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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This seminar course explores how meaning, message and story are conveyed through images. Students will learn about storyboarding, story elements and organizations, archetypes, visual and perception theory, the organization of visual elements to create meaning, the history of the image, typography, visual imagery in cinema and the use of the image in digital media today.
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3.00 Credits
CertificationThis course will help the student to prepare Apple Certified Pro in Final Cut Pro exam. Digital Media Production teaches student basic camera components, project organization and management, basic video production values such as story elements, lighting design, camera use, framing, and camera angles. Students will also learn the fundamentals of digital editing software, file organization and management, sound integration, and DVD creation.
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3.00 Credits
PrerequisitesDMP 101 CertificationThis course will help the student to prepare Apple Certified Pro in Final Cut Pro exam. Digital Media Production teaches student basic video production values such as scriptwriting, story elements, lighting design, camera use, camera angles, project management and the fundamentals digital video capture and editing basics on Final Cut Pro.
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3.00 Credits
PrerequisitesDMP 102 This is a introduction course in digital signal processing, the fundamental elements of digital audio signal processing, such as sinusoids, spectra, the Discrete Fourier Transform (DFT), digital filters, transforms, transfer-function analysis, and basic Fourier analysis in the discrete-time case. The labs focus on practical applications of the theory, with emphasis on working with waveforms and spectra. This course will teach students will produce live web casts (capturing and transmission of live coursesin Windows Media, RealMedia, quicktime and MPEG formats as well as convert traditional video to almost any digital format including CD-ROM and DVD and publish sound files to the web.
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3.00 Credits
This class develops media literacy skills, so that students can critique the basic dynamics that shape current media programming and give a clearer perspective of the boundaries between the real world and the simulated media world. This cutting-edge approach, which encourages the acquisition of strong knowledge structures and analytical skills, includes broadcast (television and radio), print, and digital media. The class examines the history of the modern communications industry, the regulatory process that governs what it can do, and the technical process that produces content and scheduling.
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3.00 Credits
Fundamentals of blueprint reading as applied to specific problems. Designed for pre-engineers, draftsmen, machine operators, machine repairmen, electronic technicians, inspectors and supervisors.
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4.00 Credits
PrerequisiteDRT 101 Fundamentals of Mechanical Drawing Basic course of students with minimal high school experience. Emphasizes use of instruments, introduction to drafting, introduction to drafting practices, geometric construction, lettering, line work, orthographic projection and three-dimensional visualization from two-view drawings, section cutting, auxiliary views and dimensioning systems .
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3.00 Credits
PrerequisiteDRT 102 This course is focused on detailed drawings of a variety of parts, based on projection techniques, sectional views, threads and fasteners, dimensional fundamentals and other conventional drawing practices. Students will execute charts and graphs for data display and analysis and practice required instrument skills to produce ink drawings.
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3.00 Credits
PrerequisiteDRT 102 Occupational oriented solutions to descriptive geometry problems involving points, lines, planes and single and double curved surfaces and their intersections.
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2.00 Credits
PrerequisiteDRT 101, DRT 102 The theoretical and practical application of dimensioning and tolerance, as used in the world wide industry for the production of parts. GDT is the standard that defines clear and consistent application for precise interpretation of tolerances on geometric and characteristics. The standard is intended for the more advanced engineer, drafter, product designer, machinists, or inspector. At present, this is a Prerequisite in the Automotive Industry for employment in design, engineering, or manufacturing. Emphasis is placed upon building a solid foundation in understanding dimensioning and tolerance terms, as well as definitions and concepts as stated in ANSI Y 14.5 M 1982 and ASME Y 14.5 M 1994 (two CH) .
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