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Course Criteria
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisites: PHYS 02300 This course introduces modern experimental techniques commonly used in physics. Experimental results will be correlated with existing theories. Technical writing skills will be developed and evaluated.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: PHYS 02300 This course is aimed to expose students to advanced physics topics that are important for their career development and their involvement with faculty research. The topics include, but are not limited to, Solid State Physics, Atomic and Molecular Physics, Occupational Physics, Special Relativity, and Elementary Particles. One topic from the above list will be chosen each time the course is offered.
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Students consider public administration principles and organizations, internal governmental administrative structures, the interactions between organizations and their environments, personnel and policy procedures, administrative communication methods, and other management techniques. This course may not be offered annually.
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4.00 Credits
Prerequisites: BIOL 01101 and MATH 01131 and PHYS 02201 and CHEM 07201 and CHEM 09250 This course covers the topics of physical chemistry and their applications in biochemistry. Topics include thermodynamics, kinetics and spectroscopy. This course also provides laboratory experience in physical methods that apply to biological systems.
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3.00 Credits
Professors who teach this course will normally focus on some, but not all, of the following topics: political and governmental structures, functions, and processes; political behavior; public law and public policy; and political values or philosophies.
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3.00 Credits
This course focuses on the American Federal government, emphasizing the structure, operation and processes of our political system. Coverage will include political values as they are reflected in major public policies.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides students with an understanding of Western political thought from Plato to Karl Marx. It surveys Western political theory and analyzes such major concepts as order, justice, freedom, authority, power and political obligation.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: POSC 07110 This course studies legislatures, executives, judicial systems and bureaucrats in the working of state and local government and the influence of political parties, interest groups, and elections on government policy. It examines inter-governmental relations and the role of state and local government in the federal system. This course may not be offered annually.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: POSC 07110 This course presents a comparative analysis of the fundamental law, political institutions, policies and processes and their relationship to political culture in Britain, France, the C.I.S. and a selected Third World country.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: POSC 07110 This course compares the functions of U.S. political parties, interest groups, and political movements in recruiting and nominating candidates for public office, supporting campaigns and elections, organizing and staffing government, representing and shaping public opinion, and rationalizing and mobilizing the vote. The U.S. system is compared to the systems of other countries. Special attention is given to the civil rights movement, the reform of the presidential election process, and the candidate-centered professional campaign in the decline of the influence of the political parties.
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