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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Sea power and maritime affairs; general concept of sea power including Merchant Marine; role of naval warfare components used to support the Navy's mission; sea power as an instrument of national policy; comparative study of US and Soviet strategies.
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3.00 Credits
Piloting, navigation, maneuvering, rules of nautical road. Use of charts, visual and electronic aids, operation of magnetic and gyro compasses, relative motion vector analysis, formation tactics, and ship employment. Tides, currents, wind, weather, navigation instruments, and characteristics of electronic navigation.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: Naval Science 301. Naval operations and operations analysis, ship handling, and afloat communications. Case analyses stress practical application of skills. Leadership traits in themes of communication counseling and conflict resolution applicable to naval operations.
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3.00 Credits
Forms of warfare through history to formulate sense of historical continuity in evolution of warfare, to develop a basic sense of strategy and alternative military actions, and to explore impact of historical precedent on military thought and actions.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: Naval Science 302. Develop working foundation and understanding of diversity and complexity of Navy and Marine Corps weapons systems including target detection and tracking, radar, sonar, electronic warfare systems, weapons warheads, fuzing, propulsion, guidance, launching, and fire control systems.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: Naval Science 201A. Naval leadership and management with emphasis on military justice administration, naval personnel management, material management, and administration of discipline.
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3.00 Credits
Amphibious warfare, doctrinal origins, and its evolution as an element of naval policy during the twentieth century.
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3.00 Credits
Conceptual approach to major issues in physics and chemistry, including principles of motion and energy and structure and properties of matter. Effects of physical science and technology on individuals and human society.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: Completion of the General Education requirement in Foundations II.A., Natural Sciences and Quantitative Reasoning. Comparison of science portrayed in science fiction literature and mass media with science as understood by practicing scientists, emphasizing theoretical frameworks such as relativity, quantum mechanics, and evolution, and how authors work within or against such frameworks.
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3.00 Credits
Prerequisites: Completion of the General Education requirement in Foundations II.A., Natural Sciences and Quantitative Reasoning. Ethical, moral, social, and cultural implications of significant issues and ideas in science and technology. History of development of these ideas from ancient Greek thinkers to contemporary scientists.
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