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Course Criteria
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1.00 Credits
This course is a continuation of Physical Education 109. Beginner exercises will be reviewed and advanced options, exercises, and techniques will be taught. Prerequisite(s): PED 109 or permission by the instructor. Students may repeat this course a maximum of two times.
Prerequisite:
PED109
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1.00 Credits
The course includes advanced lifesaving techniques, CPR and first-aid training, and lifeguard training as outlined by the American Red Cross guidelines. Upon completion, students may assume the responsibilities of a lifeguard at a pool or protected open water beach. (Lifesaving at open water surf beaches is not applicable to this course.) Students may repeat this course a maximum of two times.
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1.00 Credits
A continuation of Physical Education 128. Students will learn advanced forms and techniques. In addition, they will have an introduction to traditional weapons used in the martial arts. Prerequisite(s): PED 128 or permission of the instructor. Students may repeat this course a maximum of two times.
Prerequisite:
PED128
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1.00 Credits
Students learn advanced, low-impact choreographed routines using step boxes, DynaBands, and hand weights. This course is not for beginners or for students who do not exercise regularly. Students may repeat this course a maximum of two times.
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1.00 Credits
This course is a continuation of Physical Education 245. Students learn advanced step bench aerobic routines that require greater skill level and additional fitness demands. Prerequisite(s): PED 245 or permission of the instructor. Students may repeat this course a maximum of two times.
Prerequisite:
PED245
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3.00 Credits
An introductory course focusing on some of the perennial problems of philosophy: the relation of mind and body; the nature of knowledge, freedom and determinism; the existence of God; immortality, and moral responsibility.
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3.00 Credits
A discussion-orientated critical exploration of some important value questions and conflicts. Focus is on one's responsibility to and for oneself and on conflicts arising from interpersonal and societal relationships.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to critical thinking, induction, deduction, and contemporary symbolic logic including argument symbolization, proof construction, and truth tables.
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3.00 Credits
An introductory exploration of the fundamental normative questions of politics and social life. The course examines the various methods of political and social thought, especially the range of solutions to the problems of authority, obedience, freedom, equality, and justice in the works of such theorists as Plato, Hobbes, Locke, Mill, Rousseau, and Marx.
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3.00 Credits
This course is concerned with the ethical issues arising from recent biomedical innovations or issues that might arise from future innovations. Among the topics discussed are new definitions of death and personhood, killing versus letting die, allocation of scarce medical resources, organ transplants, genetic engineering, the psychiatric control of human behavior, and new projected techniques of human sexual and asexual reproduction.
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