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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
This course is intended primarily for students pursuing the Associate in Fine Art (AFA) degree in studio art. One additional hour of instruction per week is required so that students may be exposed to a more intense studio experience. This course will explore a variety of approaches to the portrait using photography and introduce students to some of the critical issues raised in the use of the camera to represent humans. Students will learn basic techniques of lighting, both in the studio and on locations. Emphasis is placed on the creative use of photography in portraiture. Lecture ( 30.00) Laboratory ( 30.00) Prerequisites: PHO-103 or PHO-101
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3.00 Credits
This course will introduce the computer as a powerful tool for the photographer. We will discuss the ethical, philosophical and practical considerations regarding the digital image process as photography professionals. This course will cover multiple ways to digitize images, image editing software, and different forms of outfitting the digitized image. We will also discuss image making in the context of contemporary photographic art practice. Lecture ( 30.00) Laboratory ( 30.00) Prerequisites: PHO-103 or PHO-101
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3.00 Credits
Goals and objectives must be established for an Independent Study in Photography which is not substituting for an existing course. Faculty member conducting the Independent Study must periodically meet with the student to guide the study.
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4.00 Credits
Areas covered in the course are elementary mechanics, heat and conservation laws. Topics include scalar vector qualities; rectilinear, circular, and simple harmonic motion; work, energy, and momentum; molecular forces in solids and liquids; heat, temperature, expansion, and gas laws; and change of phase and heat engines. Related experiments are performed. Lecture ( 45.00) Laboratory ( 45.00) Prerequisites: MTH-109, MTH-120, MTH-125, MTH-130, MTH-140 or MTH-150
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4.00 Credits
This course covers vibration, wave motion and sound; electrostatics, electric fields, potential, capacitance, DC circuits, magnetic fields and forces, induced EMF; physical properties of light; and geometric optics. Related experiments are performed concurrently with lectures and recitation. Lecture ( 45.00) Laboratory ( 45.00) Prerequisites: PHY-101
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4.00 Credits
This course is for Liberal Arts majors and examines a limited number of topics in the physical sciences using the laboratory approach as the mode of instruction. Lecture ( 30.00) Laboratory ( 60.00)
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4.00 Credits
This course is for engineering students and physics majors. It is essential to have high school physics or algebra based physics to take this course. It uses calculus in developing conservation laws as they are applied to mechanical systems. The course covers motion problems involving non-uniform acceleration in both rectilinear and curvilinear cases, elastic and non-elastic collisions and conservation of momentum, the mechanics of heat and heat transfer, fluid dynamics and thermodynamics. Related experiments are performed. PRE-REQUISITE: One full year of college preparatory high school physics. Lecture (45.00) Laboratory ( 45.00) Corequisites: MTH-140
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4.00 Credits
This course is for engineering students and physics majors. It uses calculus in developing the basic laws of wave motion, light, and other forms of electromagnetic radiation. The course covers the concept of the force field, the action of electric and magnetic fields on stationary and moving charged particles, the laws of conservation of charge and mass, and an introduction to nuclear physics. Lecture ( 45.00) Laboratory ( 45.00) Prerequisites: PHY-201
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3.00 Credits
This course is an introduction to the discipline of political science, concentrating on the processes which relate to the institutions and organizational forms of society. Values, doctrines, politics, and "great issues" of political science are studied. Lecture ( 45.00) Prerequisites: ENG-013 and ENG-023
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3.00 Credits
This course is designed for students who are interested in perfecting their analytical and critical thinking skills. It will provide them with the opportunity to participate in simulations and other collaborative learning experiences which relate to the institutions and organized forms of society. Values, doctrines, politics, and "great issues" of political science are studied. Lecture ( 45.00) Prerequisites: ENG-013 and ENG-023
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