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Course Criteria
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5.00 Credits
5 cr. Continues instruction at the level of Emergency Medical Technician Basic. Includes all skills necessary for the individual to provide emergency medical care as outlined by scope of practice established by the Oregon Board of Medical Examiners. Serves as the second in a series of courses making up a national and state EMS training program. Failure of this course will require retaking the full sequence of EMT-Basic courses. Prerequisite: Successful completion of EMT 151. Must meet standards as set by the Oregon State EMS Office for certification which includes health, driving, immunization, and criminal record check.
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5.00 Credits
5 cr. Covers intermediate emergency medical procedures. Includes the roles and responsibilities of the technician, patient assessment, and procedures related to airway, oxygen, ventilation, shock, intravenous, intraosseous, and ECG monitoring, defibrillation, pharmacology, and field protocols. Failure of this course will require retaking the full sequence of EMT-Intermediate courses. Prerequisite: Completion of placement testing for writing skills at WR 049 or higher, reading at RD 090 or higher and math at MTH 020 or higher. Current Oregon EMT Basic certification and 80% or better on pre-test. Must have a high school diploma, GED, or equivalent.
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5.00 Credits
5 cr. Continues study of intermediate medical procedures for technicians. Gives students successfully completing Part 2 a recommendation to the Oregon Health Division for the certification process. Failure of this course will require retaking the full sequence of EMT-Intermediate courses. Prerequisite: EMT 167A.
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3.00 Credits
3 class hrs/wk, 3 cr. Features critical analysis and appreciation of fiction through the reading of narratives originally written in English as well as works in translation. Employs chronological, genre, stylistic, or thematic approaches to content to introduce the short story, the novel or novella, and basic literary terminology and concepts.
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3.00 Credits
3 class hrs/wk, 3 cr. Features critical analysis and appreciation of drama from the classical Greek to contemporary periods written by an international range of playwrights. Introduces concepts and types of dramatic literature, including comedy and tragedy as well as the elements and conventions of drama as both a literary and performing art.
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3.00 Credits
3 class hrs/wk, 3 cr. Features critical analysis and appreciation of poetry originally written in English as well as works in translation by major poets from various cultural backgrounds. Introduces poetic terminology, concepts and principles, and explores a variety of the poetry's structures and types.
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3.00 Credits
3 class hrs/wk, 3 cr. Features discussion and analysis of histories, stories, poems, and plays of the Western and non-Western world between 2000 B.C.E. and 1450.
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3.00 Credits
3 class hrs/wk, 3 cr. Features discussion and analysis of literary works of the Western and non-Western world between 1450-1850.
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3.00 Credits
3 class hrs/wk, 3 cr. Features discussion and analysis of literary works of the Western and non-Western world of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
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3.00 Credits
3 class hrs/wk, 3 cr. Surveys selected Shakespearean tragedies, emphasizing dramatic structure, characterization, imagery, and theme. Uses critical essays to explore these plays and to provide background on the nature of tragedy.
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