|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Course Criteria
Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
-
5.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: PHR 103, PHR 105, SCT 100; Corequisite: PHR 107) This course presents the advanced concepts and principles needed in the pharmacy technology field. Topics include: physician orders, patient profiles, phar macy data systems, job readiness, legal requirements, and pharmaceutical calculations review.
-
7.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: PHR 103, PHR 105, SCT 100; Corequisite: PHR 106) Continues the development of student knowl edge and skills applicable to pharmacy technology prac tice. Topics include: dispensing responsibilities, physician orders, controlled substances, hyperalimentation, chemo therapy, patient profiles, pharmacy data systems, oph thalmic preparations, and hospital/retail/home health pharmacy techniques.
-
5.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: MAT 190 or MAT 191 with a grade of C or better) Introduces students to the basic laws of physics. Topics include: Newtonian mechanics, fluids, heat, light and optics, sound, electricity and magnetism, and modern physics.
-
5.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: MAT 191; Corequisite: MAT 193) Intro duces the classical theories of mechanics. Topics include: measurements and systems of units; Newton's laws; work, energy, and power; impulse and momentum; one- and two- dimensional motion; and mechanical equilibrium. Laboratory exercises supplement class work. Computer use is an integral part of class and laboratory assignments.
-
5.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: Provisional admission) Emphasizes the American legal system, the role of the lawyer and legal assistant within that system, and the ethical obligations imposed upon attorneys and legal assistants. Topics in clude: survey of American jurisprudence, code of profes sional responsibility and ethics overview, legal reasoning and problem solving, and introduction to sources of law and legal vocabulary.
-
5.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: Program admission level verbal achieve ment, provisional admission level math achievement, PLS 101) Introduces the student to the competencies involved with legal bibliography and research methodology so that the student can effectively research issues of both state and federal law. The student will also learn to properly cite legal research sources. Topics include: identification of legal issues, sources of state and federal statutes and case law, citation of legal authorities, and computer assisted legal research.
-
5.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: Program admission, ENG 191, PLS 101, PLS 102) Focuses on the application and reinforcement of basic writing skills, familiarizes the student with types of writing typically engaged in by lawyers and legal assistants, and prepares the student for legal writing tasks. The stu dent teams to write business letters as well as advisory documents. Topics include: legal analysis and legal corre spondence and composition.
-
5.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: Program admission; Corequisite: PLS 101) Introduces the student to the issues which may arise in family law cases and to the role of the paralegal in assisting the attorney in the development and presentation of such cases. Topics include: issues associated with client and witness interviews, marriage validity and dissolution, litiga tion support in family law matters, issues concerning chil dren, special matters in family law, and attorney and paralegal ethical obligations.
-
5.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: Program admission; Corequisite: PLS 101) Introduces the student to the basic concepts of real prop erty law as they pertain to common types of real estate transactions. Additionally, emphasis will be placed on prac tical skills such as document preparation and tide examina tion. Topics include: real estate contracts, plat reading and legal description, types and purposes of deeds, title searches, common real estate mortgages and documentation, real estate closing and closing statements, recordation statutes and requirements, and elements of the lease.
-
5.00 Credits
(Prerequisite: Program admission; Corequisite: PLS 101) Introduces the student to the basic concepts of substantive criminal law and its procedural aspects with an emphasis on the constitutionally protected rights of the accused in the criminal justice system. Topics include: substantive criminal law, criminal procedure from arrest to post-con viction, constitutional issues of criminal law and proce dure, and criminal litigation support.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Privacy Statement
|
Terms of Use
|
Institutional Membership Information
|
About AcademyOne
Copyright 2006 - 2025 AcademyOne, Inc.
|
|
|