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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
A course in strengthening reading, vocabulary, and study skills. Inclusion in this class is determined by a placement test. This course is calculated into the semester gpa, financial aid hours and credit load used in determining full time status. This course does not count in overall credit hours required for graduation.
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3.00 Credits
This course, offered only in the spring semester, will offer an intensive review of diction, grammar, punctuation, sentence and paragraph structure in conjunction with reading and study skills. Inclusion in this course determined by placement.
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3.00 Credits
A study of the interaction in the major social institutions: the family, military, economy, religion, education, government / legal, leisure, mass media, peer group, community, and social stratification. How everyday life is influenced by culture, status, and role constructs. Sociology as an applied / problem solving discipline is emphasized.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to the areas of anthropology; archaeology, physical anthropology, cultural anthropology, and linguistics. Topics include: methods of dating archaeological finds; origins of humankind; theories of culture; relationship between language and culture, modern societies and anthropological concepts.
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3.00 Credits
Appreciation of how "social problems" are defined by culture. Areas studied: (1) the city (urban change); (2) healthcare; (3) family disorganization; (4) labeling of sexual behavior; (5) individual and organized crime; (6) juvenile delinquency; (7) life-cycle problems; (8) substance use - drugs, alcohol, smoking; (9) war and terrorism; (10) secrecy and privacy; (11) poverty; (12) environmental issues.
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3.00 Credits
Appreciation of how "social problems" are defined by culture. Areas studied: (1) the city (urban change); (2) healthcare; (3) family disorganization; (4) labeling of sexual behavior; (5) individual and organized crime; (6) juvenile delinquency; (7) life-cycle problems; (8) substance use - drugs, alcohol, smoking; (9) war and terrorism; (10) secrecy and privacy; (11) poverty; (12) environmental issues.
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3.00 Credits
The course introduces the student to the historical background and the fundamental principles and concepts that underlie modern social work theory and practice.
Prerequisite:
SOC 0100
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3.00 Credits
The core social theories and skills that inform social interventions. Skill and practice exercises.
Prerequisite:
SOC 0120
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3.00 Credits
Selected classical theorists. Comte, Spencer, Durkheim, Simmel, Weber, and others will be studied with an interest in their social concepts as they are employed today.
Prerequisite:
SOC 0100
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3.00 Credits
Selected modern theorists read in the original with emphasis on how a theory is constructed. Freud, Parsons, Merton, Goffman, Park, Homans, Feminist Sociologists (K. Millet, D.E. Smith, de Beauvoir, J. Mitchell, B. Hooks), and others. The application of concepts to empirical research and sociological practice.
Prerequisite:
SOC 0100
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