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Course Criteria
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2.00 Credits
Introduction to principles of psychopharmacology and to the counselor’s role in the effective and ethical use of psychiatric medications with therapy clients (i.e. referral, consultation, monitoring, etc.). Content includes basic psychopharmacological principles, physiological actions, and therapeutic and adverse effects of major psychiatric drugs. Attention is given to the historical and sociopolitical contextual issues surrounding the use of psychiatric medication.
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Special Studies
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
Counseling experience supervised by Counseling Department faculty. Experience can be gained both at the on-campus Community Counseling Clinic or in outreach programs in the community. Cr/NC Only. Prerequisite: consent of instructor; for School Counseling students: permission of school counseling faculty.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture, 2 hours; laboratory, 2 hours. Topics include computer types, history of computing, computer organizations, survey of computer languages, program development, computer applications, networking, and computers in society. Weekly hands-on experience with personal computers. Not applicable to the CS major. Recommended for all students. Satisfies GE, category B3 (Specific Emphasis in Natural Sciences).
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1.00 Credits
Laboratory, 3 hours. An introduction to the use of UNIX as a programming environment. Communicating with a UNIX host, shells and shell commands, files and directories, X Window System, jobs and processes, scripting, programming utilities (compiler, linker, debugger, make, hex dump, etc.). Prerequisites: GE math eligibility and previous or concurrent enrollment in CS 115, or consent of instructor.
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4.00 Credits
Lecture, 3 hours; laboratory, 2 hours. An overview of computer organization; arithmetic and logical expressions, decision and iteration, simple I/O; subprograms; principles of good programming style, readability, documentation, structured programming concepts; top-down design and refinements; techniques of debugging and testing. Use of the above concepts will be implemented in a standard high-level programming language. Satisfies GE, category B3 (Specific Emphasis in Natural Sciences). Prerequisite: GE math eligibility or consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture, 2 hours; laboratory, 2 hours. A first course in computer graphics hardware and software. Topics include graphics hardware, microcomputer graphics, presentation and business graphics, graphics for artists, computer mapping, CAD/CAM (drafting and environmental applications), animation, 3-dimensional Sonoma State University 2006-2008 Catalog Computer Science Page 119 graphics, and desktop publishing. Students will have hands-on experience using a variety of graphics programs on microcomputers. Not applicable to the CS major. Prerequisite: previous computer course or consent of instructor.
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1.00 - 4.00 Credits
This lower-division course may be repeated with different subject matter. Content will be indicated by the specific topic. Prerequisite: consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture, 2 hours; laboratory, 2 hours. Pointers and dynamic allocation of storage; linked lists; an introduction to the object-oriented programming (OOP) paradigm; classes and objects; encapsulation; member variables and member functions; inheritance and polymorphism; scoping; templates; iterators; error handling techniques. Prerequisite: CS 110 and 115, or consent of instructor.
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3.00 Credits
Lecture, 2 hours; laboratory, 2 hours. Introduction to assembly language programming, computer system organization from the machine language point of view, assembly language implementation of high-level language constructs, and elementary data structures. Prerequisite: CS 110 and 115, or consent of instructor.
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