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Course Criteria
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2.00 Credits
1-3 credits Prerequisite: Keyboard familiarity, skills taught in SKD030. Course continues the instruction of word processing on the PC. Students learn intermediate techniques they can use when producing papers for college. Concurrently, students improve and enhance their academic writing and research skills using the word processor as a tool. Basic internet skills for academic use including using data bases available on the LCC Library website are also taught.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Prerequisite: Keyboard familiarity. This course introduces students to computer-based strategies that will allow them to represent information visually in meaningful formats. They will also learn to use the computer to organize and synthesize information from multiple sources.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Prerequisite: Placement on a screening test taken the first day in class or instructor consent. Upon successful completion of this course, students will understand basic sound patterns, phonetic rules, and selected homonyms. Students will use spelling words to write grammatically correct sentences. They will become improved spellers and resourceful spellers who can use electronic spell checkers effectively.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Throughout history, cultural views and practices regarding women's bodies have fundamentally affected women's experiences, position, and relative power in society. This class focuses on the embodied experiences of women, in what ways these experiences are socially constructed, and women's accommodation and resistance to those cultural constraints. Major areas of focus will include the politics of women's health, reproduction, sexuality, and body image, and will include crosscultural information.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits See department for topics.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Development and application of the sociological imagination, concepts, and perspectives concerning human groups, includes attention to socialization, culture, organization, stratification and societies. Examines fundamental concepts and research methodology. May be offered through Distance Learning.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Explores patterns of social inequality, or stratification, using sociological research and theory. Focuses on race, class, and gender inequality. May be offered through Distance Learning.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Sociological study of dynamic organizational nature of society through analysis of social change and major social institutions such as family, education, religion, economy, and political systems. May be offered through Distance Learning.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits Women perform nearly two-thirds of the world's work, receive onetenth of the world's income, and own less than one-hundredth of the world's property. This class is an introduction to and analysis of the issues necessary to understand women's work experience and economic position, past and present. Focus areas will include the multicultural economic and labor history of women in the US, the family and women's work, welfare/workfare issues, and women's position in the global economy.
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3.00 Credits
3 credits This course explores the relations between sport and society. While we use sociology to help make sense of sport, we also use sport to develop the ability to think sociologically about society. Subjects include sport and: values, socialization, deviance, social problems, social inequalities including class, race, and gender, social institutions including the economy, politics, mass media, and religion, and social change.
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