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Course Criteria
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1.00 - 12.00 Credits
This course is used to transfer approved courses from other colleges and universities.
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3.00 Credits
Introductory survey of the Mexican American experience in the United States, with special reference to New Mexico. Exploration of historical, political, social and cultural dimensions.
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3.00 Credits
This general survey course introduces students to Chicana women's diverse and changing social statuses from the times of Indigenous sovereignties preceding European interventions in Mexico to the 21st century. The purpose is to familiarize students with the diversity and complexity of Chicana experiences and to introduce some key issues central to those experiences. Course materials will highlight Chicana/Mexican/Indigenous women's attempts to challenge notions of inferiority and rationalizations for dominance through actions and power contestations and, in turn, contextualize these actions socially, economically and politically. In Mexico and the U.S., women served as agents of social and political change in the formation of the society and the state.
Prerequisite:
Reading & Writing Skills 1
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3.00 Credits
This class introduces you to the basic principles of learning, including cognition, motivation, and assessment. You will examine the relationships between theory, research, and practice in learning, memory, child development, motivation, and educational assessment for the school setting. This course will provide the student with concepts and principles of educational psychology that will form a framework for thinking about learning and instruction and how theories of learning are connected to classroom situations.
Prerequisite:
Reading and Writing Skills 2
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3.00 Credits
This course will introduce non-science majors to the basic chemistry required to understand topics of current interest affecting their communities, such as air and water quality, global climate change, use of fossil fuels, nuclear power, and alternative energy sources, to illustrate chemical principles, acquaint students with scientific methods, and to critically evaluate scientific claims as presented in the media and in other communicative forums.
Prerequisite:
Reading and Writing Skills 2
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1.00 Credits
This course will introduce non-science majors to the basic chemistry required to understand topics of current interest affecting their communities, such as air and water quality, global climate change, use of fossil fuels, nuclear power, and alternative energy sources. Experiments will illustrate chemical principles and acquaint students with scientific methods, data processing, critical thinking and scientific writing.
Prerequisite:
Reading and Writing Skills 2
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3.00 Credits
This course will introduce non-science majors to the basic chemistry required to understand topics of interest to the artistic community, such as solubility, color and preparation of pigments, electrochemistry, chemical safety and toxicity. The course will illustrate chemical principles, acquaint students with scientific methods, allow them to critically evaluate scientific claims as presented in the media and in other communicative forums, and emphasize the creation of works of art using their knowledge of chemistry.
Prerequisite:
IRW 0980 or appropriate placement scores
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1.00 Credits
Chemistry in Art Laboratory is a laboratory course designed to complement the theory and concepts presented in the Chemistry in Art lecture component. The laboratory allows students to develop basic chemical laboratory techniques for obtaining and analyzing experimental observations pertaining to chemistry and art using diverse methods and equipment.
Prerequisite:
IRW 0980 or appropriate placement scores
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3.00 Credits
This course covers qualitative and quantitative areas of non-organic general chemistry for non-science majors and some health professions. Students will learn and apply principles pertaining, but not limited to, atomic and molecular structure, the periodic table, acids and bases, mass relationships, and solutions.
Prerequisite:
Reading and Writing Skills 2 + Math Skills 2 Alg
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1.00 Credits
Introduction to Chemistry Laboratory is a laboratory course designed to complement the theory and concepts presented in the Introduction to Chemistry lecture component, and will introduce students to techniques for obtaining and analyzing experimental observations pertaining to chemistry using diverse methods and equipment.
Prerequisite:
Reading and Writing Skills 2 + Math Skills 2 Alg
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