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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course presents the physiological processes controlling animal reproduction. The course emphasizes the application of basic concepts to the management of reproduction in livestock.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides an overview of the entire field of anthropology by focusing on the essential methods and findings of the discipline's four principal subfields (biological anthropology, archaeology, cultural anthropology, and linguistics). Students who successfully complete ANT 1000 are well prepared for subsequent courses in Cultural Anthropology and Linguistics (ANT 2410) and Biological Anthropology and Archaeology (ANT 2140), although ANT 1000 is not a prerequisite for those courses. ANT 1000 is not intended for students who have already completed either ANT 2410 or ANT 2140. Prerequisite: Student must score into college-level English on placement test.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides a critical, scientific examination of paranormal beliefs in contemporary American culture. Topics include ESP, psychokinesis, disembodied spirits, astrology, UFO's and cryptozoology. Prerequisite: Student must score into college-level English on placement test.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides an introduction to the anthropological subfields of biological anthropology and archaeology. Topics include the principles of biological evolution, the evolution of the human species, the evolution of culture, the peopling of the New World, and the origins of civilization. Prerequisite: Student must score into college-level English and reading on placement test.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides an introduction to the anthropological subfields of ethnology, ethnography, and linguistics. It focuses on culture as the human system of adaptation and examines the reasons for the similarities and differences among the world's societies. Principal topics include language, subsistence, kinship, political organization religion, and the arts. Prerequisite: Student must score into college-level English and reading on placement test.
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to the basic principles of forensic anthropology, an applied field within the larger discipline of biological anthropology that uses human osteology, archaeology, and other anthropological research methods to solve problems of medical-legal significance, primarily the determination of personal identity and cause of death from human remains.
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3.00 Credits
This course presents the application of the collating of figures for reports. It includes analyzing, journalizing, posting, adjusting and closing entries, straightline depreciation, and payroll. Knowledge of business mathematics proceedings is essential. Lab fee $12.00.
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1.00 Credits
This course teaches the computer applications packet Quickbooks, which includes A/R, A/P, inventory, invoicing, payments, payroll, graphs, and reports.
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1.00 Credits
This course teaches the student to process financial transactions in depth for a month's cycle for a business. This will take the student who has had the orientation class further into the accounting processing system. Prerequisite: APA 1152.
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4.00 Credits
This course teaches the introductory design of space defined as the analysis, formation, and articulation of habitable volumes. This course emphasizes the basic concepts of space, its inhabitation and the process of its design. A sequence of analytical and generative exercises develops space cognition.
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