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Course Criteria
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1.00 - 6.00 Credits
An "IP" (In Progress) grade will be given until the thesis is completed.
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4.00 Credits
An investigation and analysis of issues, problems, and trends in various areas of communication. Rotating topics, including interpersonal communication, rhetorical studies, media studies, and others.
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4.00 Credits
An advanced communication-based fieldwork practicum conducted in a service-learning environment that utilizes a student's cumulative knowledge and abilities in theory, research, and practice. Applied fieldwork involving research, assessment, and remedies for communications needs and issues of significance to the individual, group, or organization. The course should produce a finalized summary of a project suitable for presentation before the Seaver Graduate Programs, a regional or national professional association conference, or other scholarly or service forum.
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1.00 - 6.00 Credits
Required of all students in the master of arts in communication program who are not writing a thesis. The project may consist of a summary bibliographical and reading project with a substantial evaluation paper of the communication material in the student's area, or of an advanced media project such as a television documentary or a public relations or advertising campaign. An "IP" (In Progress) grade will be given until the project is completed.
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Directed Studies
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to programming with the C++ language. Data types: numeric, character, the string class, and boolean. Input/output stream classes: interactive I/O, file I/O. Programming constructs: sequential, conditional, iterative. Functions: parameter passing mechanisms, function libraries. Arrays: one-dimensional arrays, searching and sorting, two-dimensional arrays. Introduction to classes.
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1.00 Credits
A review of topics from COSC 220. This course is intended for those who have previously taken a computer programming course and wish to enroll in COSC 221 without taking COSC 220. Topics selected for review will depend on the preparation of the students and may vary from year to year. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to programming with an object-oriented framework using the C++ language. Input/output: graphical user interfaces based on the model/view/controller paradigm. Programming constructs: sequential, conditional, iterative. Data abstraction: abstract data structures, stacks and lists as abstract data types. Procedural abstraction: proper procedures, function procedures. Basic algorithms and applications: random numbers, iterative array searching and sorting. Prerequisite: MATH 220 or concurrent enrollment.
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to object-oriented programming. Recursion Cbasic algorithms, array searching and sorting. Dynamic storage allocatio n -pointer types, linked lists and binary search trees as abstract data types. Class e s-objects, abstract classes, inheritance and polymorphism, linked lists and binary trees as classes. Prerequisites: MATH 221 or concurrent enrollment and COSC 220
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Selected Topics
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