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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course is a workshop in radio history, production, and station management. The class works in close association with the student-operated KSCL radio station, creating projects for possible broadcast. Students will read media texts, interact with local radio professionals, write scripts, and design programming. Spring of alternate years.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: CSC 106, COMM/ENGL 282 or permission of instructor. This course explores the intersections of contemporary critical theory, new digital technologies, and literature. By examining computer-mediated cultures and major topics through these lenses, students develop sophisticated, scholarly and critical analyses of this rapidly-developing world. Spring of alternate years (same as ENGL 383).
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ENGL 101. An analysis of the cinema or television as aesthetic forms and social documents, usually with an emphasis on American and European film or television. Recent topics have included: "Masculinity and Femininity in Film" and "Film and Literature" and "Television Studies". May be elected for up to six hours redit as topic changes. Spring of alternate years. Same as ARt 399 and ENGL 399.
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1.00 - 6.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Permission of the Biedenarn Chair in Communication. Supervised internship with an approved company or ogranization in any of the professional areas covered by the Communication major, such as video/film/ television production, advertising, public relations, news or feature writing, new media design, graphic design, or marketing. Students will be required to submit a term report or project at the end of the internship to the Biedenharn Chair in Communication. May be repeated for credit for internship in another area up to a maximum of six hours. Offered each semester.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Senior standing. A review of the theory and practice of communication with an emphasis in writing for the mass media.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CSC 107 or MATH 104 or higher or permission of instructor. This course covers the principles of problem so lving, programming and algorithm, development through an int erdisciplinary approach. Topics include mathematical functi ons, string manipulation, logic and control structures, imput/output, elementary data structures, and object- programming. Every Fall.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CSC 207. This course studies different structures for storing and processing data implemented through object-oriented programming. These structures include stacks, queues, linked lists, graphs and trees. Also studied are techniques and algorithms for sorting, searching, and simulation. Every spring.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CSC 207. This course explores computational methods for analyzing and understanding the large quantities of information now available in the growing fields of genomics, proteomics and systems biology. It complements practical experience of current bioinformatics systems with a deep understnding of their algorithmic underpinnings. topics include aligning pairwise and multiple sequences, constructing phylogenies, searching strings, modeling motifs , clustering, microarray data, inferring regulatory networks , and modeling biological systems. Alternate years in the spring.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Prerequisite CSC 207. Credit is given for on-the-job training in certain vocational areas of computer science. On demand.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CSC 234. This course provides an introduction to artificial intelligence, with a particular focus on the empirical approach: how can we have a computer act rationally? Topics include both local and global search techniques for problem solving, game theory, automated logical reasoning, statistical machine learning, and complex adaptive ysytems. An in-depth research project will be required. Every third year in the fall.
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