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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Covers the roles and responsibilities of the paramedic, emergency medical services systems, medical-legal considerations, major incident response, hazardous materials awareness, and stress management. Off ered as needed.
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2.00 Credits
Covers ambulance operations, laws, maintenance and safety, emergency response driving, and route planning. Off ered as needed.
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2.00 Credits
Covers principles of therapeutic communication, via verbal, written, and electronic modes in the provision of EMS; documentation of the elements of patient assessment, care, and transport; communication systems; radio types; reports; codes; and correct communication techniques. Sp
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3.00 Credits
See CWE-Cooperative Work Experience.
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16.00 Credits
Off ers fi rst term of a three-term course, which includes EMT296, EMT297, and EMT280F. Focuses on patient assessment; airway/ventilation; pathophysiology of shock; general pharmacology; and respiratory, cardiovascular, neurological, behavioral, and acute abdominal emergencies. Applies didactic knowledge to campus-based laboratory skills practice and clinical patient care in the hospital setting. Failure of this course will require retaking the full sequence of Paramedic courses (EMT296, EMT297 and EMT280F). Prerequisite: fourthterm standing in the Emergency Medical Technology program. F, Sp
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16.00 Credits
Off ers second part of a three-term course, which includes EMT296, EMT297, and EMT280F. Focuses on anaphylactic, toxicological, environmental, geriatric, pediatric, obstetric, gynecologic, neonatal, and endocrine emergencies; infectious diseases; and trauma care. Applies didactic knowledge to campus-based laboratory skills practice and clinical patient care in the hospital setting. Failure of this course will require retaking the full sequence of Paramedic courses (EMT296, EMT297, and EMT280F). W, Su
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3.00 Credits
Features critical analysis and appreciation of fi ction through the reading of narratives originally written in English as well as works in translation. Employs a selection of chronological, genre, stylistic, or thematic approaches to content to introduce the short story, the novel, novella, and basic literary terminology and concepts. F, W, Sp, Su
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3.00 Credits
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. F, W, Sp, Su
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3.00 Credits
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. F, W, Sp, Su
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3.00 Credits
Features discussion and analysis of histories, stories, poems, and plays of the Western and non-Western world between 2000 B.C.E. and 1450. F
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