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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Provides students with hands-on experience in a community pharmacy setting within the State of Colorado. Students must complete all didactic coursework prior to enrolling for this course. The course involves a minimum of 160 hours including 8 hours of seminar class time and 152 hours of on-the-job work experience. Each student is required to work under the supervision of a licensed pharmacist (i.e. preceptor) who may, in turn, delegate some supervisory and/or training responsibilities to another licensed pharmacist or certified pharmacy technician. During their work time at their community pharmacy site, students are expected to participate in the pharmacy practice activities delineated in the Clinical Site manual provided each student and each preceptor. Such activities include, but are not limited to, dispensing, compounding, inventory handling and control, drug distribution, processing of third party claims, maintenance of patient profiles and interaction and communication with patients. Students are also expected to complete daily and weekly reports of their work activities and are required to evaluate both their work site and their preceptor at the conclusion of their clinical rotation. Similarly, each preceptor is asked to complete an evaluation of, and provide a grade for, each student at the completion of the student's rotation. The course instructor is also required to evaluate each student after completing a visit to the student's work site and discussing the student's performance with both the student and their preceptor. 150 Contact Hours.
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0.50 Credits
Prepares the student for the national Pharmacy Technician Certification Examination. 8 Contact Hours. Prerequisite: Completion of PHT certificate program or prior work experience as a pharmacy technician.
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4.00 Credits
GT-sci (A.A. Deg ree onl y) Focuses on mechanics, heat, properties of matter, electricity and magnetism, light and modern physics. Incorporates laboratory experience. 75 Contact Hours (45 lecture hours and 30 lab hours).
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5.00 Credits
GT-sci Enables the student to explore the truth about physical reality through reasoning, mathematics and experimentation. Examines kinematics, force, circular motion, energy, momentum, torque, rotational dynamics, simple harmonic motion, temperature, heat and thermodynamics. The concepts and theories presented are explored through demonstrations and hands-on experiments. It is a general physics course that is recommended for all of the health sciences and all other interested students. Students entering engineering or one of the advanced sciences should register for PHY 211. 90 Contact Hours (60 lecture hours, 30 lab hours). Prerequisite: MAT 121.
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5.00 Credits
GT-sci Expands upon PHY 111 and covers sound waves, electric fields, electric circuits, magnetic fields, optics, and modern physics. Explores the concepts and theories presented in class through demonstrations and handson experiments. 90 Contact Hours (60 lecture hours, 30 lab hours). Prerequisite: PHY 111.
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5.00 Credits
GT-sci Enables the student to examine the truth about physical reality through reasoning, mathematics and experimentation. Covers kinematics, force, gravity, energy, momentum, torque, rotational dynamics, fluids and waves. The concepts and theories presented in class are explored through the demonstrations and the hands-on experiments. This first semester calculus-based physics course is recommended for students entering engineering or one of the advanced sciences. 105 Contact Hours (60 lecture hours, 45 lab hours). Prerequisite: MAT 201.
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5.00 Credits
GT-sci Examines thermodynamics, electric fields, electric circuits, magnetic fields, light and optics, and modern physics. The concepts and theories presented in class are explored through demonstrations and hands-on experiments. 105 Contact Hours. Prerequisite: PHY 211.
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3.00 Credits
GT-SS1 Focuses on a survey of the discipline of political science, including political philosophy and ideology, democratic and non-democratic governments, and processes, and international relations. 45 Contact Hours.
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3.00 Credits
GT-SS1 Includes the background of the U.S. Constitution; the philosophy of American government; general principles of the Constitution; federalism; and civil liberties. Examines public opinion and citizen participation, political parties, interest groups, and the electoral process, and the structure and functions of the national government. 45 Contact Hours.
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3.00 Credits
Emphasizes the structure and function of state, county, and municipal governments including their relations with each other and with national government. Includes a study of Colorado government and politics. 45 Contact Hours.
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