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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Arts 18C. Advisory: English Writing 200 and Reading 200 (or Language Arts 200), or English as a Second Language 261, 262 and 263. Six hours lecture-laboratory. (May be taken two times for credit. Students build upon previous experience and develop higher-level skills.) Advanced techniques of throwing on the potter's wheel. Introduction to combined forms and developing the vessel as an aesthetic object. Development of shapes, function and individual expression with clay.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Arts 55B. (Also listed as Film/Television 85. Student may enroll in either department, but not both, for credit.) Six hours lecture-laboratory. The analysis and interpretation of the art and design involved in the production of "on-the-air" graphic design. The creative integration of "type" and "image?otion is stressed through the use of directed laboratory exercises. Software used includes Adobe Photoshop, Adobe Premier, Macromedia FreeHand, Macromedia Director, Macromedia Flash.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Arts 53A and 53B. Three hours lecture, three hours laboratory. Introduction to industry standard software related to the creation and implementation of computer generated illustration. Emphasis is on verbal-visual relationships and the integration of type and image in contemporary illustration. Topics will include: illustration software options; concept and problem solving; style and personal expression; story board and broadcast illustration; and 3D illustration dynamics.
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5.00 Credits
(See general education pages for the requirement this course meets.) Advisory: English Writing 1A or English as a Second Language 5. Five hours lecture. Analyze the physical principles, logic, and development of stellar astronomy from ancient times to the present, with emphasis on recent developments. Examine the relationship of earth to its deep-space environment and contrast the Sun to other types of stars. Synthesize the organization in space and time of the hierarchy of the cosmos from stellar systems through the universe on its largest observable scale, and investigate the observational strategies and equipment that are used to investigate it.
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5.00 Credits
(See general education pages for the requirement this course meets.) Advisory: English Writing 1A or English as a Second Language 5. Five hours lecture. Analyze the physical principles, logic, and development of solar system astronomy from ancient times through the space age. Examine earth and sky relationships, exploration of the solar system by spacecraft and earth-based methods, similarities and differences between Earth and other planets, theories of the origin of the planetary system, and properties of other stars' planetary systems. Includes multimedia planetarium demonstrations.
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1.00 Credits
Special Projects in Astronomy
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2.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
(Formerly Astronomy 40, 40X, and 40Y.) Prerequisite: Consent of instructor and division dean. Three hours laboratory per week for each unit of credit. (Any combination of Astronomy 77, 77X, and 77Y may be taken up to six times, not to exceed 18 units, as long as the topics/projects are different each time.) Pass-No Pass (P-NP) course. Individual special reading, writing, or study projects in astronomy as determined in consultation with the instructor.
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4.00 Credits
Advisory: English Writing 211 and Reading 211 (or Language Arts 211), or English as a Second Language 272 and 273; Mathematics 212 or equivalent. Four hours lecture per week. Forty-eight hours lecture per quarter. A selective study of the automobile's engine systems. Knowledge and skills necessary for basic repair, maintenance, and troubleshooting today's engine systems. May be used to fulfill the prerequisite to the Automotive Technology Program.
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2.00 Credits
Prerequisite: Automotive Technology 50A (may be taken concurrently). Advisory: English Writing 211 and Reading 211 (or Language Arts 211), or English as a Second Language 272 and 273; Mathematics 212 or equivalent. Four hours lecture-laboratory per week. Forty-eight hours lecture-laboratory per quarter. Basic lecture-laboratory experiences in automotive repair and maintenance as related to the engine and its supporting systems.
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