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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Emphasis in this course is placed on the preparation of correspondence and legal documents in the areas of civil litigation actions, torts, trial proceedings, appeals, discovery documents, pleadings, and post-trial documents and correspondence.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: No ACT scores or appropriate placement test score. Review of basic mathematics skills. Includes the fundamental numeral operations of addition, subtraction, multiplication, and division of whole numbers, fractions, and decimals; ratio and proportion, percent, systems of measurement, and an introduction to geometry. NOTE: May not be used to satisfy the math or elective requirement in any curriculum at BPCC.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Appropriate placement test score or a grade of "C" or higher in MATH 097. A beginning algebra course that includes performing fundamental operations on real numbers; exponents; solving linear equations and inequalities; applications; functions; graphing linear equations; slope; systems of linear equations. NOTE: May not be used to satisfy the mathematics or elective requirement in any curriculum at BPCC.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Appropriate placement test score or a grade of "C" or higher in MATH 098. A continuation of Beginning Algebra I including exponents and polynomials; factoring polynomials; rational expressions and equations; solving quadratic equations; graphing quadratic functions; roots and radicals. NOTE: May not be used to satisfy the mathematics or elective requirement in any curriculum at BPCC.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite : ACT score of 25 or higher, appropriate placement test score, or a grade of "C" or higher in MATH 102. A course in precalculus algebra using the graphing calculator. Topics include graphs and functions, quadratic equations and inequalities, theorems about zeros of polynomial functions, rational functions, inverse functions, exponential and logarithmic functions, systems of equations and inequalities, matrix operations, conics, sequences, series, limits, and the derivative using the difference quotient.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ACT score of 25 or higher, appropriate placement test score, or a grade of "C" or higher in MATH 102. Methods and theory of trigonometry including trigonometric functions, solution of right triangles, identities and trigonometric equations, graphs, inverse trigonometric functions, solution of oblique triangles, and complex numbers.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: A grade of "C" or higher in MATH 102. A course that contains a wide variety of realistic applications for students majoring in the liberal arts, the social sciences, and business. Topics include the following: linear, quadratic, exponential, and logarithmic functions with applications; mathematics of finance; sets and probability; permutations, combinations and counting; and statistics.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: A grade of "C" or higher in MATH 102. This course is designed for elementary education majors. The emphasis of the course is teaching number sense and problem solving. Topics include numeration, bases other than ten, factorization, building numbers with primes, meaning of fractions, equivalent fractions, mixed numbers and comparison of fractions, fractions which represent probabilities, fractions which represent ratios, fractions which represent rates, meaning of decimals, meaning of percent, opposites, understanding addition, understanding subtraction, understanding multiplication, product of two negative numbers, and meaning of division.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: A grade of "C" or higher in MATH 102. A course for the liberal art and education student stressing thinking critically, putting numbers in perspective in the real world, statistical reasoning, putting statistics to work, living with probability and odds, and mathematics in politics and business.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: ACT score of 18 or higher, or grade of "C" or higher in MATH 099. This course covers a practical application of basic math/algebra skills to typical industrial applications and problems. There is an emphasis on units of measure, algebraic expressions, reading tools of measurement, perimeter/area/volume analysis using plane and solid geometry, simultaneous equations, polynomial roots, radicals, trigonometry (right and oblique triangles), graphical analysis and engineering units/notation.
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