, The Middle East’s political and economic impact A comparative study of contemporary political Marxism and Nazism, and the new ideologies on the international environment. leadership using the state-civil society dichoto - of the Third World. my as the framework. The competency measure POLS3365 is a travel-abroad field experience. POLS3349 3 Credits 3 Credits Latin America in World Affairs I POLS4430 African-American Politics Colonial and early national periods of the 1–3 Credits Each Semester Discusses the impact of the African-American selected nations of the Caribbean, Central and Selected Studies in Political Science voter on U.S. politics since the Reconstruction South America with emphasis on political Studies in an area of political science for which period. Emphasizes the modern period and the development (1700–1900). no formal course is offered. growth of political organizations. POLS3366 POLS4431 POLS3352 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Latin America in World Affairs II Politics of the Environment Government and Politics of the The recent history and policies of selected Latin- The course analyzes the roles of national and Third World American nations with emphasis on current international governments, groups and social Patterns of political development of selected U.S. relations (1900–present). movements on environmental issues and poli - nations of the Third World. cies. Moral and ethical issues as well as inter - POLS3367 preting “facts” will be discussed. 3 Credits Africa in World Affairs I Early African civilizations and examination of the history of major regions of Africa since

480 Course Descriptions Psychology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

POLS4460 PSYC2234 3 Credits Psychology 3 Credits New Europe School of Psychology Social Psychology The study of the state system in Europe and its Representative theories and selected problems Europeanization in transitional cooperation and PSYC1103 concerning determinants of social behavior. integration. The impact of global and regional 3 Credits Socialization, attitude structure and change, issues of conflict. General Psychology social norms, prejudice, leadership and group A survey of topics including, but not limited to, dynamics. Prerequisite: PSYC1103 General POLS4462 research methods, brain and behavior, motiva - Psychology. 3 Credits tion, consciousness, development, sensation and Terrorism and Political Violence perception, learning, memory and cognition, PSYC2235 This course will examine the overall scope of emotions, personality, social psychology and 3 Credits Positive Psychology contemporary terrorism and political violence. It psychological disorders. will study the causes and impact of terrorism on Introduction to the scientific basis and princi - contemporary politics. It will also examine the PSYC1125 ples of positive psychology. Exploration of how changing political landscape after September 11, 3 Credits the field of positive psychology offers the possi - 2001. Introduction to Social Service bility of prevention of serious mental illness. Advocacy Courage, optimism, interpersonal skill, work POLS4463 This course introduces students to the funda - ethic, hope, responsibility, future-mindedness, 3 Credits mental concepts and theories of social service honesty and perseverance are all examined, as Political and Economic Challenges in advocacy and social work and explores the prac - are the practice of civic virtue and the pursuit of Africa tical implication of these on organizations, com - the best things in life. This course examines contemporary issues in munities, groups, families and individuals (the Africa. Emphasizing trends in political and eco - client). The course is centered on three major PSYC3100 nomic developments, the focus will include, components of social-work practice: 1) inequali - 3 Credits Psychology of Belief among others, an examination of human-rights ty and social justice, 2) social welfare policy and trends across the continent, the impact of glob - 3) social practice methods. The course will also This class looks at why people believe what they alization, environmental issues, sustainable explore human behavior and development as believe. The course will touch on a wide range development, conflict resolution and health well as needs and services within the legal and of supernatural or unexplainable phenomena issues. organizational context of the discipline. such as magic, ghosts, astrology, psychic abili - (Equivalent to CRIM1125 Introduction to ties, parapsychology and religious belief. It will POLS4511 Social Service Advocacy.) examine different types of belief and what caus - 3 Credits es a person to believe. This highly interactive U.N. and Human Security PSYC2126 class emphasizes critical thinking and skeptical Analysis of the United Nation’s approach, 3 Credits inquiry. involvement, success and failures in the arena of The Interview human security. Interviewing principles and techniques, with PSYC3202 emphasis on the information-gathering inter - 3 Credits Experimental Psychology POLS4600 view used in educational, industrial and clinical 3 Credits settings. Recommended for students in educa - Introduction to methods of scientific experimen - Political Science Seminar tion, personnel management, psychology and tation in psychology by means of laboratory To research and write a culminating project that social work. Prerequisite: PSYC1103 General experiments, studies of problems in the design reflects the students’ knowledge and under - Psychology. of experiments and the analysis of data as standing of the discipline. reported in the experimental literature. Reports PSYC2201 of experiments will be required. Prerequisite: POLS4800 3 Credits PSYC2201 Statistics. 1–3 Credits Each Semester Statistics Fee Independent Study in Political Statistical concepts and procedures, with Science emphasis on descriptive statistics and an intro - PSYC3301 Independent study under the direction of a spe- duction to inferential statistics. Relevance to 3 Credits Drugs and Behavior cific faculty member after consultation with the behavioral sciences. school director. Limited to a total of 6 credits. Therapeutic and recreational use of psychoactive PSYC2204 drugs, including alcohol, nicotine and caffeine. POLS4875 3 Credits Emphasis on modes of action, behavioral effects Variable Credits Child Development and psychological aspects of tolerance and Honors in Political Science Growth and development of children in terms dependence. Independent study in political science for stu - of sensorimotor, intellectual and social behavior. dents in the University Honors Program under Scientific findings and theoretical viewpoints PSYC3304 the direction of a specific faculty member with presented with implications concerning the child 3 Credits Psychometrics approval of the school director. Prerequisite: for the family, school and community. Prereq- admission to the University Honors Program. uisite: PSYC1103 General Psychology. Theory and practice of psychological testing and basic principles of psychometrics, including a critical survey of representative tests of aptitude, ability, interest, attitudes and personality.

481 Course Descriptions Psychology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

PSYC3305 3 Credits PSYC3317 PSYC3339 Adolescent Growth and Development 3 Credits 3 Credits Factors contributing to adolescent mental Psychology and the Law Psychology of Prejudice and health, behavior and adjustment are covered. Application of psychological principles to legal Intergroup Relations Developmental characteristics, the impact of problems. Analysis and implications of court This course examines classic (e.g. the culture as well as intra- and interpersonal issues decisions. Current controversies: insanity defense, Authoritarian Personality) and contemporary are integrated into the understanding of adoles - jury selection, persuasive techniques, sentencing, (e.g. Implicit Bias) understandings of prejudice cent functioning. Risk factors particularly asso - competency, use of hypnosis, capital punishment, and its relationship to intergroup relations, ciated with juvenile delinquency and conduct psychological testing. Conducting forensic inter - stereotyping and discrimination. The course will disorder are emphasized, examining etiology. views will be incorporated. also include discussion of social psychological prevention and treatment. Pre requisite: interventions aimed at reducing prejudice, as PSYC1103 General Psychology. PSYC3319 well as the policy implications of such interven - 3 Credits tions. Prerequisite: PSYC1103 General PSYC3306 The World of the Psychopath Psychology. 3 Credits This course will provide students with a broad Psychology of Aging overview on psychopathy focusing on key ele - PSYC3359 The geriatric years, with emphasis on causes of ments of this “condition” and dismissing myths 3 Credits aging, personality, sexuality, sensation and percep - associated with it. Sport Psychology tion, psychopathology, intelligence and memory. An introduction to the role of psychology in Prerequisite: PSYC1103 General Psychology. PSYC3325 sports. Major issues addressed include the scien - 3 Credits tific basis of sport psychology, arousal/anxiety PSYC3307 Psychology of Women and clinical interventions, cognitive processes in 3 Credits Various theories of the psychology of women sport behavior, aggression and group perfor- Human Sexuality contrasted with recent research findings about mance and coaching behavior. Application and discussion of psychological and sex differences. biological issues related to sexual anatomy, phys - PSYC3365 iology of the sexual response, sexually transmit - PSYC3330 3 Credits ted diseases, homosexual and bisexual patterns, 3 Credits Psychology of Creativity unconventional sexual behavior and sexual coer - Health Psychology The aim of this course is to demystify the cion and exploitation. Application of human Examination of psychological factors that affect process of creative thinking, survey the major sexuality issues to the law and legal issues will how people stay healthy and how and why they theories of creativity and explore the lives of be covered with particular emphasis on the become ill. Specific topics to be addressed several highly creative individuals using the psychology of the sex offender. include the mind-body relationship, stress and case-study method. Creative achievements in the coping, pain, cardiovascular disorders, psycho- arts and sciences will be reviewed as well as PSYC3308 immunology, eating disorders and substance innovations in industry. 3 Credits abuse. Prerequisite: PSYC1103 General Educational Psychology Psychology. PSYC3370 Application of psychological theory to formal 3 Credits and informal practices, with emphasis on the PSYC3332 Psychology of Men role of the person guiding someone else’s learn - 3 Credits The psychological development of men, gender- ing. Theories and principles of learning, motiva - The Psychology of Religion role conflict, men’s health, men in families, roles tion, measurement of behavior and emotional Influence of religion on personality and behav - and identities, sexual orientation, the men’s adjustment. Prerequisite: PSYC1103 General ior. Religious beliefs, feelings, effects, self-actu - movement, ethnocultural factors and alex - Psychology. alization and neurosis. ithymia. Incorporation of theory and empirical evidence. PSYC3311 PSYC3338 3 Credits 3 Credits PSYC3381 Psychology of Love and Cognitive Processes 3–4 Credits Interpersonal Relations This course will present in-depth treatments of Field Placement Psychological aspects of the role of love and many topics in cognitive psychology, with some Supervised experience in community agencies attachment in human relationships. Topics attention paid to cognitive neuroscience. Each for a minimum of 60 hours, plus a weekly one- addressed include phenomenology and historical day, a person performs a number of cognitive and-a-half-hour seminar. Integration of psycho - evolution of love styles, the function of love, tasks, such as remembering how to get to logical theory and practical applications. attraction and initiation of love relationships school, recognizing a friend’s face in a crowd, Recommended for juniors and seniors. Admis- and marriage. deciding where to eat lunch and what to eat and sion by permission of the instructor. Prereq- deciding when to go to sleep at night. In this uisite: PSYC1103 General Psychology. PSYC3315 course, students will begin by exploring lower- 3 Credits level processes (e.g. perception) and proceed to PSYC3384 Abnormal Psychology higher-level processes (e.g. reasoning). 3 Credits Science of psychopathology. Descriptive study of Prerequisite: PSYC1103 General Psychology. Theories of Personality syndromes and etiology of the major behavior Major approaches to personality theory, with disorders, anxiety-related disorders, stress-based emphasis on empirical studies in context of the disorders, sociopathies and mental deficiencies. various theories. Prerequisite: PSYC1103 Prerequisite: PSYC1103 General Psychology. General Psychology.

482 Course Descriptions Psychology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

PSYC3393 PSYC4376 PSYC4500 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits Child Behavior Disorders Advanced Abnormal Psychology Senior Seminar in Psychology Etiological and developmental aspects of ab - Considers the more debilitating disorders and A capstone course for psychology majors to normal behavior in children; biological, cultural reviews various psychopathologies in depth. both unify and provide a broader context for and psychological influences of a wide range of Discussion of psycho therapeutic and somatic knowledge about the field of psychology gained childhood behavior disorders (e.g., schizo - approaches. Prereq uisite: PSYC3315 Abnormal throughout the undergraduate years. The course phrenia, autism, mental retardation, anxiety Psychology. is designed to evaluate critical thinking and to disorders). Prerequisite: PSYC3315 Abnormal prepare students for their career paths following Psychology. PSYC4377 graduation. Particular emphasis will be placed 3 Credits on helping students explore the connections PSYC3394 Physiological Psychology among themselves, the field of psychology and 3 Credits Relationship between aspects of behavior and the rest of the world. Students will be required Disorders of Addiction physiology. Basic neuroanatomy; neurophysiolo - to write integrative review papers, give oral and Disorders of addiction such as alcohol and other gy; and the effects upon behavior of drugs, poster-format presentations and defend their e- drug abuse, smoking, eating and compulsive cortical lesions and internal secretions. portfolios. Prerequisite: PSYC3202 Experimen- gambling are discussed in depth. Emphasis is Prerequisites: PSYC1103 General Psychology tal Psychology. placed on theory, epidemiology, symptomatol - and 3 additional credits in psychology. Fee ogy, course, assessment and treatment. Pre- requisite: PSYC3315 Abnormal Psychology. PSYC4391 PSYC4501 3 Credits 3 Credits PSYC3421 Techniques of Psychotherapy Advanced Senior Seminar in 3 Credits Techniques used by several schools of psycho- Psychology Psychology of Criminal Behavior therapy and research in the field. Application A capstone course for psychology majors to The psychological bases and dynamics of crimi - of behavioral principles to behavior and rela - unify and apply knowledge and skills gained in nal behavior. Use of cases from the forensic psy - tionship variables in therapy. Prerequisite: previous courses. Students will gain an under - chology literature to illustrate various theoretical PSYC1103 General Psychology and either standing of how to integrate, critically evaluate and explanatory aspects of criminal behavior. PSYC3 315 Abnor mal Psychology or PSYC3384 and apply psychological theory and empirical Emphasis on the relationships between various Theories of Personality. findings to address problems and topical issues psychopathological conditions, personality dis - in the behavioral sciences. Heavy emphasis is orders and criminal and antisocial behavior. PSYC4398 placed on report writing and oral presentation Prerequisite: PSYC3315 Abnormal Psychology. 3 Credits of research projects. Prerequisites: PSYC2201 Computer Applications for Data Statistics and PSYC3202 Experimental PSYC3800 Analysis Psychology. 1–3 Credits Each Semester This course will cover the usage of SPSS statisti - Junior Independent Study in cal software and related programs (e.g. Excel) PSYC4800 Psychology for data management, analysis and graphing. 1–3 Credits Each Semester Independent study under the direction of a spe - Emphasis will be placed on using graphical Senior Independent Study in cific faculty member after consultation with the interface of SPSS software, but program syntax Psychology school director. for various applications also will be covered. Independent study under the direction of a spe - This course will also cover scientific report writ - cific faculty member after consultation with the PSYC3900 ing (e.g. summarizing SPSS output) with school director. Limit of 6 credits. 3 Credits emphasis placed on APA style. Psychology of Emerging Adulthood PSYC4875 Emerging adulthood or those years between PSYC4498 1–6 Credits adolescence and adulthood are important to 3 Credits Honors Psychology the development of a productive adult life. Internship in Psychology Independent study in psychology for students in Normative and non-normative issues, clinical Integration of classroom study with specific the University Honors Program under the direc - implications as well as prevention strategies and planned periods of supervised learning in tion of a specific faculty member with approval evidence-based early interventions are dis - productive employment experiences. A develop - of the school director. Prerequisite: admission to cussed. Prerequisites: PSYC1103 General mental process designed to combine progressive the University Honors Program. Psychology and PSYC2204 Child Development. learning on the job, University course work and career-development skills. Graduate Courses PSYC4309 Graduate courses may be taken by seventh- 3 Credits PSYC4499 or eighth-semester students who receive the Advanced Social Psychology 3 Credits approval of the school director. Interested stu - This course reviews social psychological theory Co-op Education in Psychology dents should see the Graduate Studies Bulletin and research techniques that are relevant to Integration of classroom study with specific for a list of courses and descriptions. problems in applied settings (e.g. the legal sys - planned periods of supervised learning in tem, business and industry, community and productive employment experiences. A develop - mental health). Topics include, but are not mental process designed to combine progressive limited to, attitude formation, attitude change, learning on the job, University course work and prejudice and discrimination, altruism and attri - career-development skills. Prerequisite: permis - bution theory. Prerequisite: PSYC2234 Social sion of the director of the co-op program. Psychology.

483 Course Descriptions Radiography University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

will enable students to continue to develop pro - RADT1140 Radiography fessional and technical skills. Using the 4 Credits Henry P. Becton School of Nursing Competency-based Clinical Education model, Clinical Practicum IV students will have the opportunity to acquire The fourth course in a series of eight clinical- and Allied Health competency in all previously covered imaging education courses that is designed to enable a studies. Students are required to complete continued progression toward the development RADT1101 objectives in mobile, surgical, venipuncture and of entry-level skills as a radiographer. Using the 3 Credits vital signs. Students are afforded 112 hours of Competency-based Clinical Education model, Introduction to Radiography and experience to meet course objectives and students will have an opportunity to acquire Protection requirements. Prerequisite: RADT1110 Clinical com petency in those areas previously covered in This course introduces the student to the diag - Practicum I. RADT1105 Radiographic Procedures I and nostic imaging department and to the health RADT1135 Radiographic Procedures II in addi - care environment, radiation safety and protec - RADT1130 tion to contrast-media studies. Students are tion, medical law and ethical practice. Diverse 2 Credits afforded 560 hours of experience to meet course issues related to these topics will be explored. Clinical Practicum III objectives, requirements and quality-assurance Corequisites: RADT1105 Radiographic Pro- The third course in a series of eight clinical- objectives. Prerequisite: RADT1130 Clinical cedures I, RADT1110 Clinical Practicum I, education courses designed to enable progression Practicum III. RADT1131 Principles of Radiographic Expo - in the development of entry-level skills as a radi - sure I and RADT1150 Fundamentals of Patient ographer. There will be an introduction to con - RADT1150 Care. trast media and urographic procedures. Using the 3 Credits Competency-based Clinical Education model, stu - Fundamentals of Patient Care RADT1105 dents have the opportunity to acquire competen - This course introduces the student to the skills 4 Credits cy in all areas previously covered, lower limb needed for the management and care of all Radiographic Procedures I radiography and the femora, pelvis and spine. patient populations while in the clinical environ - This is the first course in a series of four courses Students are afforded 240 hours of experience to ment. Topics of this course include: communica - that are designed to orient the student radiog- meet course objectives and requirements. Pre - tion, pharmacology, infection control, sterile rapher to anatomy, positioning, physiology, requisite: RADT1120 Clinical Practicum II. technique, isolation, body mechanics, vital signs, terminology and imaging procedures of the Corequisites: RADT1135 Radiographic Pro - venipuncture, contrast-media administration thorax, abdomen and upper limb. Acceptable cedures II and RADT2251 Advanced Principles and management of emergency situations. practices and principles that are introduced in of Radiographic Exposure. Corequisites: RADT1101 Introduction to lecture are reinforced in structured laboratory Radiography and Protection, RADT1105 and clinical practice. Corequisites: RADT1101 RADT1131 Radiographic Procedures I, RADT1110 Clinical Introduction to Radiography and Protection, 3 Credits Practicum I and RADT1131 Principles of RADT1110 Clinical Practicum I, RADT1131 Principles of Radiographic Radiographic Exposure I. Principles of Radiographic Exposure I and Exposure I RADT1150 Fundamentals of Patient Care. This course introduces the student to t hose prin - RADT2250 ciples related to image production and evaluation, 2 Credits RADT1110 as it relates to materials used and physical process - Clinical Practicum V 1 Credit es. Topics of this course include film, cassettes, The fifth course in a series of eight clinical- Clinical Practicum I grids, intensifying screens, imaging plates, process - education courses designed to prepare the The first course in a series of eight clinical- ing chemistry, radiographic film processing and student radiographer for entry-level skills devel - education courses that is designed to enable the artifact formation. Students will study the multi - opment. During this phase in the education student to develop those skills that are neces - tude of factors that impact image creation. Coreq - process, students will perfect all clinical skills sary to perform in the capacity of an entry-level uisites: RADT1101 Introduction to Radiography acquired over the course of one year. Using the radiographer upon completion of this program. and Protection, RADT1105 Radiographic Pro - Competency-based Clinical Education model, This course serves as an introduction to the cedures I, RADT1110 Clinical Practicum I and students may acquire competency in all previ - medical-imaging career and department. CPR RADT1150 Fundamentals of Patient Care. ously covered areas, in addition to advanced requirements are met this semester. Using the contrast-media examinations, skull radiography Competency-based Clinical Education model, RADT1135 and geriatric and pediatric populations. Stu- students will have an opportunity to acquire 4 Credits dents are afforded 240 hours of experience to competency in radiography of the thorax, Radiographic Procedures II meet course objec tives and requirements. Pre - abdomen and upper limb. Students are afford - This is the second course in a series of four posi - requisite: RADT1140 Clinical Practicum IV. ed 120 hours of experience to meet course tioning/procedures designed to introduce the Corequisites: PHYS1114 Physics for Radiog- objectives and require ments. Corequisites: student to basic anatomy, physiology, terminolo - raphy, RADT2252 Radiation Biology and Safety RADT1101 Introduction to Radiography and gy and imaging procedures of the lower limb and RADT2255 Radiographic Procedures III. Protection, RADT1105 Radiographic Proce - and the spinal column. In addition, students will dures I, RADT1131 Principles of Radiographic be introduced to basic studies that involve the RADT2251 Exposure I and RADT1150 Fundamentals of use of opaque contrast agents. Acceptable prac - 3 Credits Patient Care. tices and principles that are introduced in the Advanced Principles of Radiographic lecture are reinforced in structured laboratory Exposure RADT1120 and clinical practice. Prerequisite: RADT1105 The focus of this course is the photographic and 1 Credit Radi ographic Procedures I. Corequisites: geometric creation of a radiographic image. The Clinical Practicum II RADT1130 Clinical Practicum III and content of this course includes density, contrast, The second course in a series of eight clinical- RADT2251Advanced Principles of Radio- recorded detail and distortion. Mathematical education courses and a continuation of graphic Exposure. manipulations, technical compensations and RADT1110 Clinical Practicum I. This course application of theory as it relates to clinical prac -

484 Course Descriptions Reading • Religion University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

tice will be explored. Prerequisite: RADT1131 addition to cases such as “grams.” Students are imaging the head, neck, abdomen, pelvis and Principles of Radiographic Exposure I. Corequi - afforded 240 hours of experience to meet course extremities. Some attention will be devoted to sites: RADT1130 Clinical Practicum III and objectives and requirements. Corequisites: physics, nursing care, contrast administration RADT1135 Radiographic Procedures II. RADT2254 Radiographic Imaging Equipment and cross-sectional anatomy. and Quality Management, RADT2271 Radio- RADT2252 graphic Pathology and RADT2275 Radiograph- RADT4003 2 Credits ic Procedures IV. 3 Credits Radiation Biology and Safety Advanced Radiological Science II The primary focus of this course is to orient stu - RADT2271 This course will provide the technologist with dents about effects produced by ionizing radia - 2 Credits the knowledge of quality management applica - tion in living cells and matter. Cell survival, Radiographic Pathology tions and data analysis. Emphasis will be on genetic effects, somatic effects and radiation The emphasis of this course is the identification radiographic and mammographic quality con - syndromes are discussed in detail. Correlation of of pathologic diseases and conditions that trol, collection of data and instrumentation. This such effects is made to radiation safety practices require procedural modification and/or techni - course of study focuses on mammography and protection standards that are stipulated at cal compensation that have an effect on patient (breast imaging), emphasizing routine and spe - the state and national levels. Prerequisite: care and the outcome of radiographic quality. cial projections of the breast. Imaging equip - RADT1101 Introduction to Radiography and Corequisites: RADT2254 Radiographic Imaging ment and Mammog raphy Quality Standards Act Protection. Corequisites: PHYS1114 Physics for Equipment and Quality Management, (MQSA) also will be addressed. Prerequisite: Radiography, RADT2250 Clinical Practicum V RADT2270 Clinical Practicum VII and RADT4002 Advanced Radiological Science I. and RADT2255 Radiographic Procedures III. RADT2275 Radiographic Procedures IV. RADT2254 RADT2275 Reading 2 Credits 4 Credits Radiographic Imaging Equipment and Radiographic Procedures IV Academic Advising and Student Quality Management This is the last course in a series of four radio- Support Services Office This course is a study of diagnostic-imaging graphic procedures-related courses that focuses equipment and quality-control practices. Topics on complex imaging studies, modalities and Developmental Reading of this course include: diagnostic circuitry, imag - therapy. In addition, students will have an Remediation is required for students whose ing tubes, image intensification, body-section opportunity to experience relevant radiography screening test scores indicate they lack reading radiography, mobile units and automatic expo - computer programs as part of the final laborato - proficiency. Students requiring remediation sure control. Students will perform calculations ry experience. Prerequisite: RADT2255 must take READ0097 Fundamentals of College and modules related to the previously indicated Radiographic Procedures III. Corequisites: Reading I as indicated by the Academic content. Prerequisite: PHYS1114 Physics for RADT2254 Radiographic Imaging Equipment Resource Center. This course carries no credit Radiography. Corequisites: RADT2270 Clinical and Quality Management, RADT2270 Clinical toward graduation. Practicum VII, RADT2271 Radiographic Pathol - Practicum VII and RADT2271 Radiographic ogy and RADT2275 Radiographic Procedures IV. Pathology. READ0097 0 Credits RADT2255 RADT2280 Fundamentals of College Reading I 4 Credits 4 Credits Precollege reading. Emphasis on textbook-read - Radiographic Procedures III Clinical Practicum VIII ing skills, such as surveying, outlining, summa - This is the third course in a series of four imag - The last course in a series of eight clinical- rizing, basic reading skills and close-reading ing procedures-related courses that is designed education courses designed to prepare graduates techniques. to introduce students to complex imaging proce - for entry into the field of medical imaging. Dur- dures of the skull, facial and para-nasal sinuses. ing the final phase of their education, students There will be an intensive reinforcement of are expected to master all technical and clinical anatomy, physiology and terminology as it skills. Using the Competency-based Clinical Religion relates to the content covered in this course. Education model, students must complete all School of the Humanities Acceptable practices and principles that are mandatory, elective, continual and terminal introduced in this course are reinforced in struc - competency evaluations to meet the program’s RELI1105 tured laboratory and clinical practice. graduation requirements. Students will com - 3 Credits Prerequisite: RADT1135 Radiographic plete all sub-specialty imaging objectives. Stu- World Religions in America Procedures II. Coreq uisites: PHYS1114 Physics dents are afforded 560 hours of experience to This course is an exploration of the changing for Radiography, RADT2250 Clinical Practicum meet course objectives and requirements. Pre- multi-religious landscape of the United States, V and RADT2252 Radiation Biology and Safety. requisite: RADT2270 Clinical Practicum VII. looking at the history and dynamic interaction of the various religious traditions that now com - RADT2270 RADT4002 pose the American religious scene, with special 2 Credits 3 Credits emphasis on the religious life of Buddhists, Clinical Practicum VII Advanced Radiological Science I Hindus, Sikhs, Jains and Muslims. Prerequisite: The seventh course in a series of eight clinical- This course will provide the student with an ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and education courses that are designed to develop overview of physics, cross-sectional anatomy, Argument. (Equivalent to PHIL1105 World entry-level skills that are needed to enter the positioning, instrumentation and nursing care Religions in America.) profession. Using the Competency-based involved in magnetic resonance imaging. It will Clinical Education model, students may acquire focus on the use of computed tomography for competency in all previously covered studies, in

485 Course Descriptions Sociology University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

RELI2107 RELI3316 RELI3324 3 Credits 3 Credits 3 Credits One God, Three Paths Babylon the Great: Culture, Religion Islamic Religion — Past and Present The course will trace the historical development and Conflict in Iraq The course presents an overview of the Islamic of the three great Western monotheistic faiths, This course is an introduction to the cultural religion, beginning with the Prophet Judaism, Christianity and Islam. What makes and religious history of Iraq beginning in the Muhammad (the Meccan and Medinan periods), this course unique is that it is team taught by a fourth millennium BCE and continuing through through the dynasties (Umayyad and Abassid) rabbi, a priest and an imam, all of whom will the present day. Topics will include the inven- and the Ottoman empire to the modern period. share their insights into their faith traditions tion of writing, the origin of cities, Mesopota- with the students and with each other. The mian law and religion, the Epic of Gilgamesh, RELI3334 course also aims to give participants a workshop the rise of Islam, cultural continuities in the 3 Credits in a global learning experience that will lead the Middle East and the legacy of the ancient Near Religion and Politics students not only to greater knowledge, but also East in western civilization. Students will engage This course explores the controversial and to an appreciation for, and commitment to reli - in a variety of methodological approaches in the sometimes bloody crossroads between politics gious diversity in the world. Prerequisite: humanities as they learn of the rich cultural and and religion. Specific topics may include religion ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and religious heritage of Iraq and consider important as a political construct and instrument of power Argument. questions about its future. FDU NetID (formerly in society, the role of biblical traditions in the Web mail) account re quired . Prerequisite: development of church-state relations in the RELI2207 ENWR1002 Composition II: Research and United States, prophetic rhetoric and liberation 3 Credits Argument. (Equivalent to HUMN3316 Babylon theologies as public modes of discourse for Philosophy of Religion the Great: Culture, Religion and Con flict in social justice, morality, ethics and the just-war God’s existence and attributes, problem of evil, Iraq.) debate and the development of a suitable politi - religious truth, religious views of history, myth cal theology for contemporary society. and language systems, meaning in religion. RELI3317 Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: (Equivalent to PHIL2207 Philosophy of 3 Credits Research and Argument. (Equivalent to Religion.) Ancient Egypt: Mummies/Myth/ HUMN3334 Religion and Politics.) Magic RELI2255 This course provides an introduction to the RELI4431 3 Credits religion, history, society and culture of ancient 1–3 Credits Person, Gender and Sexuality: Egypt, which was one of the most sophisticated Selected Studies in Religion Judaism, Christianity and Islam and long-lived civilizations in world history. Studies in an area of religious study. This course, an interfaith endeavor taught by Special attention will be given to funerary Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: professors from the Jewish, Christian and Mus - literature and religion, cults, magic and ritual, Research and Argument. lim traditions, will trace the historical devel - religious art and architecture, the sacred writing opment of the meaning and value of person, system and the religion of daily life. (Equivalent RELI4439 gender and sexuality in these traditions. Empha - to HUMN3317 Ancient Egypt: Mummies/Myth/ 3 Credits sis will be placed on understanding the cultural, Magic.) Questioning Religion historical and theological basis of these terms; Discussion of readings from atheists, skeptics, the convergences of the meanings of these terms RELI3321 saints, scoffers, believers, doubters, scientists in the three traditions; and the contemporary 3 Credits and theologians to explore issues of doubt and applicability of these concepts from a global The Book of Job and Its Interpreters faith, reason and religion, for and against the perspective. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composi - This course will examine the Biblical book of major religious traditions and in people’s own tion II: Research and Argument. (Equivalent to Job as a work of literature and religious thought lives. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: HUMN2255 Person, Gender and Sexuality: and will develop the analysis historically in com - Research and Argument. (Equivalent to Judaism, Christianity and Islam.) parison with ancient near Eastern, classical, HUMN4439 Questioning Religion and medieval and modern philosophical discussions PHIL4439 Questioning Religion.) RELI2273 and theological commentaries of the Joban tradi - 3 Credits tion. In this class, students will wrestle with The Battle Over the Book such themes as theodicy, piety, evil, suffering Sociology This course will introduce students to the vari - and the nature of the divine-human experience. ous interpretative patterns used by the People of Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition II: School of Criminal Justice, Political the Book over the ages. Specifically, the course Research and Argument. (Equivalent to Science and International Studies will examine the historical patterns of interpret - HUMN3321 The Book of Job and Its ing the sacred texts of Judaism, Christianity and Interpreters.) NOTE: 1000-level courses may be counted Islam. It will emphasize the rich diversity in toward the major. interpretations, as well as the unrelenting efforts RELI3323 to preserve fidelity to the traditions. Finally, the 3 Credits SOCI1101 course will focus on helping students under - The Ethics of Jesus 3 Credits stand how these patterns had an impact on and A study of the ethical teachings of Jesus through Introductory Sociology continue to impact the state of affairs of the an analysis of the Sermon on the Mount. The A systematic introduction to basic sociologi cal world. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 Composition philosophy of Dietrich Bonhoeffer will assist in concepts (culture, norms, status, roles, groups, II: Research and Argument. this study. Ethical case studies from business, institutions), landmark studies and their applica - health care and foreign and domestic policy will tions for understanding our own and the world’s be introduced. Prerequisite: ENWR1002 cultures. Composition II: Research and Argument.

486 Course Descriptions Spanish Language and Culture University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

SOCI1113 tems including allopathic, homeopathic, SPAN2103 3 Credits ayurvedic and holistic. 3 Credits Sports in Society Intermediate Spanish I Analysis of sports as a sociological phenome - SOCI3320 Review of grammar with intermediate-level non. Categories of analysis include organization - 3 Credits readings. Prerequisite: SPAN1102 Elementary al, economic and political aspects of sports Race, Generation and Immigration Spanish II or equivalent. teams; social origins of sports participants; and The course focuses on factors affecting Asians, sports in cross-cultural perspective. blacks and Latinos in the United States; their SPAN2104 parallel experiences of Americanization; chang - 3 Credits SOCI2115 ing experiences of race as a function of succes - Intermediate Spanish II 3 Credits sive generations living in the U.S.; and the bicul - A continuation of the review of grammar with Introduction to Social Work tural gap between family and “American” cul - intermediate-level readings. Prerequisite: This course provides an introduction to the ture. SPAN2103 Intermediate Spanish I or equiva - practice of community service work with indi - lent. viduals, families and groups. Together with the SOCI3415 ethical principles of social service work, it also 3 Credits SPAN3301 explores the dynamics of social policy develop - Internship in Social Work 3 Credits ment. Students work in a specific community-service Advanced Conversation in Spanish setting, using and applying what they have Discussion of contemporary topics in Spanish. SOCI2805 learned in their social work courses to gather 3 Credits and refine skills in working to help people with SPAN3304 Contemporary Social Issues their needs and problems. Prerequisites: 3 Credits A survey and analysis of major current issues in SOCI3316 The Family: Stability and Dysfunc- Spanish for Careers America and international societies and cul - tion and SOCI3318 Health and Society: Access Practical vocabulary needed in such fields as air - tures, including such topics as poverty, social and Issues. lines, business, computers, education, health justice, culture change and the global economy. care and social work. Conducted in Spanish. Criminal Justice and Legal Studies Prerequisite: SPAN2104 Intermediate Spanish II SOCI3201 With pre-approval, select courses in criminal or equivalent. 3 Credits justice and legal studies may serve to fulfill Methods in Social Research sociology-recommended electives. SPAN3435 Concepts, methods and applications of research See pages 435–440. 3 Credits that form the scientific foundation of our un- The Modern Spanish-American Short derstanding of society, including qualitative Story studies (ethnography, participant observation, Spanish This course introduces the students to a variety conversational interviews) and quantitative of short stories from Mexico, the Caribbean and studies (sample surveys), along with techniques Language Central and South America. The genre will be for interviewing and applications of theory to explored in its literary, historical and cultural practice. Prerequisite: SOCI1101 Introductory and Culture contexts. Prerequisite: SPAN2104 Intermediate Sociology. Spanish II or SPAN3301 Advanced School of the Humanities Conversation in Spanish. SOCI3316 3 Credits SPAN1101 SPAN3439 The Family: Stability and Dysfunction 3 Credits 3 Credits Family as the central social institution in Ameri - Elementary Spanish I Latin-American Culture and ca and across the world is studied in relation Essentials of Spanish grammar. Easy reading Civilization to the economic, political and religious forces selections leading to extensive conversation and An overview of the history and cultures of pre- of which it is a part. The course also analyzes writing. Columbian times to present-day Latin America. changes in family structure and ideals, roles Students are introduced to various modes of within the family, emergent family forms, pat - SPAN1102 cultural productions and social and political terns of fertility in and out of marriage and 3 Credits structures that have shaped modern Latin divorce and remarriage patterns historically and Elementary Spanish II America. Prerequisite: SPAN2104 Intermediate currently. A continuation of the essentials of Spanish Spanish II. grammar. Easy reading selections leading to SOCI3318 extensive conversation and writing. Prerequisite: SPAN3440 3 Credits SPAN1101 Elementary Spanish I or equivalent. 3 Credits Health and Society: Access and Latin-American Short Stories: Issues SPAN1111 Fantasy and Mystery Health care as a social institution; cultural views 3 Credits Stories with elements of fantasy and/or mystery of health and illness; connections between well - Spanish for Health Personnel will be read, including detective stories and sci - ness and social class; cultural assumptions in Primarily for students in the nursing program, ence fiction. Some will be by well-known medical research and treatment; the training of stressing the acquisition of basic communication authors such as Jorge Luis Borges and Gabriel doctors, nurses and other healers across cul - skills in the fields of health and medicine. Basic Garcia Marquez. The class will be conducted in tures; challenges to the medical establishment grammatical structures studied within the con - Spanish. Prerequisite: SPAN2104 Intermediate through the consumer advocacy movement; text of the health professions. Spanish II or equivalent. patients’ rights groups and the internet; the modern interplay of various cultural healing sys -

487 Course Descriptions Speech • Theater University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

SPAN3454 tics of French, Italian, Portuguese, Romanian SPCH2153 3 Credits and Spanish and their relationship to Latin. 3 Credits Introduction to Latin-American Speech and Voice Improvement Literature SPAN4437 Practice in improvement of voice and articula - This course offers a panoramic view of Spanish- 3 Credits tion through the study of phonetics and stan - American literature from the 16th century to the Advanced Composition in Spanish dard American English. most recent production, with emphasis on 20th- Study in writing Spanish, aimed at fluency and century writers and their search for new modes ease of expression. Conducted in Spanish. SPCH2217 of expression to reflect the social, historical and Prerequisite: SPAN2104 Intermediate Spanish II. 3 Credits political events that have shaped the region’s Speech for Broadcasters destiny. SPAN4440 Voice training for students interested in pursu - 3 Credits ing a career in broadcasting or acting, including SPAN3455 The Hispanic Novel: From Cervantes exercises in acquiring the right speaking rate for 3 Credits to García Márquez delivering the news and selecting audition mate - Introduction to Spanish Literature This course offers a sampling of novels from rial such as film and stage monologues. This course provides an overview of Spanish lit - representative writers of Spain and Latin (Equivalent to THEA2217 Speech for Actors.) erature from medieval times to the present. America. Important literary periods and move - Students will read representative samples of ments will be studied in their respective contexts SPCH2318 novels, short stories, poems, essays and plays. — from Spain’s Golden Age period to the liter - 3 Credits Prerequisite: SPAN2104 Intermediate Spanish II ary boom in Latin America of the 1960s. Oral Presentations or SPAN3301 Advanced Conversation in Prerequisite: SPAN3301 Advanced A skills-oriented course providing students with Spanish. Conversation in Spanish or SPAN4437 practical experience in incorporating multimedia Advanced Composition in Spanish. into oral presentations within a professional SPAN3456 setting. 3 Credits SPAN4800 Spanish Culture and Civilization 1–3 Credits Each Semester SPCH2351 This course is a panoramic survey of the histori - Independent Study in Spanish 3 Credits cal, geographical and various artistic expressions Language and Literature Persuasive Speaking of Spanish civilization. An eclectic array of Independent study under the direction of a spe - Theory of argumentation and debate and prac - sources from history, art, architecture, film, cific faculty member after consultation with the tice in preparation and delivery of different music and literature are utilized to explore the school director. types of persuasive speeches. main events that have shaped the character of modern peninsular culture. Prerequisite: SPAN4875 SPCH2353 SPAN2104 Intermediate Spanish II. Variable Credits 3 Credits Honors Spanish Speech: Small-group Discussion SPAN3457 Independent study in Spanish for students in the Dynamics of successful small-group communi - 3 Credits University Honors Program under the direction cations. Roles of leaders and participants Introduction to Latin-American of a specific faculty member with approval of the explored in theory and practice. Literature school director. Prerequisite: admission to the This course offers a panoramic view of Spanish- University Honors Program. SPCH4430 American literature from the 16th century to Variable Credits most recent productions. Special emphasis is Selected Studies in Speech placed on 20th-century writers and their search Speech (Sportscasting) for new modes of expression that reflect the Studies in an area of speech. social, historical and political events that have School of Art and Media Studies shaped the region’s destiny. Prerequisite: SPCH4800 SPAN2103 Intermediate Spanish I or SPCH1105 Variable Credits Independent Study in Speech SPAN2104 Intermediate Spanish II. 3 Credits Voice Production and Articulation Independent study under the direction of a spe - SPAN4235 A basic course in voice and articulation includ - cific faculty member after consultation with the 3 Credits ing practice in enunciation, production of voice school director. Latin-American Media and Film tone and the sounds of standard English speech. This course provides a comprehensive and criti - Basic concepts of anatomy and physiology of cal overview of some of the most important speech mechanism. Theater media systems in Latin America. A selection of School of Art and Media Studies films from Mexico, Argentina, Cuba and other SPCH1155 Latin-American countries will be studied in their 3 Credits Public Speaking THEA1103 social, political and cultural contexts. Conducted 3 Credits Training in the organization of ideas and effec - in Spanish. Prerequisite: SPAN2104 Intermediate Introduction to Theater tive delivery through practice in speaking before Spanish II or equivalent. Theater as an art form, emphasizing playwrights, an audience. actors, directors, designers, technicians, dramatic SPAN4259 forms and performing spaces. Off-campus play - 3 Credits going required. Recommended for majors. Spanish Linguistics The study of the Spanish language including his - tory, structure and sounds. Comparative linguis -

488 Course Descriptions Theater University College: Arts • Sciences • Professional Studies Metropolitan Campus and Vancouver Campus

THEA1104 THEA2218 3 Credits 1 Credit History and Development of the Technical Theater Production I Theater I Experience in creating scenery, lighting, sound Development and history of theater from its ori - and special effects for theater productions. Not gins to the beginning of the English suitable for fine arts core. Renaissance. THEA2219 THEA1105 3 Credits 3 Credits Directing: Theory and Practice I History and Development of the Basic theory and techniques of directing, organi - Theater II zation, staging and interpretation. Students Development and history of theater from the required to direct and perform at least two English Renaissance to Ibsen. Prerequisite: scenes per semester. THEA1104 History and Development of the Theater I or permission of instructor. THEA3305 3 Credits THEA1106 Advanced Acting I 3 Credits Essential techniques stressing truthful human Playgoing and Analysis behavior on stage. Concentration on basic act - Theater attendance and classroom criticism of ing exercises. professional productions. Backstage discussions. Cost for theater tickets additional. Students THEA3306 responsible for their own transportation. 3 Credits Advanced Acting II THEA2205 Continuation of THEA3305 Advanced Acting I. 3 Credits In-depth scene study. Prerequisite: THEA3305 Acting: Theory and Practice I Advanced Acting I or permission of instructor. Basic theories and techniques of acting through THEA3309 scene and character analysis, body and voice 3 Credits training, improvisation and performance. Advanced Directing I For those seriously interested in developing in THEA2206 depth as directors. One-act play to be staged. 3 Credits Prerequisite: THEA2210 Directing: Theory and Acting: Theory and Practice II Practice II or permission of instructor. Further study in basic theory and practice. Prerequisite: THEA2205 Acting: Theory and THEA3310 Practice I or department permission. 3 Credits Advanced Directing II THEA2210 Staging an original one-act play or preliminary 3 Credits work on staging a full-length play. Prerequisite: Directing: Theory and Practice II THEA3309 Advanced Directing I or permission Advanced course in directing techniques. Stu- of instructor. dents will direct or co-direct a complete produc - tion. Prerequisite: THEA2219 Directing: THEA4432 Theory and Practice I or department permission. 1–3 Credits Each Semester THEA2211 Selected Studies in Theater 3 Credits Studies in an area of theater. The course may be Stagecraft repeated but students may not repeat the topic. Survey and practicum in the techniques required to mount a theatrical production. Students THEA4800 required to participate in campus productions. 1–3 Credits Each Semester Independent Study in Theater THEA2217 Independent study under the direction of a spe - 3 Credits cific faculty member after consultation with the Speech for Actors school director. Voice training for students interested in pursu - Fall, Spring, Summer ing a career in broadcasting or acting, including exercises in acquiring the right speaking rate for delivering the news and selecting audition mate - rial such as film and stage monologues. (Equivalent to SPCH2217 Speech for Broadcasters.)

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