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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to World Religions is a survey course in philosophy designed to familiarize students with the major theories of world religions. Students establish broad and multiple perspectives of religious theory and evaluate theories of religion. Prerequisites: Reading level 7 and Writing level 7. (3:3-0)
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly Philosophy 1311) This is a study of the nature and methods of correct reasoning. It focuses on deductive proof, logical fallacies, and valid arguments. Prerequisites: Reading level 7 and Writing level 7. (3:3-0)
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3.00 Credits
This course offers a general overview of classical and contemporary theories concerning the good life, human conduct in society, moral and ethical standards; and the nature, criteria, sources, logic, and validity of moral value judgments. Prerequisites: Reading level 7 and Writing level 7. (3:3-0)
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3.00 Credits
Social and Political Philosophy is a survey course in philosophy that familiarizes students with the major theories concerning the organization of societies and government. Students establish broad and multiple perspectives of social and political theory, evaluate theories of justice, and learn how to be responsible members of society. Prerequisites: Reading level 7 and Writing level 7. (3:3-0)
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3.00 Credits
This course discusses the qualifications, operational guidelines, and duties of a pharmacy technician. Topics include definitions of a pharmacy environment, the profile of a pharmacy environment, the profile of a pharmacy technician, legal and ethical guidelines, job skills and duties, verbal and written communication skills, professional resources, safety techniques, and supply and inventory techniques. (3:3-0)
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly PHRA 1205) This is a study of pharmaceutical drugs, abbreviations, classifications, dosages, actions in the body, and routes of administration. Emphasis on location of drugs within a pharmacy, inventory control, safety, and quality assurance procedures. Prerequisites: PHRA 1301. (3:3-0)
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly PHRA 1209) Pharmaceutical mathematics includes reading, interpreting, and solving calculation problems encountered in the preparation and distribution of drugs. Conversion of measurements within the apothecary, avoirdupois, and metric systems, with emphasis on the metric system of weight and volume, will be a focus. Topics include ratio and proportion, percentage, dilution and concentration, milliequivalent units, intravenous flow rates, and solving dosage problems. Prerequisites: PHRA 1301. (3:3-0)
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3.00 Credits
Mastery of skills necessary to interpret, prepare, label, and maintain records of physicians' medication orders and prescriptions in a community pharmacy is a primary focus. This course trains individuals in the administration of supply, inventory, and data entry. Topics include customer service and advisement, count and pour techniques, prescription calculations, drug selection and preparation, over-the-counter drugs, price labeling, record keeping, stock level adjustment, maintenance of new drug requests, data input and editing, and legal parameters. Pre- or corequisites: PHRA 1301, 1305, 1309. (3:2-3)
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3.00 Credits
Mastery of skills in compounding sterile products is emphasized. Topics include introduction to sterile products, hand washing techniques, pharmaceutical calculations, references, safety techniques, aseptic techniques in parenteral compounding, proper use of equipment (auto-injectors, pumps), preparation of sterile products (intravenous, irrigating ophthalmic, total parenteral nutrition, and chemotherapy drugs), and safe handling of anti-neoplastic drugs. Prerequisite: PHRA 1313. (3:2-3)
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3.00 Credits
In-depth continuation of pharmaceutical mathematics I. Addresses ratio and proportion, dilution and concentration, allegations, milliequivalent units and intravenous flow rates. Prerequisite: PHRA 1309. (3:3-0)
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