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Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
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2.00 Credits
These courses, which may not be transferable, are offered in response to student interest and demand. Internships allow students who have achieved a level of competency in art to work within the community, applying their skills.
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3.00 Credits
These courses, which may not be transferable, are offered in response to student interest and demand. Internships allow students who have achieved a level of competency in art to work within the community, applying their skills.
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3.00 Credits
This course is designed to give students experience in selecting and presenting art activities, music, and dance activities which enhance and are, in turn, enhanced by other subject areas within a thematic unit framework. This class is open only to those admitted into the Teacher Education Program.
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3.00 Credits
A study of the visual arts as an expression of human creativity. Comparison of paintings, sculpture and architecture from past and present acquaints students with aesthetic, social, psychological, and critical dimensions of art. Occasional experiments with selected media.
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3.00 Credits
This course is designed to give students experiences in selecting and presenting art, music, and dance activities which enhance and are, in turn, enhanced by other subject areas within a thematic unit framework.
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3.00 Credits
A course for non-science students that focuses on organisms, particularly humans. Topics include cells, metabolism/dynamic equilibrium, continuity of life (DNA to population genetics), animal form and function (comparative evolution of selected body systems).
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1.00 Credits
A course with activities designed to supplement BIOL 1101 lecture. These include use of scientific methods of investigation, data analysis and critical thinking to understand the relevance of biology in the contemporary world.
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3.00 Credits
A course for non-science students that focuses on the environment, evolution and biological diversity. It introduces students to a variety of organisms, particularly plants and animals; attention is given to their evolutionary and ecological interactions with each other and humanity. Emphasis is placed on natural and stressed (polluted) ecosystems.
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3.00 Credits
A course for science majors that includes biological chemistry, cell structure and function, bioenergetics, inheritance, gene expression, regulation and technology, population genetics and evolution.
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1.00 Credits
A course with activities designed to develop the powers of observation, skills in biological techniques, experimentation, data analysis, and critical thinking that are necessary for advanced biology courses.
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