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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CIP 101 or CIP 104 or consent of instructor. This course will introduce students to programming with the COBOL language using structured programming techniques. 3 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: COER 112, NETW 166, or consent of the instructor. The student will learn techniques for creating customized scripts in both the Linux and Windows environment. This course provides students with the skills to read, write, maintain, and debug Linux shell scripting and Windows scripting for Systems Administration. 3 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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3.00 - 4.00 Credits
The student will learn Web site development with the three methods that have been used sine Web design first began: hand-coding HTML using a text editor; building Web pages using a WYSIWYG editor like Dreamweaver; and using the most modern method, a Content Management System that separates design from content while making it easy for non-technical users to update a site. Topics include: design principles, formatting Web pages with cascading style sheets, server-side vs. client-side technologies, testing Web pages with multiple Web browsers, and Web servers. In addition, the student will learn how to stay current on W3C standards for Web page development. 4 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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2.00 - 3.00 Credits
The student will learn Web site development with how Web design first began: hand-coding HTML using a text editor. Students will also format Web pages with cascading style sheets using a text editor. Topics include: design principles, formatting Web pages with cascading style sheets, server-side vs. client-side technologies, testing Web pages with multiple Web browsers. In addition, the student will learn how to stay current on W3C standards for Web page development. 2 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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2.00 - 3.00 Credits
The student will learn Web site development using Dreamweaver (an (HTML Editor) and will learn the concept of maintaining a site using Content Management System software. Topics include: Dreamweaver views, CSS, Layout, Assets, and Behaviors in Dreamweaver. Students will learn how to create and manage a web site within Dreamweaver. 2 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: BE 170 or CIP 170 and either CIP 101 or CIP 104 or permission of instructor. This course will provide students with the knowledge and skills needed to develop Web application using client-side scripting with Java Script. An overview is given on the constructs of the scripting language such as functions, arrays, and control structures. Topics covered include session variables, client-side vs. server-side scripting, DOM, validation, objects, cookies, and DHTML. 3 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CIP 101 or CIP 104 or consent of instructor. The student will use Microsoft's Visual Web Developer to create interactive Web applications with VB or C#. Topics include: Web forms, controls, site navigation, events and postback, validation, stylesheets, master pages, state management, testing and deployment. Students completing this coursewill have at least one fully functional ASP.NET Web application for their portfolio. 3 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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1.00 Credits
The student will develop XML documents and learn the related technologies. Topics include: creating valid and well-formed XML documents, DTD's, XML schemas, XML editors (software), XSLT and applications using XML. 1 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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1.00 - 3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Working knowledge of Microsoft Windows OS. Develop an understanding of and ability to use Microsoft project in managing projects. Case studies will be Information Technology focused projects. 1 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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3.00 - 4.00 Credits
Prerequisite: CIP 101 or CIP 104 or consent of instructor. This course uses the latest version of the Visual Basic programming language to create, GUI-based (Windows) applications, applying effective development strategies based on object-oriented programming. Topics include: controls, methods, events, array processing, classes, text file processing, graphics and multimedia, working with multiple forms, creating a setup program, and defensive programming with error trapping. 4 lecture hours; 0 lab hours per week.
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