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Course Criteria
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6.00 Credits
The Patience Care Elective Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experiences are two or three of the seven Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experiences in the fourth professional year. The elective course is designed to further develop the studen't knowledge and understanding of pharmacy practive by providing direct patient care in a specific area under the supervision of a preceptor. Potential opportunities may include but are not limited to Adult Medicine, Cardiology, Compounding, Hematology/Oncology, Independent Pharmacy, Critical Care, Long-term Care, Medical Messions, and Rehabilitation Medicine. Students must take two PHAR 6660 experiences and one PHAR 6670 experience or three PHAR 6660 experiences.
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6.00 Credits
The Non-Patient Care Elective Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience is an optional Advanced Pharmacy Practice Experience in the fourth professional year. This elective course is designed to further develop the student's knowledge and understanding of pharmacy practice in a non-patient care setting under the supervision of a preceptor. Potential opportunities may include but are not limited to Research, Academia, Management or Regulatory experiences. The course may substitute for on PHAR 6660.
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2.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
This is an introduction to philosophical problems, methods, and areas of interest. Topics may include the nature of reality, theory of knowledge, the existence and nature of God, the idea of beauty, personal and social ethics, political philosophy, the mind-body problem, freedom and determinism, and personal identity. NOTE: PHIL 1381 is a prerequisite for all upper division philosophy course. (Fall, Spring)
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to philosophy. It treats the origin and definitions of philosophy; the divisions of philosophy; important philosophers and some of their theories; the relationships between philosophy and poetry, faith-based theology, and the natural sciences. This course fulfills the Core Curriculum requirement for Philosophy and is restricted to students in the UIW Honors Program.
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
A problem-solving/issues approach to the study of both informal and formal logic, focusing upon tools, techniques and principles for the analysis and evaluation of reasoning. this course includes a study of the rules of inference, including deduction and induction, and rules for definition, emphasizing evaluation of the validity and soundness of arguments as well as recognition of common fallacies of reasoning.
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to interdisciplinary work in the arts and humanities. It presents an eclectic range of questions from fields such as literature, art, theater, music, philosophy, history, religious studies, linguistics, and cultural studies. The course affirms the diversity of effective tactics for answering questions, solving problems, and exploring new territory within these disciplines and it sets special emphasis on the creative traffice between them. The course, which is both a reflective and an experiential inquiry into the essence and value of a liberal arts education, is intended not only for majors in the arts and humanities. In accord with a cardinal virtu of the UIW Mission--the education of the whole person--the course is recommended for students in any field.
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