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Course Criteria
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2.00 Credits
Presents an overview of quality methods as they relate to nanotechnology. Emphasizes statistical process control (SPC), design of experiments (DOE), gage repeatability and reliability (R&R), statistical significance, correlation, teambased problem solving, failure mode analysis, theory of inventive thinking (TRIZ), graphical statistical analysis, analysis of variance (ANOVA), and an introduction to ISO certification. Prerequisite: MTH 165, NAN 211, NAN 221, and PHY 122 with grades of C or better.
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3.00 Credits
Provides experimental exploration of an authentic scientific research topic under the supervision of a faculty member. This laboratory course is designed to teach the principles and practices of modern experimental nanotechnology. Credit is contingent on the submission of a final report. Consent of the program coordinator is necessary to register for this course.
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6.00 Credits
Applies and expands nanoscience skills and knowledge in a research or industrial setting. Conducted jointly by Harper College and a research institution or industrial partner which will provide students authentic experiences using nanoscience instrumentation. Students must complete a minimum of 200 contact hours and submit a final report to earn 6 semester credit hours. Prerequisite or corequisite: NAN 241 with a grade of C or better, prior consultation with instructor, and consent of program coordinator.
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1.00 Credits
Introduces the student to the use of a graphical interface for the Windows operating system. Includes the use of the graphical interface and some of the built-in desktop and system accessories.
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2.00 Credits
Introduces a student to the use of a graphical interface for the operating system. Includes the use of the graphical interface, built-in desktop accessories, and built-in system accessories. Covers several features of application packages when used in a Windows environment, networking considerations and switching between applications. Provides students with an introduction to the command-line environment, command-line file management, directory management, disk management, and the use of wildcards and options. Also introduces batch file concepts.
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2.00 Credits
Provides students with knowledge and hands-on experience in installing Linux, using the command line to manage a personal Linux workstation, and using a Graphical User Interface when appropriate. Students learn to manage files and file permissions, use the vim editor, and are introduced to operating system concepts such as file systems, pipes, filters, redirection, and processes.
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2.00 Credits
Provides students with experience installing, configuring, maintaining, upgrading diagnosing, troubleshooting, and networking recent and current personal computer hardware.(NOTE: Recommended preparation: CIS 101, NET 101, NET 106 or equivalent experience.)
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2.00 Credits
Provides students with experience installing, configuring, upgrading, diagnosing, troubleshooting, and networking recent and current personal computer operating systems. (NOTE: Recommended preparation: CIS 101, NET 101, NET 106 or equivalent experience.)
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2.00 Credits
Provides students with a comprehensive introduction to local area networks. Includes the OSI model, media, topologies, protocols, network maintenance, upgrades, troubleshooting, and current network operating systems.
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2.00 Credits
Provides students with a detailed examination of Internet addressing and protocols. Includes IP addressing, routing, IP, ICMP, ARP, TCP, UDP, DHCP, DNS, HTTP, FTP, and SMTP. Uses protocol analyzers to monitor and examine network traffic. (NOTE: Recommended preparation: NET 121 or equivalent experience.)
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