Course Criteria

Add courses to your favorites to save, share, and find your best transfer school.
  • 3.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture. Prerequisite: Psychology 1. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC credit limitations. See counselor. Study of human development from conception through adolescence. The physical, social and cognitive development of the growing child and adolescent are examined in light of contemporary research and theory. 2001.00
  • 3.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC. Analysis of the politics of urban and suburban areas in the United States, other industrialized countries, and the Third World. Important issues such as unemployment, poverty, racism, and the impact of economic change will be examined. 2207.00
  • 3.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC. Examination of Latino politics. Topics include: political influence, civil rights, discrimination, immigration, affirmative action, assimilation, acculturation, citizenship, political efficacy, voting affiliations and tendencies, diversity within the Latino community, and contemporary political issues affecting Latinos. Special emphasis on the growing political and economic impact of Latinos on the local, state, national, and international levels. 2203.00
  • 3.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture. Transfer Credit: CSU. State, county, and municipal government with an emphasis on California's unique heritage, culture, people, and politics. Issues such as economic and class conflict, immigration and ethnic-cultural influences, and problems in urban government in the 21st century are examined. 2207.00
  • 4.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture; 48-54 laboratory. Prerequisite: Physics 5 or 44 or one year of highschool physics. Corequisite: Mathematics 65A. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC credit limitations. See counselor. Course is designed for students majoring in a life or medical science, or engineering technology, whose university major requires calculus-based physics. Position, velocity, and acceleration of objects are described using vectors. The concepts of mass, force, Newton's Laws of Motion, momentum, impulse, work, energy, and power are used to describe straight line motion, projectile motion, circular motion, collisions, and explosions. Rotational motion includes torque, moment of inertia, angular momentum, and static equilibrium. Differential calculus is used to describe velocity and acceleration, and in presenting the laws of conservation ofmomentumand conservation of angular momentum. 1902.00
  • 4.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture; 48-54 laboratory. Prerequisite: Physics 30A. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC credit limitations. See counselor. Course is designed for students majoring in a life or medical science, or engineering technology, whose university major requires calculus-based physics. Simple harmonic motion in spring-mass systems and pendula. Fluid properties as explained by Archimedes' principle and Bernoulli's equation. Thermodynamics, including temperature, heat and heat transfer, ideal gas law, and the differential form of the first and second laws of thermodynamics. Electricity and magnetism, including electric force and field, electric potential energy, potential, capacitance, resistance, electromotive force, magnetic force and field, and Faraday's Law. Inductors, with induced electromotive force presented as a derivative of flux. Power, intensity and loudness of sound waves. Interference, diffraction, and geometrical optics of light waves. 1902.00
  • 3.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC. Analysis of law, its functions, cultural variations, legal theories of justice, and law as a tool of social change. A comparative analysis ofWestern and ThirdWorld legal systems will also be made. 2207.00
  • 3.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture. Transfer Credit: CSU. Introduction to the philosophical underpinnings of historical and contemporary political systems. Analysis of theoretical concepts including the nature of justice, power, freedom, and democracy. Views of theorists such as Plato, Machiavelli, and Marx are examined. 2207.00
  • 3.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture. Prerequisite: Psychology 1. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC. Study of the biological basis of behavior. Topics include: basic neuroanatomy and neurophysiology; neurophysiological mechanisms in movement, sensation, perception, learning, memory, emotion, psychological disorders, language, and consciousness; scientific method as applied in the brain sciences; brain evolution; and the effects of discoveries in the neurosciences on modern views of human nature and theories of mind. 2001.00
  • 4.00 Credits

    Class hours: 48-54 lecture, 48-54 laboratory. Prerequisite: Mathematics 61. Transfer Credit: CSU; UC credit limitations. See counselor. Introduction to mechanics for students majoring in a physical science or engineering. Position, velocity, and acceleration of objects are described using vectors. Concepts of mass, force, Newton's Laws of Motion, momentum, and impulse are used to describe straight line motion, projectile motion, circular motion, collisions, and explosions. In the laboratory, microcomputers with motion detectors and force probes are used to study the concepts of velocity and acceleration, and Newton's Laws of Motion. Graphical representation of motion - velocity-time graphs, acceleration-time graphs, and force-time graphs - is emphasized. 1902.00
To find college, community college and university courses by keyword, enter some or all of the following, then select the Search button.
(Type the name of a College, University, Exam, or Corporation)
(For example: Accounting, Psychology)
(For example: ACCT 101, where Course Prefix is ACCT, and Course Number is 101)
(For example: Introduction To Accounting)
(For example: Sine waves, Hemingway, or Impressionism)
Distance:
of
(For example: Find all institutions within 5 miles of the selected Zip Code)
Privacy Statement   |   Terms of Use   |   Institutional Membership Information   |   About AcademyOne   
Copyright 2006 - 2024 AcademyOne, Inc.