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  • 3.00 Credits

    A fiction writing workshop for students who have completed the introductory creative writing workshop or who can demonstrate advanced fiction writing ability. The course requires the reading of major modern and contemporary authors, weekly short writing assignments and may include the writing of an extended work of prose fiction or a linked series of short stories. Prerequisites: ENG 102, ENG 200/ENG 218, CRW 385.
  • 3.00 Credits

    See course description for ENG 395.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Creative Writing Tutorial, the capstone course for the creative writing concentration, consists of a semester (usually spring term of the senior year) in which the student works one-on-one with an English department faculty member to create a polished portfolio of poetry or fiction, including revisions of previous work and new writing. Prerequisites: three CRW workshop courses (CRW 385, 386, 387, 391, 392). Required for creative writing concentrators. Not a core course.
  • 4.00 Credits

    After an introduction to the basic concepts of computer systems (hardware and software), this course deals with the general topic of problem solving and algorithm development, as implemented with the C++ programming language. The following aspects of programming are treated: data types (scalar and structured); program structures (control structures and subprograms, block structure of the language); introduction to program development (design, coding, testing, documentation). (Offered each fall.)
  • 4.00 Credits

    This course extends the study of programming methodology introduced in CSC 171 (specification, design, coding, verification). Concepts and implementations of standard data structures are studied: linear structures (lists, including stacks and queues) and nonlinear Mathematics & Computer Science structures (trees, sets). Other topics include: recursion, the implementation and analysis of algorithms for internal searching and sorting, file merging as an external sort technique. Prerequisite: CSC 171 or CSC 252. Corequisite: MIS 385 or CSC 253/MIS 325. (Offered each spring.)
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course is a study of the COBOL programming language, with application of its features for table handling, sorting, sequential and random access file handling and modular programming. Prerequisite: prior experience with a high-level programming language.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This class covers the basics of structured programming using Visual Basic. The theory and practice of structured programming, logic, systems development, and object-oriented analysis and design are covered in a series of interactive hands-on assignments. A term project involving the development and documentation of a Visual Basic program is required. Oral, written and technical communications are required in this course. Prerequisite: MIS 301.
  • 3.00 Credits

    See course description for MIS 325.
  • 3.00 Credits

    This course covers advanced programming topics relevant to today’s programmer. Topics may include event-driven programming, concurrent programming, using application programming interfaces (APIs), programming language design, software design patterns, compilers versus translators, graphics and visual programming. Included will be the study of two to four programming languages, used to illustrate the various programming concepts. The specific programming topics and languages covered are based on instructor preferences, market demands and current programming language research. Prerequisite: CSC 172. (Offered each every other spring.)
  • 3.00 Credits

    Computing hardware architecture and software operating systems are studied in this course. Popular computing implementations are compared and contrasted with a historical perspective provided to better understand the evolution of computing environments. Architecture topics include: digital logic and digital systems; machine level representation of data; assembly level machine organization; memory system organization; I/O and communication; and CPU implementation. Operating system topics include: operating system principles; concurrency; scheduling and dispatch; virtual memory; device management; security and protection; and file systems and naming. Prerequisite: CSC 172. (Offered every other spring.)
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