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Course Criteria
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2.00 Credits
Capstone is an evaluative course which allows students to document their learn ing and provide an assessment of their personal learning and the effectiveness of the Corrections Program. To be taken concurrently with CORR 496. Pre: Completion of all other required CORR courses. Fall, Spring
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1.00 - 12.00 Credits
The internship in Corrections is designed to provide opportunities to apply class room learning, to practice and enhance skills, to experience professional so cial iza tion, and to explore a career. It also serves as a vehicle for the student to become more aware of personal strengths and to identify areas in which further growth is needed. Pre: Consent Fall, Spring
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1.00 - 6.00 Credits
A maximum of six credits is applicable toward a single major in the department; three credits toward a minor. Pre: Consent
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4.00 Credits
Students will learn programming skills in object-oriented C++. Students will design algorithms and learn how to write, compile, run and debug programs that include selection and repetition structures, functions, and arrays. Study skills and professional development will be addressed. Pre: MATH 112 (College Algebra) Fall, Spring
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4.00 Credits
Continues the exploration of introductory Computer Science begun in CS 110. Focus is on developing basic knowledge of algorithms, programming skills and problem solving techniques. Topics include recursion, sorting, linked lists, stacks and queues. Pre: MATH 115 or MATH 113, and CS 110 Fall, Spring
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2.00 Credits
This course provides an introduction to programming using C++. Emphasis on structured programming concepts, with a brief discussion of object-oriented programming. Control structures, expressions, input/output, arrays and functions. Pre: MATH 113 or MATH 115 Fall, Spring
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4.00 Credits
Course will explore the interplay between science fi ction (1950's - present) and the development of artifi cial intelligence. Turing tests, agents, senses, problem solving, game playing, information retrieval, machine translation and robotics. Fall, Spring GE-1C, GE-6
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2.00 Credits
C++ syntax for students who already know Java. Specifi c topics: data types, operators, functions, arrays, string operations, pointers, structures, classes, constructors, destructors, pointers as class members, static classes, "this" pointer,operator functions, data type conversions, inheritance, polymorphism, and dynamic binding. Pre: Consent Variable
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4.00 Credits
Investigates effi cient data structuring techniques to support a variety of operations in different problem scenarios. Topics include binary trees, binary search trees, multiway search trees, hashing and hash tables, priority queues, and algorithm analysis for best, worst and average cases. Pre: CS 111 and MATH 121 Fall, Spring
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces students to assembly language programming and basic machine structures. Topics include number systems; basic central processing unit (CPU) organization, instruction formats, addressing modes and their use with a variety of data structures; and parameter passing techniques. Pre: CS 110 and EE 106 Fall, Spring
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