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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: junior standing, acceptance as a health sciences major, minimum GPA of 2.50, minimum of one semester of HSCI 3391, and consent of program coordinator. Cooperative education seeks to integrate academic and professional work experiences. Students will be placed in a work setting consistent with their health sciences career objectives. This course requires a minimum of 200 semester work hours. Three credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: BIOL 1411, 1412, HSCI 3302 or the equivalents. This course is designed to train students in the theory and skills required for the administration of fitness programs in industry, YMCAs, rehabilitation clinics, and similar facilities. Emphasis will be on standards and guidelines for facility staffing, programming, and equipment. Overview and discussion of organizational structure, client screening, emergency/safety procedures, and legal issues. Two hours lecture and two hours of program/facility fieldwork per week.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: senior standing, 3195, 3196, consent of program coordinator. Directed observation and supervised field work in a health education professional setting. Emphasis on administration, supervision, and program leadership in public, private, or voluntary health agencies, institutions, or business. Six hours credit for 200 clock hours. Six credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: ECON 4320, FINC 4330, MGMT 4377, and MKTG 4320 or consent of the instructor. An integrated course that explores the key tasks facing international business managers including financial, managerial and marketing objectives and strategies. Heavy emphasis placed on decision-making and developing skills necessary for conduction international business. Course work will be project based and case analysis. Three credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: RHET 1312. Study of information security for roles as security professionals and business decision-makers. This course addresses knowledge areas of the Certified Information Systems Security Professional (CISSP) certification, including need for security, legal and ethical issues, risk management, security technologies and tools, and personnel security maintenance. Three hours lecture. Three credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: IFAS 2300 and knowledge of Unix or Linux, as well as Windows operating systems. Study of the preservation, identification extraction, documentation, and interpretation of computer data following clear, well-defined methodologies and procedures. This course can be repeated for credit with a different theme. Three hours lecture. Three credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Familiarity with using a desktop computer. Hands-on, projectoriented experiences to develop the basic software tools expertise expected of a student in information science. Exercises in Window, Microsoft Office, and the internet including email, FTP, and web page building. A computer-based laboratory course whose assignments involve both individual and team activities. Two hours lab per week per credit hour. Two credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: IFSC 1201 or consent of the department. Continuation of Enterprise Information Science I; includes introduction to UNIX and basic algorithm and programming in Visual Basic and elementary SQL, emphasis on understanding graphical user interface technology. This is a laboratory computer-based course with lab exercises pursed individually and in teams. Two hours lab per week per credit hour. Two credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: MATH 1302 or equivalent. Corequisite: IFSC 1201 or equivalent. Examines methods of problem solving in mathematical and non-mathematical contexts. Introduces concepts that pertain to programming and code patterns, and various diagramming techniques. Uses spreadsheet software and other software tools when appropriate. Three hours lecture per week. Three credit hours.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: IFSC 1201 or consent of the department. Building on the foundation of web page building in static HTML, this course presents using Dynamic HTML, CGI and JavaScript programming. Also addresses client-pull and server-pushtechnology, elements TCP/IP, and basic internet protocols pertaining to HTTP, FTP, Telnet, and electronic mail servers and clients. Three hours lecture per week. Three credit hours.
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