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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to Futures and Options contracts and markets for both commodities and financial assets. The course is designed to introduce you to the economic rationale of derivative markets as well as to provide you with the concepts and tools for practical operation in these markets. The course is designed to provide an integrated view of deferred delivery markets with a balanced blending of concepts, empirical evidence, and practical tools for options and futures trading. Utilization of option and futures contracts, as vehicles for investment and risk-shifting, will be explained. Spreads, hedges, and arbitrages will also be taught. Prerequisite: FINC 210
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3.00 Credits
Experiential Learning course focusing on group dynamics. Under the supervision of a faculty advisor, students will work on a company-specific project in the capacity of a smallgroup consulting team, collecting and analyzing data and information, considering alternative feasible solutions, and delivering team recommendations. Prerequisites: Approval by the department chair.
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3.00 Credits
An advanced elective course which permits the student to apply theoretical knowledge in a real world setting and gain supervised on-the-job experience. Term paper is required. Prerequisites: Approval by the department chair.
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3.00 Credits
An advanced elective course which permits the student to apply theoretical knowledge in a real world setting and gain supervised on-the-job experience. Term paper is required. Prerequisites: Approval by the department chair.
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3.00 Credits
This is a survey course of American history from the colonial period, the Revolution to the establishment of the Republic, the first half of the nineteenth century, up through the period of the Civil War, ending in 1865. The impact of geography on the growth of the Republic is considered. The political, economic, and cultural evolution of the American people is examined, providing the student with historical foundations for an informed political awareness of present-day issues.
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3.00 Credits
This is a survey course of American history from the end of the Civil War to the present: the period of the Reconstruction, the industrialization of the United States, the emergence of the country as a Great Power, U.S. role in the twentieth century are considered. The political, economic, and cultural evolution of the American people is examined, providing the student with historical foundations for an informed political awareness of present-day issues.
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1.00 Credits
This one credit course is a survey of the political, economic and social history of the state of New York beginning with its colonial history. Special attention will be paid to the legacy of the American Indians, such as the Iroquois confederacy, the early Dutch settlers of the colonial period, the industrial growth of the state, the emergence of New York as the financial center of the world, and New York state's role in national politics.
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3.00 Credits
A survey of the role of African American people in American history from African beginnings to the present time. Topics include: African American response to the major political, social and economic changes in America; the contributions of outstanding African American to American history; the interaction of the African American and majority environments; and the black movements that help shape African American consciousness.
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3.00 Credits
A survey of the life of the Jewish people from their beginnings in the Near East to the mid- twentieth century. Attention is focused on major migrations, leading personalities, and historic movements.
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3.00 Credits
The history of Western technology is surveyed with emphasis on technological change since the Industrial Revolution. Attention is given to both the positive and the negative aspects of technological change. The various interrelationships among technological change and other aspects of history are highlighted, as is the phenomenon of the geometrical progression of technological changes.
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