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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Examines the fundamentals of design, installation, operation, testing, and maintenance of airborne communication, navigation, instrument, and auto flight systems.
Prerequisite:
AMT A274 UA D
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3.00 Credits
Examines the procedures and rules for performance of scheduled and non-scheduled aircraft inspections and evaluation of the condition of aircraft and their systems to determine air worthiness. Details aircraft disassembly, balancing, reassembly, weight and balance, and the procedures for rigging structural assemblies and flight control systems. Students will conduct research on regulations and conformity data; plan and perform inspections, then analyze and record findings.
Prerequisite:
AMT A185 UA D AND AMT A272 UA D
Corequisite:
AMT A369L
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2.00 Credits
Provides practice in the performance of scheduled and non-scheduled aircraft inspections. Includes practice in the performance of jacking and weighing of aircraft and disassembly, balancing, reassembly, and rigging of aircraft assemblies and flight controls, researching data, inspecting systems and components, evaluating the condition of aircraft and systems to determine air worthiness, recording findings in maintenance records.
Prerequisite:
AMT A185L UA D AND AMT A272 UA D
Corequisite:
AMT A369
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3.00 Credits
Introduces fundamentals of the four subfields of anthropology: archaeology, cultural anthropology, biological anthropology and anthropological linguistics. Emphasizes basic ideas, perspectives and methods of anthropology. Special Note: Recommended for non-majors. Majors can apply it to their degree as a program elective.
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3.00 Credits
Surveys Alaska Native peoples, including cultural heritage, ethnohistory, and contemporary experiences from an anthropological perspective. Covers environmental settings, linguistic subdivisions, precolonial sociocultural organization and subsistence patterns, contact with non-Native groups, and key issues, including education, politics and law.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces the fundamental concepts, terminology, ethical considerations and methods in the study of culture and cultural change. Emphasizes cross-cultural comparisons of sociopolitical systems, kinship, ethnicity, gender, subsistence, religion and art, integrating applied, local, regional and global perspectives.
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4.00 Credits
Introduces biocultural perspectives on human and non-human primate behavior, biological diversity, and the development of the theory of evolution. Examines the fossil record, genetic and epigenetic variation, physiological adaptations, and applied research in forensic anthropology and bioarchaeology. Exposes students to laboratory practice in biological anthropology.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces the fundamental concepts, terminology, ethical considerations and methods in the anthropological study of language. Explores topics in language and culture, including the origin of human speech, language structure, sociolinguistics, historical linguistics, language change and variation, multilingualism, language endangerment and revitalization, language and gender, and folk taxonomies.
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4.00 Credits
Introduces the historical development, basic concepts, terminology, ethical considerations, theories, and methods of archaeology with an emphasis on North American approaches. Exposes students to archaeological laboratory practice.
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3.00 Credits
Introduces the biological and cultural emergence of modern humans, innovations leading to domestication and complex societies, and the roles these played in urbanization, state formation, and civilizations. Compares primary civilizations and may include secondary civilizations.
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