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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Three hours lecture. Prerequisite: MBA status or permission of the instructor. Emphasis on accounting data used by managers in decision making. The course uses a textbook and cases. Among topics covered are relevant cost identifi cation in decision making, contribution margin approach and capital budgeting.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours seminar. Prerequisite: ACTG 414. An expanded study of auditing and attestation services and technology topics. It is designed to further expose students to the prerequisite knowledge tested on the Auditing and Attestation section of the Uniform CPA Examination. Audit teams will be utilized to conduct an audit simulation based on a cycle approach.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours seminar. Prerequisites: ACTG 313 and ACTG 314. Study of the practice of accounting, financial reporting and analysis of financial performance for corporate entities. Emphasis on research and analysis of advanced financial topics of current interest.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: MBA status or permission of instructor. Examines topics of special interest in accounting areas not covered in current graduate course offerings.
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Hours and credits to be arranged. Prerequisites: MBA status and permission of the instructor, adviser and Directed Study form submitted to the Graduate College.
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1.00 - 6.00 Credits
Hours and credits to be arranged with the approval of the student's thesis supervisor, adviser, department chairperson and the dean of the Graduate College.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours lecture. This course serves as the introduction to the Anthropological Sciences and thus to the biocultural origin and evolution of the human species and human societies worldwide. It includes a survey of human and nonhuman primate evolution and prehistory (including the methods and theories used by anthropologists to illuminate these subjects) and the emergence of fully modern humans in terms of their behavior and culture. The more recent evolution of societies as diverse as small-scale hunter-gatherers to more complex civilizations is also considered in the context of the biocultural factors that have shaped their development. Finally, students will be introduced to the range of modern applications in anthropological sciences, ranging from cultural resource management to forensic investigation.
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2.00 Credits
Two hour seminar. Prerequisites: ANSC 101 or permission of instructor. This seminar serves as an Introduction to the Anthropological Sciences major and prepares students for success in the major. Topics will include the nature of scientific inquiry in Anthropology as well as career options and resume preparation. Students will learn, through locating and reading the primary literature, to critically evaluate research in the discipline and receive the background and training necessary to conduct their own original research.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours lecture. Prerequisite: ANSC 101, or permission of instructor. Serves as an introduction to the field of forensic anthropology, the identification and analysis of human remains in a legal context. It includes a brief study of the major bones of the human body, their growth, development, variation, and initial treatment and examination. Through lectures, readings, and discussions, emphasis is placed on the major methods and techniques forensic anthropologists use to identify unknown human remains for law enforcement, including preliminary discussions of determination of age, sex, ancestry, and stature from the human skeleton. It also includes discussions of determination of time since death (or postmortem interval), manner of death, as well as differentiating antemortem, perimortem, and postmortem trauma. The role of the forensic anthropologist in mass disasters and human rights abuse cases is also considered.
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3.00 Credits
Three hours lecture. Prerequisites: ANSC 101, or permission of instructor. An introduction to the major methods of forensic archaeology, the application of archaeological theory and method to crime scene investigation and recovery. A focus will be on field methods for search and recovery of human remains and other forensic evidence, including mapping and geophysical remote sensing methods, initial recognition and excavation of human and other forensic remains, and collection of soil, botanical, and entomological evidence. Through a combination of lecture and fi eld exercises, the course will also consider the major variables which affect recognition and recovery of forensic remains, including the taphonomic effects of weathering, natural decay, water, fire, faunal and floral degradation.
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