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Course Criteria
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0.00 Credits
Lec. 3 Lab. 0 Credit 3 The study and analysis of the major physical and cultural elements of the world. Emphasis on processes of acquiring, treating, and evaluating related information. For those with little or no prior background in the study of geography.
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0.00 Credits
Lec. 3 Lab. 0 Credit 3 The examination of the uneven and real distribution of production, exchange, and consumption, extractive industries, manufacturing, agriculture, transportation and services in relation to human techniques, resource potentials, demographics. Some prior background in geography helpful.
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0.00 Credits
Lec. 3 Lab. 0 Credit 3 The examination of the physical and cultural features of the United States and Canada. Emphasis on influence of environment on patterns of settlement, agricultural and industrial development, urbanism, land use and planning. Some prior background in geography helpful.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Lec. Arranged Credit 1-3 This course is open to students who desire to participate in selected geographic field experiences designed around supervised observation and practice. The experience provides an opportunity to apply classroom learning in the field. Specific written credit and participation requirements are established in advance of the field study. Each hour of credit requires a minimum of 54 hours of supervised travel and living experience.
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2.00 Credits
Lec. 2 Lab. 2 Credit 3 The main focus of this course is in preflighting techniques and color control. Advanced graphic design, color management skills, and printing technologies will be used in complex projects. The importance of communication between printer/ pressroom and the graphic designer is also emphasized. This course integrates all facets of the graphic communications coursework and should be taken during the student's final semester. Prerequisites: GRA-275 and GRA-131.
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2.00 Credits
Lec. 2 Lab. 2 Credit 3 This course is designed to introduce the student to the application of rendering techniques. Emphasis is placed on controlling various media, methods, surfaces, design problems and the appropriate media selection process. Prerequisites: CSC-110 and ART-120.
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2.00 Credits
Lec. 2 Lab. 2 Credit 3 The student will gain familiarity with the document production cycle of graphic layout using prevalent industry pagination software. Emphasis will be placed on planning the publication, using page elements, working with graphics, preparing the publication page, and reproduction. Students will use this publishing package to create a variety of print media utilizing proper design principles. Prerequisite: GRA-137. Corequisite: GRA-275.
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2.00 Credits
Lec. 2 Lab. 2 Credit 3 The student will gain familiarity with the function of graphic layout using electronic pagination software. Emphasis will be placed on publication design, development, reproducibility, and utilization of proper design techniques. Students will use this publishing package to create a variety of print media. Prerequisite: CSC-110.
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2.00 Credits
Lec. 2 Lab. 2 Credit 3 This course is designed to introduce the student to image manipulation software used in the electronic and print media industry. Emphasis will be placed on scanning, image editing techniques, using painting tool sets, color correction, ethics and digital photography techniques. Prerequisite: CSC-110.
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2.00 Credits
Lec. 2 Lab. 2 Credit 3 A continuation of GRA-140 in the area of image manipulation and will build on skills used previously for the multimedia and print industries. Emphasis will be placed on web graphics, alpha channels, masking, adjustment layers, color correction, and actions.
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