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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Pre/Corequisite: GIT This course provides a foundation for application development using VBA and ArcObjects. In course exercises, student create usable ArcObjects code for typical GIS programming tasks. Students work with VBA development tools and the ArcGIS Customize dialog box and learn how to access online help resources. After completing the course, student will have a variety of sample code from which they can build their own applications. It is mandatory that students gain basic proficiency with VB/VBA before taking this course. This class meets 5, 8-hours days.
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3.00 Credits
Pre/Corequisite: GIT 2123 An introduction to the preparation and interpretation of data in cartographic form and the use of computers for map compilation, design, and production. Includes principles of global positioning (GPS), methods of map making, and principles of digital cartography. Two lecture and two lab hours per week.
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3.00 Credits
A course designed to introduce database concepts and goals of database management systems, and relational, hierarchical, and network models of data. Included are Structured Query Language (SQL) and methods for organizing data are introduced and discussed. Two lecture and two lab hours per week.
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3.00 Credits
An introductory course in the basic principles and uses of Geographic Information Systems (GIS) along with an overview of the GIS industry and GIS software. Course content will also highlight current GIS applications and steps taken for planning, implementing and maintaining a GIS. This course will help the student understand GIS concepts concerning mapping/cartography, global positioning systems, remote sensing, database analysis and database management. Students will gain hands-on experience using GIS software and global positioning equipment. Two lecture and two lab hours per week.
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3.00 Credits
Pre/Corequisite: GIT 2273 This course includes fundamentals of remotely sensed data including scale, feature identification, and symbolization. Includes fundamentals of interpretation techniques of various image products, including topographic and thematic maps, aerial photographs, sensor images, and satellite images. Two lecture and two lab hours per week.
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3.00 Credits
This course includes a discussion of a variety of remote sensing data collections methods. This course deals with manual interpretation data from photographs and other imagery. One lecture and four lab hours per week.
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3.00 Credits
Two-dimensional computer assisted drafting strategies applied to descriptive geometry topics and traditional mechanical drawing topics; sketching skills. Two hours lecture and four hours computer graphics laboratory work per week.
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1.00 Credits
Public History
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3.00 Credits
This course will introduce students to the professional principles and practices in the care and management of history museum
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: A score of 16 on the Reading portion of the Enhanced ACT or REA 1013 with a grade of "C" or better.This course introduces students to the themes, events, people and ideas that gave shape to human societies and human experiences in every area of the globe during the first 5000 years of human history. From the invention of writing in Mesopotamia (3500 BC) until the conclusion of the first HmodernF war (1648 AD), humans established civilizations and destroyed them, expressed themselves through art, architecture, philosophy and religion, and in every other way imaginable communicated their ideas about family, society and the nature of the universe. These areas are explored as a part of the human story as told by Africans, Middle Easterners, Asians, Europeans and the first Americans through readings, discussions. Three lecture hours per week.
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