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Course Criteria
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6.00 Credits
6 credits: 3 hours, lecture; 12 hours, clinical laboratory. Synthesis of knowledge and skills required to effectively support clients, families, and groups along a trajectory from diagnosis through end of life. Population-based care, as it relates to disaster preparedness and targeted nursing response. PREREQ: NUR 405 or NUR 400 and NUR 406. COREQ: NUR 410.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits (3 hours, lecture). Professional role of the nurse in the healthcare system. Emphasis on leadership and management theory, as related to nursing administration, organizational design, and governance. COREQ: NUR 409.
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3.00 Credits
One semester, 3 credits (maximum 6 credits). Independent study or investigation, under faculty direction. A written report is required. PREREQ: Satisfactory completion of 24 credits in NUR or related fields and Departmental permission; cumulative college index of 3.2 and an index of 3.5 in Nursing. Courses of Interest NUR (SOC) 240: Death, Dying, and Bereavement. 3 hours, 3 credits. Sociological, psychological, and healthcare perspectives and ethical issues surrounding the processes of dying and bereavement. Topics include the history of attitudes toward death, the new medical technology, the ways individuals confront their own death and that of others, dying in institutions, death and the child, and suicide.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours, 3 credits. Examination of a broad range of philosophic questions whose unifying theme is the idea of freedom. Topics may include liberation strategies for both individuals and social groups, freedom as an ultimate category or value, and the concept of freedom present in most modern philosophies.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours, 3 credits. A critical examination from a philosophic point of view of contemporary genres of music. Topics may include a philosophic analysis of the meaning and value of forms, such as rap music, within their cultural contexts and in relation to the larger American society.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours, 3 credits. An introduction to logical analysis covering propositional logic, syllogistic inference, deductive techniques, probability and statistical inference, scientific method, language and logic, definition, and meaning.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours, 3 credits. Introduction to philosophic thinking via a discussion of questions such as "How should I live?," "What is the truth about reality?," and "Can God's existence be known?"
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3.00 Credits
3 hours, 3 credits. Fundamental ethical theories and their applications to current moral issues, such as capital punishment, abortion, sexual equality, economic justice, and issues in medical and other professional ethics.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours, 3 credits. A study of freedom, justice, and order, and the primary conflicts among them.
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3.00 Credits
3 hours, 3 credits. The contrast between traditional religiously based views of human nature and the post-Darwinian views based within the framework of modern science.
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