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Course Criteria
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6.00 Credits
Student must participate in 200 hours or more of chemistry-related activities at an off-campus site under the supervision of an internship sponsor. Internships may be procured at any business, academic, government or non-profit agency willing to engage interns in meaningful work or research activities. Prerequisites: Junior status and a 2.5 GPA.
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
400 level chemistry transfer with no course-to-course equivilant
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1.00 Credits
Part of the Alvernia Basic Training Series. Hands-on experience in Microsoft Powerpoint and Publisher. Powerpoint lessons will include using themes; tables and graphics; transitions and animations; printing notes, handouts and slides; customizing presentations, embedding and linking files; saving, managing and delivering presentations. Publisher lessons will include using templates; text boxes and frames; creating and customizing templates.
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1.00 Credits
Part of the Alvernia Basic Training Series. Hands-on experience in Microsoft Excel including data manipulation, formulas, filters, formatting and conditional formatting, charting, use of ranges and multiple spreadsheets, and pivot tables. Cannot get credit for both CIS 115 and Excel Bootcamp.
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1.00 Credits
Part of the Alvernia Basic Training Series. Hands-on experience in Microsoft Word including APA and MLA document formatting, page formatting, tabs, columns, mail merge, footnotes, endnotes, comments, and document sharing. Cannot get credit for both CIS 115 and Word Bootcamp.
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1.00 Credits
Part of the Alvernia Basic Training Series. Hands-on experience in Microsoft Access including database design and organization, tables, compound and foreign keys, queries, forms and reports.
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3.00 Credits
Study value of microcomputer as a tool in business, school and home through projects involving use of currently popular word processing, database, and spreadsheet packages. Students may audit course only with instructor's permission.
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3.00 Credits
Essential workplace computer knowledge and skills. Provides requisite fundamental knowledge expected for most professional disciplines. Topics include computer system components, peripherals, media formats, communications and networks, computer security, office productivity software, specialized software, hardware, societal implications, and finer points of using the Internet. Prerequisite: Basic familiarity with word processing, spreadsheets and presentations.
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3.00 Credits
(Paired with CIS 152) Constitutes the first year of the required sequence in CIS. First semester is heavily concept-oriented. Topics discussed: input and output hardware; secondary storage; memory; parts and functions of the CPU; systems development life cycle; intro to programming logic; steps from source to executable code; the relationship between the program and the operating system.
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