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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Introduction to digital systems, Boolean algebra, minimization, combinational circuits, sequential circuits, and programmable controllers. Prerequisites: ENGR 0011, MATH 0150
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3.00 Credits
Data representation, instruction formats, control, memory, input/output units, microprocessors, minicomputers, and multiprocessor systems. Prerequisite: EE 0132
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3.00 Credits
Electrical properties of solids, energy levels, semiconductor theory, diodes, and transistors. Prerequisites: EE 0031, 0132, PHYS 0201
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3.00 Credits
Diode circuits; power supply design, and analysis and design of bipolar junction transistor and field effect transistor amplifiers. Bias stability analysis, power amplifiers. Ideal operational amplifiers, complementary metal oxide semiconductor (CMOS) inverters. Corequisite: EE 0041
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3.00 Credits
Electronic measurements and circuits, including experiments on use of electronic test equipment, a variety of linear circuits, nonlinear device characteristics, operational amplifier basics, and transistor amplifier characteristics and design. Time and frequency domain methodologies are covered. Corequisites: EE 0041, EE 0257
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3.00 Credits
Designed to provide the student who has had no previous exposure to economics with an introduction to current economic issues. GE: Economics
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3.00 Credits
A basic course in microeconomics studying the allocation of resources, the distribution of income, and the mechanism of exchange in a free enterprise system under perfect and imperfect competition. Emphasis is placed on the market structure of the economy in the United States.
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3.00 Credits
An introductory course dealing with the measures of national income, an analysis of national income fluctuations, monetary, and fiscal policies, and international exchange.
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3.00 Credits
This course is designed to increase the student’s awareness of the economic problems of inner cities: ghetto life; traffic gridlocks; impact of drugs, sex, and violence in schools; experimental housing; economics and urban underclass; shrinking tax base; etc. GE: Economics
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3.00 Credits
This is a team-taught course that uses a series of current issues to introduce students to the study and understanding of finance and economics. Topics such as financial instruments, financial markets, international exchange, and financial issues in a globalized economy are explored. The challenges of financial planning are also discussed. Information from current periodicals is extensively employed. GE: Economics
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