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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Designed to give students with an accounting background a familiarity with accounting information systems and business spreadsheet applications. System design theory and accounting theory will be integrated to convert a manual accounting system to a computerized system using a general ledger software package. Prerequisite: ACC 111 Pre/Corequisite: BUS 215
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4.00 Credits
Introduces financial accounting with emphasis on the collection, classification, summarization, and reporting of financial information about a specific business. The use of journals, ledgers, working papers, and financial statements is illustrated. Prerequisite: Eligibility for MTH 085. Students not eligible for MTH 085 must take MTH 075 as a prerequisite to ACC 111.
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4.00 Credits
The development of accounting principles with application to partnerships, corporations, and manufacturing businesses. The use of accounting as a basis for managerial decisions is emphasized. Prerequisite: ACC 111
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the preparation and use of financial information for internal management purposes. Major emphasis will be on the collection and interpretation of accounting data for planning and control purposes. Prerequisite: ACC 112
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3.00 Credits
Covers the fundamentals of manufacturing records as they relate to the needs of management in planning, controlling, and decision-making. Topics covered include: job order, process, and standard cost systems; cost behavior; costvolume- profit relationships; budgets; and relevant costs for decision making. Prerequisite: ACC 205
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the field, emphasizing the similarities and differences among societies with different economic, social, political, and religious traditions. Several societies with cultures quite different from our own are studied in detail. Theories about social structure and culture, the research methods used by anthropologists, and the ethics of anthropological research and applied anthropology are covered.
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3.00 Credits
What is language What is an accent How do children learn language These are some of the questions explored in this introductory course about language structure. This course investigates the nature of sounds, words, sentences, meanings, and conversations. The course applies learned concepts to other areas of language study: language acquisition, dialect variation, sign language, and language change. Emphasis is placed on collection and analysis of everyday language examples. (same as ENG 103 and DFS 103) Prerequisite: ENG 101
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3.00 Credits
A survey of the concepts, models, theories, and methods of anthropology with emphasis on each of the four major subdisciplines: physical, cultural, linguistic, and archaeological anthropology. Topics include the relationship among human biology, language, and culture; human biological variation; cultural diversity; evolution; and culture change.
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3.00 Credits
A survey of the Indians of North America, including a study of their origins, patterns of survival, social organization, and religions; the effects of white contact; and their present condition in the United States, Canada, and Mexico.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to archaeology, including an overview of the methods and theories of the discipline, the conceptual framework within which we impose meaning on archaeological materials, and an exploration of the theories of the origins and evolution of humans and culture.
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