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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Individual directed study. Instructor approval required.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to web-based technology and applications emphasizing development. Topics may include: client- and server-side programming; web services; e-business models; security and privacy issues; the provisioning, development, and deployment of web sites, including dynamic web content generation and the management of database back ends; cloud computing; legal and business aspects; and relevant copyright law. Restricted to graduate students.
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3.00 Credits
This course will provide students with training in identifying and dealing with ethical and legal issues in engineering and technology. The primary objective is to teach students to approach engineering problems ethically, that is, they will learn to better understand how real-world engineering issues can and should be analyzed for their ethical context. Topics may include responsibility, duty, right, wrong, reasonable care, permissibility, defensibility, justifiability, occupational role, loyalty, professionalism, conflict of interest, cost/benefit analysis, whistle-blowing, confidentiality, agency topics, professional ethical standards, risk management, disruptive technologies (nano-technology or bio-technology), globalization, privacy issues, copyright issues, honesty, public interest, hacking, and control of the internet. Prerequisite: Departmental approval.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to software engineering processes including requirements elicitation, definition, specification, and validation; design notations, styles, and issues including concurrency, component distribution, and data persistence; software construction, including automation tools, configuration management, programming standards, and documentation; verification, including testing and coverage; maintenance, including reverse engineering, refactoring, and code reading; and professional responsibility, including ethics, privacy, security, codes of ethics, legal issues, and computer crime and law enforcement. Restricted to graduate students.
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3.00 Credits
Software requirements engineering. Topics may include: functional and non-functional requirements; specification styles including informal, test-case documentation, and formal specifications; elicitation techniques, requirements maintenance, configuration management, cost estimations, cost negotiation, feasibility, metrics, and tools support. Restricted to graduate students.
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3.00 Credits
Design of software systems. Topics may include: mapping requirements to architecture and design; iterative and incremental design methods; software architectures; software frameworks; design models; design notations; mapping of design to implementation design validation; design maintenance; and design metrics. Restricted to graduate students.
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3.00 Credits
Software validation and verification. Topics may include: limits of testing, professional responsibility and liability, testing, management of the testing process, automated testing tools, coverage metrics, software quality, non-testing quality assurance, static and dynamic validation techniques, inspections, and audits. Restricted to graduate students.
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3.00 Credits
Management of software development. Topics may include professional practices, process improvement, risk management, project planning, project staffing, schedule and cost estimation, project budget development, project tracking, contracts and liability, intellectual property, freedom of information, project retrospectives, decision-making, earned-value tracking, defect tracking, and project leadership. Restricted to graduate students.
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1.00 Credits
DANC 1151 Dance Performance (0-0-10)
(TCCN DANC 1151)
Rehearsal, performance, and production assignments in Dance Program-sponsored concerts Repeatable for credit.
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3.00 Credits
DANC 3303 History of Dance as a Performing Art (3-0)
A survey of the evolution of theatrical dance. Relevant social, political, and artistic movements are considered along with choreographic styles and traditions, and the philosophies and contributions of major dance artists.
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