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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
provides a survey of keyboard music from the Renaissance era through the present. Designed for music majors. Prerequisites: MUSC 206, MUSC 223 and permission of instructor.
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2.00 Credits
provides students with the pedagogical techniques and materials required for the direction of singers in large and small choral ensembles. The course places an emphasis on vocal technique, diction, rehearsal methods and repertoire selection for choral groups. Prerequisites: MUSC 206 and MUSC 361.
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3.00 Credits
a half recital or a full recital (to be determined by the applied teacher) is intended to be the capstone performing experience for the Music Major. The recital allows students to master a select repertoire in their applied area and to perform it in a public venue.
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3.00 Credits
provides the student with advanced choral conducting techniques, score reading and interpretive skills. Students utilize more complex and difficult choral scores, analyzing and preparing them for rehearsal and performance. Students may rehearse and perform with one of the University choral ensembles as part of the course. Prerequisite: MUSC 361.
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2.00 Credits
provides students with the concepts and materials necessary for successful piano and keyboard teaching at the intermediate and advanced levels. Business aspects, teaching methods, ensemble literature, lesson planning, and software programs appropriate for intermediate and advanced students will be included.
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3.00 Credits
is a title given to a course which covers specific themes, practices, and subject content not currently offered in the curriculum. This course is directed primarily to student majoring in the subject area and could be used to complete major requirements. The course will provide an in depth study of a specific topic. Prerequisites will vary.
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1.00 Credits
discusses the basis of Nuclear Medicine Department administration, management, and communication issues. Career skills are developed through student participation and seminars. Professional approach, patient care guidelines, medical ethics, communication skills, and medico legal considerations are discussed. The interview process, resume preparation, and other related skills are also developed.
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3.00 Credits
is a lecture series of topics of current interest selected and presented by nuclear medicine physicians. Emphasis is on clinical interpretation of organ systems pathophysiology as reviewed by the practicing nuclear medicine physician.
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2.00 Credits
- This clinical Practicum addresses the principles of Radiation Detection which include the design and function of instrumentation used in the nuclear medicine laboratory. Principles and theory of radiation measurement, event counting activity, exposure, absorbed energy dose, biological effects, unit analysis, absolute and comparative counting, detector types, scintillation detectors, pulse height spectra, detection efficiency, resolving time and statistics are discussed.
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3.00 Credits
addresses basic facts and physical principles associated with the atom, nucleus and quantum physics related to radioactive decay. The theory of electron shells and its relation to the properties of the elements and the production of characteristic X and gamma rays, anger electrons and Bremstrahlung; the nucleus and modes of nuclear decay; radiation dosimetry, interaction with ionizing radiation with matter, and performance characteristics of gamma cameras are discussed.
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