|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
3.00 Credits
Presents the skills needed to perform activities required in a medical office setting. Offers a broad spectrum of medical terms, concepts, and principles. Designed to familiarize the student with various types of documents, activities, and situations in a medical environment. (formerly BUS 282) Recommended Preparation: ENG 100 or equivalent, and keyboarding and word processing skills.
-
3.00 Credits
Presents the skills needed to perform activities required in a law firm or other legal setting. Offers a broad spectrum of legal terms, concepts and principles required in a law office. Designed to familiarize the student with various types of legal documents; emphasis is on creating, formatting, and editing common types of legal documents. (formerly BUS 283) Recommended Preparation: ENG 100 or ENG 100E or equivalent.
-
3.00 Credits
Introduction to application software useful for subsequent study in civil engineering. Introduction to subdisciplines of civil engineering through design problems. Prerequisite: Engineering Drawing.
-
3.00 Credits
Basic principles of plane surveying including reference planes and surfaces, use of instruments for distance and angular measurements, traverse adjustment, heights, measurement theory, computer applications, topographic surveying. For CE majors only. Prerequisite: Trigonometry, EE 151.
-
3.00 Credits
Equilibrium of particles, rigid bodies, frames and machines; vectors, centroids, friction, and moments of inertia. Required for CE and ME majors. Prerequisite: PHYS 170.
-
3.00 Credits
Dynamics of particles and rigid bodies; force, acceleration, impulse-momentum, work- energy. Required for CE and ME majors. Prerequisite: CE 270, MATH 206.
-
4.00 Credits
Brief introduction to basic principles of chemistry and their relationship to the modern world. This course provides a general education core course for the non-science major. Emphasis will be placed on how science and technology affect the individual, society and the environment. Topics to be treated include: air and water pollution, energy resources, and basics of biochemistry. This is a lab-oriented course in which students are encouraged to learn by doing. Class meets for 3 hours of lecture and 3 hours of lab per week. (DP) Prerequisite: MATH 25 and ENG 22 with a grade of C or better or equivalent.
-
4.00 Credits
An introductory course to the fundamental theories and experimental methods of chemistry intended for majors in science and science-related fields. The basic language and quantitative relationships of chemistry are studied, as well as the theories of atomic structure, chemical bonding, structure-property relationships, and chemical reactions. Class meets for 3 hours of lecture and 3 hours of lab per week. This course is a prerequisite to either Biochemistry (CHEM 251) or Organic Chemistry (CHEM 152) for majors in the School of Nursing, or can be taken as preparation for CHEM 161 or CHEM 171. CHEM 151B satisfies the requirements for CHEM 151 and laboratory for BIOC 241 at Manoa campus. (DP) Offered in the Spring semester only. Prerequisite: MATH 103 or equivalent.
-
4.00 Credits
Topics include the structure, nomenclature, properties and reactions of the major classes of organic compounds. Emphasis is upon the concepts and principles as they apply to modern materials and technology and to living matter. Class meets for 3 hours of lecture and 3 hours of lab per week. This course can be taken after CHEM 151B in order to complete the one-year chemistry requirement at UH Manoa for the School of Nursing and many of the programs in the College of Tropical Agriculture and Human Resources, and in the Colleges of Arts and Sciences. (DP) Offered in Spring semester only. Prerequisite: CHEM 151B or equivalent.
-
4.00 Credits
Basic principles of inorganic chemistry. A first course of a two-course sequence designed to meet the one-year requirement of General College Chemistry. Concepts and topics include, scientific measurement, chemical math, atomic structure and chemical bonding, the states of matter, and solution chemistry. Laboratory activity is a required part of the course. Class meets for 3 hours of lecture and 3 hours of lab per week. (DP) Prerequisite: Math 103 or equivalent. Rec Preparation: High School chemistry or CHEM 151B.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2025 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|