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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Study and evaluation of methods and materials for teaching dance in a studio setting. The topics examined include: how to build a dance class, what to teach and methodology involved. Practical application of the methods will be emphasized.
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3.00 Credits
Investigates why creativity is important to us personally and globally. How creativity works and how culture evolves as domains are transformed by creative individuals will be examined. Included will be experimentation with different ways to develop and enhance our own creativity, with a focus on how creativity can benefit our artistic expression as well as every other area of our lives.
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1.00 - 6.00 Credits
Terms and hours to be arranged. A means by which students may earn lower-division credit for such learning activities as intern programs and writing research reports on small business firms and international conglomerates.
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4.00 Credits
An issues-oriented introduction to economics that covers markets, unemployment, inflation, market power, the environment, crime, discrimination, health care, education, poverty, social security, international trade and economic development. Includes intensive writing.
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4.00 Credits
Introduction to consumer and producer behavior and the market process. Theories of production, cost and perfectly and imperfectly competitive market structures will be covered as well as the role of the public sector, input markets and contemporary economic issues such as health care and the environment.
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4.00 Credits
Introduction to the macroeconomic behavior of the economy. Includes national income accounting, business cycles, growth, recession, inflation, unemployment and monetary-fiscal policies. Current issues in international trade and international finance are covered. Prerequisite: EC 201
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4.00 Credits
Provides the student with a rigorous grounding in the methods and techniques of modern micro-economic analysis. The course develops the standard neoclassical theories of consumption, exchange and production under the assumption of perfect competition and full information. Situations in which information and markets are imperfect, including price discrimination, monopolistic competition, oligopoly, monopoly and cartels are also covered. Prerequisites: EC 202, MTH 111 and sophomore standing
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4.00 Credits
Focuses upon the behavior of the economy as a whole. Emphasizes the forces and interactions that naturally determine the levels of - and changes in the levels of- employment, aggregate output, interest rates and prices in a market economy; policy instruments for manipulating those levels; and policy problems. Prerequisite: EC 201, 202, MTH 111, EC 311, and sophomore standing
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4.00 Credits
Basic methods of economic analysis; data sources, collection and presentation; report writing; projects to develop these skills.
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4.00 Credits
In-depth coverage of money, its forms, how it is created by banks and the Treasury, how its supply is regulated by the Federal Reserve System and its vital role in the functioning of the macroeconomy. Prerequisites: EC 201, 202 or consent of instructor
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