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COMM 479 - Communication Ethics 3 credits
Description A study of the ethical considerations facing professionals in journalism, broadcasting, public relations, management communication, and other communication contexts. The course provides background in ethical principles and practice in applying those principles using case studies and role-playing.
Prerequisites at least 78 credits and seven of nine required Liberal Studies courses.
Note See the General Education section of the Catalog for a complete description of the capstone requirement.
General Education Credit General Education Credits [GE2000: Capstone Course (majors only)]
Capstone Course Capstone Course
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CRIM 100 - Individuals, Societies, and Justice 3 credits
Description Explores deviance, crime, law, justice, and civic life from historical, comparative, social science, and contemporary cultural perspectives. This is a General Education course which will introduce students to the broad foundations of interdisciplinary knowledge illustrating the importance, function, and effects of law and justice through complementary social science disciplines.
General Education Credit [GE2000: Social and Behavioral Studies-Foundational Course]
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CRIM 355 - The Economics of Crime 3 credits
Description This course surveys the intersection of two areas of human behavior: criminal and economic. Social science methodology and basic concepts from economics and criminology are reviewed. An economics framework is applied to analyze criminal behavior and to evaluate the economic burden that crime imposes on a society. Lessons are applied to specific types of crime: property, white collar, illegal markets, and organized crime.
Prerequisites CRIM 200.
Foundational Studies Credit [FS 2010: Integrative Upper-Division Electives]
Cross-listed Also listed as ECON 355.
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CRIM 375 - Victimology 3 credits
Description This course provides an in-depth study of the many facets of crime victimization. Coverage will include the key social, economic, and demographic variables associated with crime victims as well as the differences in victimization rates in the United States and other countries. Crime victim assistance programs, victim compensation, and victim participation in the criminal justice process will be covered. Discussion will also include victim-oriented legislation and case law related to crime victims.
Prerequisites 6 credits of criminology or consent of instructor.
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CRIM 385 - Introduction to Criminalistics 3 credits
Description A study of the application of the physical, biological, medical, behavioral, and computer sciences to crime investigation and detection. The use made of hairs, fibers, blood stains, paints, scrapings, weapons, polygraphs, voice prints, computers, photography, prints, and chemicals in the detection of crime is considered.
Prerequisites CRIM 200 or consent of instructor.
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CRIM 499 - Danger and Disorder: Critical Issues in Criminology 3 credits
Description This course is designed to meet the General Education Capstone Course requirement. This course will examine crime, justice, and civic life from historical, comparative, social science, and contemporary cultural perspectives. Topics will include law and society, violence in America, criminal subcultures, drug policy, essential issues in criminal justice, mass media and crime, and citizen involvement in criminal justice. Prerequisite: at least 78 credit hours and seven of nine required Liberal Studies courses. See the General Education section of the Catalog for a complete description of the capstone requirement.
Prerequisites at least 78 credits and seven of nine required Liberal Studies courses.
Note This course will not be counted toward the nine hours of Criminology and Criminal Justice directed electives.
General Education Credit General Education Credits [GE2000: Capstone Course (majors only)]
Capstone Course Capstone Course
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CS 260 - Object Oriented Programming 3 credits
Description Object oriented programming concepts and methods. Includes encapsulation, data abstraction, class development, instantiation, constructors, destructors, inheritance, overloading, polymorphism, libraries, and packages.
Prerequisites CS 256.
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CS 320 - Java Software Development 3 credits
Description Fundamentals and applications of the Java language. Java classes and packages, data types, control structures, methods, arrays, strings, applets, graphics, threads, GUI development, utility packages, collections, exception handling, tiles and streams, introduction to Java Networking, servlets, and Java Beans.
Prerequisites CS 260 or MIS 355.
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CS 457 - Data Base Processing 3 credits
Description Data independence, relational model, relational algebra and calculus, query languages and SQL, conceptual modeling, database design, data dependencies and normalization, access methods, tables, queries, forms, macros and reports, database administration, introduction to transaction processing, concurrent transactions, and recovery. Case studies of commercial database systems, such as Oracle and Microsoft SQL Server.
Note Open to graduate students. Graduate students are required to do additional work of a research nature.
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CS 468 - NT Server Administration and Networking 3 credits
Description This hands-on course covers the complete process of installation, configuration, and administration of both the NT4 Server software and the Windows 2000 Server software. Includes actual set-up of a physical network, the design and installation of network interface cards, hubs, cables, servers, and workstations. Also includes installation and configuration of TCP/IP, DHCP, DNS, WINS, IIS, and FTP as well as important administrative tasks including the establishment of user roles, groups and security, file protection, configuring clients, tuning, backups, and establishment of intranet and Internet connections and security. This course can be used as preparation for Microsoft Server MCSE certification examinations.
Prerequisites CS 367 or MIS 430 or Electronics and Computer Technology 353.
Note Open to graduate students. Graduate students are required to do additional work of a research nature.
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CS 469 - Unix/Linux Administration and Networking 3 credits
Description Includes installation and configuration of Unix/Linux operating system software; set-up of hardware and software for Unix/Linux networking including TCP/IP, FTP, Telnet, DNS, DHCP, and Apache; Unix/Linux administration tasks including directories, users, tuning, backup, security, and networking.
Prerequisites CS 367 or Management Information Systems 430 or Electronics and Computer Technology 353.
Note Open to graduate students. Graduate students are required to do additional work of a research nature.
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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CS 470 - Programming Languages 3 credits
Description The purpose of the course is to develop an understanding of the organization of programming languages and introduce the formal study of programming language specification and analysis. The topics covered will usually include: language definition structure, data types and structures, control structures and data flow, run-time consideration, interpretative languages, lexical analysis, and parsing.
Prerequisites CS 258.
Note Open to graduate students. Graduate students are required to do additional work of a research nature.
Click here for the Fall 2024 Class Schedule
Click here for the Spring 2025 Class Schedule
Click here for the Summer 2025 Class Schedule
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