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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course is a continuation of DV I, intended to expand upon the skills and techniques introduced in DV I, and adding more advanced editing techniques to the student's skill set. Techniques such as multi-camera production, compositing, green screen, and videoblogging are introduced. Students are encouraged to prepare film festival submissions. The course presents an outline of cinematic communication history. This course has a lab fee.
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3.00 Credits
An introduction to conflict management that balances coverage of major theories with practice in communication skills and conflict intervention techniques (e.g., assertiveness training, mediation, negotiation). Focus on experiential learning, with heavy emphasis on written analysis that includes analytical journaling and analysis of scientific journal articles.
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3.00 Credits
Experience in an applied communication field. Program tailored to individual student's needs and interests.
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3.00 - 4.00 Credits
This is a single project course tailored to the individual interests, vision and production decisions of the student. The course is adapted for individual mentoring and one-to-one faculty-student interaction. Projectbased instruction explores the advanced needs of a student while honing digital production and editing skills. Features of the course includes single short production, extensive group critiques, field trips and guest lectures, study of advanced motion graphics, and discussion of career applications. This course has a lab fee.
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3.00 Credits
Analysis of specific public communication situations, such as social reform movements, political discourse, campaign rhetoric, war rhetoric, the documentary, and the role of media in shaping discourse in contemporary society.
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4.00 Credits
Courses listed under other departments and counted for communication:
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3.00 Credits
An overview of how computers process, transmit, and store information. Designed for the non-major and includes many applications and issues found in contemporary culture. For example, privacy issues related to databases maintained by insurance companies or protection of intellectual property in light of increasingly popular file sharing applications. There are no prerequisites. This does not count toward a major or minor in computer science.
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3.00 Credits
This course covers the fundamentals of object-oriented programming utilizing the Java programming language. This first programming course provides students with basic Java programming concepts, data types, operators, flow control statements, objects, classes, methods, arrays, strings, applications, applets, and graphics user interfaces.
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3.00 Credits
Topics include: sets, functions, relations (incl. Partial order), methods of propositional logic, introduction to predicate logic, counting, recurrence relations, asymptotic analysis, proof (incl. Induction), introduction to probability, graphs.
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3.00 Credits
This course extends the concepts learned in Programming I. It covers some advanced features of Java including advanced graphical user interfaces, exceptions, threads, graphics, multimedia, input/output, and networking. Prerequisite: CSCI 211.
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