1. To enable
students to develop as successful professionals for highly competitive
positions, the programs aim to provide a variety of experiences that help
students to:
a.
Achieve
the highest level of expertise in civil, architectural, mechanical electrical or
computer engineering, mastery of the knowledge in their fields and the ability
to apply associated technologies to novel and emerging problems
b.
Present
research to local and international audiences through publications in
professional journals and conference papers given in a range of venues, from
graduate seminars to professional meetings
c.
Participate
in professional organizations, becoming members and attending meetings
d.
Broaden
their professional foundations through activities such as teaching,
internships, fellowships, and grant applications
2. To prepare
students to be effective researchers in the fields of civil, architectural,
mechanical electrical or computer engineering , the programs aim to provide a
variety of experiences that help students to:
a.
Become
independent researchers in an area of study, developing a substantial expertise
in that area that allows them to make an original contribution to it
b.
State
a research problem in such a way that it clearly fits within the context of the
literature in an area of study and demonstrate the value of the solution to the
research problem in advancing knowledge within that area
c.
Apply
sound research methods/tools to problems in an area of study and describe the
methods/tools effectively
d.
Analyze/interpret
research data
e.
Communicate
their research clearly and professionally in both written and oral forms
appropriate to the field
3. To enhance
visibility of the doctoral programs in civil, architectural, mechanical
electrical or computer engineering nationally, the programs aim to:
a.
Attract,
secure, and retain high-quality students
b.
Enhance
doctoral education by creating advanced courses, providing more supportive
resources for fellowships, research, travel to conferences, etc. for doctoral
students, and providing special mentoring for doctoral students interested in
pursuing academic careers
c.
Attract,
retain, and support research-active faculty
d.
Provide
more support for research-active faculty, such as reduced undergraduate
teaching and increased research space
Admission
Prerequisites
To be considered for admission into the Ph.D.
in Engineering Program, a student must first satisfy the admission requirements
of the School of Graduate Studies. The student is expected to meet the
requirements for admission into the Program as described below:
-
M.S. degree from
an accredited or recognized engineering program, with a minimum 3.5 grade point
average GRE scores (analytical + quantitative = 1300). The average GRE scores
among the students enrolled in the Program are 738 (quantitative) and 640
(analytical). Expected score on analytical writing portion of GRE is 4.5
-
Statement of
Objectives
-
Three letters of
recommendation
-
International
students must have a minimum TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language)
score of at least 550 (old system) or 213 (new system) or an IELTS
(International English Language Testing System) score of 6
Students can help to expedite the admission
process by including the following information in their Statement of Objectives:
the research focus area of interest; the research that was performed during
undergraduate or graduate study; and the name of the faculty with whom the
student would like to do research, but only if this has been mutually agreed
upon.
Requirements
To graduate, students are required to take 62 credits at
AUSTC and research work. Each student may qualify for transfer of 8 semester
units from previously obtained education and/or training at an accredited or
recognized engineering graduate educational facility.
(1) All doctoral students are required to take Information Research
Strategies at AUSTC or provide an acceptable evidence to transfer it from a
recognized graduate educational facility.
(2) Doctoral Fundamental Curriculum must be successfully completed
before taking any specialty subjects
(3) Each Engineering Specialty class must complete its related core
and focus specialty curriculum after successful completion of fundamental
studies and before starting research activities.
(4) Every doctoral student is required to submit a conceptual paper
and set for doctoral comprehensive exam and then get involved in research
activities after assignment of doctoral research committees and chairmen.
(5) Each student shall proceed with doctoral research and submit a
publishable doctoral dissertation through three stages under full supervision
and coordination with doctoral committee.
(6) Student may qualify for graduation after completion of all
required curriculum, submit and oral defense of the dissertation.
Required = 62 Semester Units
Maximum Credit Transfer = 8 Semester Units
Minimum Taken at AUSTC = 54 Semester Units
2 Information Research Strategies (Optional, if not taken
earlier)
10 Credits - Fundamental subjects
10 Credits - Core subjects
30 Credits - Advanced specialty subjects
2 Credits - Submission of Concept Paper,
2 Credits - Comprehensive Exam
6 Credits – Dissertation
PHD,
ENGINEERING – CURRICULUM:
General
and Fundamental studies:
Code
|
General Studies
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
ALS
6010
|
Information
Research Strategies
|
2
|
Code
|
Fundamental
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
RES
6120
|
Statistical
Modeling and Analysis for Complex Data Problems
|
2
|
RES
6121
|
Optimal
Experimental Design
|
2
|
RES
6122
|
Mathematical
Modeling
|
2
|
RES
6123
|
Research
Methods and Design
|
2
|
RES
6124
|
Dissertation
Planning, Writing, and Defending
|
2
|
PHD SPECIALTIY STUDIES:
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERING
CORE SUBJECTS
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
EE
6130
|
Test
Engineering Fundamentals
|
2
|
EE
6131
|
Electronic
Manufacturing
|
2
|
EE
6132
|
EMC
Test Engineering Fundamentals
|
2
|
EE
6133
|
Digital
Hardware Testing
|
2
|
EE
6134
|
Optical
System Design and Testing
|
2
|
FOCUS SUBJECTS
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
EE
6140
|
Statistical
Processing Of Radar, Sonar, And Optical Signals
|
3
|
EE
6141
|
Optical
Fiber Communications
|
3
|
EE
6142
|
Low-Power
High-Resolution Analog to Digital Converters
|
3
|
EE
6143
|
Digital
Filters: Basics and Design
|
3
|
EE
6144
|
Electricity
from Renewable Resources
|
3
|
EE
6145
|
Electromagnets
|
3
|
EE
6146
|
Electro-Mechanical
Modeling of Charged Particulate Systems
|
3
|
EE
6147
|
Operational
Amplifiers
|
3
|
EE
6148
|
Introduction
to Subsurface Imaging
|
3
|
EE
6149
|
Computer
Architecture
|
3
|
TELECOMMUNICATION
ENGINEERING:
CORE
SUBJECTS:
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
EE
6130
|
Test
Engineering Fundamentals
|
2
|
EE
6131
|
Electronic
Manufacturing
|
2
|
EE
6132
|
EMC
Test Engineering Fundamentals
|
2
|
EE
6133
|
Digital
Hardware Testing
|
2
|
EE
6134
|
Optical
System Design and Testing
|
2
|
FOCUS
SUBJECTS:
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
TLM
6141
|
Fundamentals
of DSL Technology
|
3
|
TLM
6142
|
Microwaves
and RF Engineering
|
3
|
TLM
6143
|
Antenna
Theory and Design
|
3
|
TLM
6144
|
Advanced
Topics in Signal Processing
|
3
|
TLM
6145
|
Underwater
Acoustics
|
3
|
TLM
6146
|
LTE,
WIMAX and WLAN Network Design
|
3
|
TLM
6147
|
Satellite
Communications Systems
|
3
|
TLM
6148
|
Telecommunications
Network Design and Management
|
3
|
TLM
6149
|
Systems
Engineering in Wireless Communications
|
3
|
TLM
6140
|
Network
Flaws, Theory and Application
|
3
|
CONSTRUCTION
ENGINEERING
CORE
SUBJECTS
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
CON
6134
|
Pavement
Management Systems
|
2
|
CON
6130
|
Decision-Making
in Complex Dynamic Systems
|
2
|
CON
6131
|
Introduction
to System identification
|
2
|
CON
6132
|
Stability
of Earth Structures
|
2
|
CON
6133
|
Engineering
with Developing Communities
|
2
|
FOCUS
SUBJECTS:
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
STE
6140
|
Statics
and Strength of Materials for Construction
|
3
|
STE
6141
|
Masonry
Structural Design
|
3
|
STE
6142
|
Structural
Analysis with the Finite Element Method
|
3
|
STE
6143
|
Beam
Structures: Classical and Advanced Theories
|
3
|
STE
6144
|
Earthquake
Hazard and Seismic Risk Reduction
|
3
|
STE
6145
|
Advanced
Reinforced Concrete Structures
|
3
|
STE
6146
|
Advanced
Steel and Composite Structures
|
3
|
STE
6147
|
Analysis
of Plates and Shells
|
3
|
STE
6148
|
Plastic-Hinge
Methods For Framed Structures
|
3
|
STE
6149
|
Earthquake
Resistant Buildings
|
3
|
CIVIL
ENGINEERING:
CORE
SUBJECTS
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
CON
6134
|
Pavement
Management Systems
|
2
|
CON
6130
|
Decision-Making
in Complex Dynamic Systems
|
2
|
CON
6131
|
Introduction
to System identification
|
2
|
CON
6132
|
Stability
of Earth Structures
|
2
|
CON
6133
|
Engineering
with Developing Communities
|
2
|
FOCUS
SUBJECTS:
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
CE
6140
|
Steel
Design
|
3
|
CE
6141
|
Public
Transit
|
3
|
CE
6149
|
Soil
Mechanics and Foundations
|
3
|
CE
6142
|
Storm-water
Management and LID
|
3
|
CE
6143
|
Probabilistic
Analysis and Reliability
|
3
|
CE
6144
|
Mathematical
Modeling of Earth Systems
|
3
|
CE
6145
|
Advanced
Soil Mechanics
|
3
|
CE
6146
|
Fundamentals
of Soil Behavior
|
3
|
CE
6147
|
Engineering
Design Practicum
|
3
|
CE
6148
|
Advanced
Structural Concrete Design
|
3
|
COMPUTER
SCIENCE:
CORE
SUBJECTS:
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
CS
6130
|
Information
Theory
|
2
|
CS
6131
|
Coding
Theory
|
2
|
CS
6132
|
Digital
Image Processing
|
2
|
CS
6133
|
Computational
Intelligence - Theory and application
|
2
|
CS
6134
|
Compiler
Design, Theory, and Optimization
|
2
|
FOCUS
SUBJECTS:
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
CS
6140
|
Theory
of Computation
|
3
|
CS
6141
|
Advanced
Algorithms
|
3
|
CS
6142
|
Parallel
Algorithms
|
3
|
CS
6143
|
Advanced
Computer Architecture
|
3
|
CS
6144
|
Distributed
Systems
|
3
|
CS
6145
|
Systems
Performance Analysis
|
3
|
CS
6146
|
Software/Hardware
Design of Multimedia Systems
|
3
|
CS
6147
|
GPU
and Multicore Programming
|
3
|
CS
6148
|
Data
Visualization
|
3
|
CS
6149
|
Advanced
Artificial Intelligence
|
3
|
CONSTRUCTION
MANAGEMENT
CORE
SUBJECTS
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
CON
6134
|
Pavement
Management Systems
|
2
|
CON
6130
|
Decision-Making
in Complex Dynamic Systems
|
2
|
CON
6131
|
Introduction
to System identification
|
2
|
CON
6132
|
Stability
of Earth Structures
|
2
|
CON
6133
|
Engineering
with Developing Communities
|
2
|
FOCUS
SUBJECTS
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
CME
6140
|
Project
Management
|
3
|
CME
6141
|
Operations
Management
|
3
|
CME
6142
|
Construction
Equipment and Methods
|
3
|
CME
6143
|
Accounting
Fundamentals for Construction
|
3
|
CME
6144
|
Construction
Cost Estimating
|
3
|
CME
6145
|
Construction
Project Scheduling and Control
|
3
|
CME
6146
|
Legal
Environment for Engineers and Architects
|
3
|
CME
6147
|
Construction
Project Administration
|
3
|
CME
6148
|
Computer
Applications in Construction
|
3
|
CME
6149
|
Project
Delivery Systems for Construction
|
3
|
MECHANICAL
ENGINEERING
CORE
SUBJECTS
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
ME
6133
|
Nonlinear
Systems Analysis & Control
|
2
|
ME
6134
|
Advanced
Dynamics
|
2
|
ME
6130
|
Advanced
Heat Transfer
|
2
|
ME
6131
|
Linear
Systems Theory and Design
|
2
|
ME
6132
|
Dynamic
Behavior of Materials
|
2
|
FOCUS
SUBJECTS:
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
ME
6147
|
Design
Optimization
|
3
|
ME
6148
|
Advanced
Acoustics
|
3
|
ME
6149
|
Advanced
Vibrations
|
3
|
ME
6140
|
Advanced
Power train Instrumentation and Experimental Methods
|
3
|
ME
6141
|
Advanced
Combustion
|
3
|
ME
6142
|
Advanced
Machining Processes
|
3
|
ME
6143
|
Advanced
Metal Forming
|
3
|
ME
6144
|
Experimental
Methods Vibro-Acoustics
|
3
|
ME
6145
|
Introduction
to Robotics and Mechatronics
|
3
|
ME
6146
|
Advanced
Continuum Mechanics
|
3
|
PHD
RESEARCH ACTIVITIES
Code
|
Research Subjects /
Activity
|
Semester Units
|
RES
7160
|
Concept
Paper
|
2
|
RES
7161
|
Doctoral
Comprehensive Examination
|
2
|
RES
7162
|
Doctoral
Dissertation Research l
|
2
|
RES
7163
|
Doctoral
Dissertation Research ll
|
2
|
RES
7164
|
Doctoral
Dissertation Research lll
|
2
|
Return to Top
11.05 - School of
Sciences
School of sciences at the American University for
Science and Technology offers two programs:
-
Graduate
Medical Informatics program grants Master’s and Doctor of Philosophy in Medical
informatics, and
-
Graduate
Nutritional Sciences program grants Master’s and Doctor of Philosophy in
Nutritional Sciences
11.05.01- M.S. in Medical Informatics
With increased attention on reducing healthcare costs,
expanding access to quality care and improving the quality of services, the role
of health informatics is recognized as a critical component of healthcare
reform. The American University for Science and Technology provides innovative
and relevant programs and has demonstrated expertise in health informatics
management and technology through a faculty of Information Technology leaders
with solid medical informatics and health technology background, Medical
Doctors, Pharmacists, Nurses and information technologists with special
interest in health and medical information practice.
The Master of Science in Medical Informatics (MSMI)
program emphasizes the applied aspect of using informatics (information science
and technology) in the health care setting. This is somewhat different than
other medical informatics programs where there is a stronger emphasis on
theory. We strive to provide a practical education that prepares students to
effectively participate in development, implementation and management teams
charged with producing information technology solutions that improve patient
care and reduce the cost of care.
Through The American University for Science and
Technology’s M.S. in Medical Informatics program, students can gain the tools
and skills they need to integrate advanced digital technologies into the field
of healthcare and use electronic data to improve the effectiveness and
efficiency of healthcare delivery. Learn how new technologies can improve the
diagnosis, treatment, and outcomes of disease, as well as reduce the
occurrences of medical errors.
Objectives:
Through
AUSTC master's in health informatics program, graduates of this program will:
• Gain an in-depth understanding of
new and existing digital technology and health information management systems
within the context of the U.S. health care system.
• Prepare to lead in the
development, implementation, evaluation and management of information
technology solutions to improve patient health and the health care delivery
process.
• Use health informatics to reduce
the occurrence of medical errors.
• Utilize health information
technology for decision making support, knowledge management, strategic
planning, and outcomes assessment and management to optimize cost efficiencies
in the health care system.
• Effectively interface between the
data systems developers and the user community.
• Facilitate the development and
advancement of e-Health initiatives and other emerging information technologies
to improve health care delivery and cost efficiencies.
• Analyze data to identify early
patterns of diseases, illness, and injury and review prevention and treatment
options.
Program Features
The
M.S. in Health Informatics program was designed to provide students with a
curriculum that reflects the current industry standards and principles
• Timely perspectives from a team
of subject-matter experts, including current best thinking by industry thought
leaders, health management experts, national policy makers, and researchers.
• Current texts, articles, and
interactive media along with experience with emerging technologies
• Opportunities to apply theory to
practice through a practicum, which enables students to integrate the knowledge
and skills acquired throughout the program.
• A scholarly project in which
students synthesize the practicum experience and complete a professional
portfolio based on their field experience.
Admission Prerequisites
1.
Minimum
undergraduate degree GPA of 3.00 (on a 4.00 scale)
2.
GRE or GMAT
general test scores having percentiles that average 60% or better, or an MCAT
average of nine on the individual scores. This requirement is waived if
applicant already has a graduate degree in a healthcare related discipline.
3.
Transcripts
should show proof of undergraduate course work in college algebra, statistics,
and introduction to computers, computer programming and medical terminology.
4.
Personal
essay stating why applicant wishes to pursue this degree
Requirements
Required = 45 Semester Units
Maximum Credit Transfer = 8 Semester Units
Minimum Taken at AUSTC = 32 Semester Units
2 Credits - ALS 6010 (Required to be the first taken
subject or transferred from another facility)
10 Credits - Fundamental Subjects
10 Credits - Core Subjects
21 Credits - Specialty Subjects
2 Credits – Thesis
CURRICULUM
GENERAL KNOWLEDGE:
Code
|
General Studies
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
ALS
6010
|
Information
Research Strategies
|
2
|
FUNDAMENTAL SUBJECTS CURRICULUM
Code
|
Fundamental
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
MI
5120
|
Introduction
to Medical Informatics
|
2
|
MI
5121
|
Essentials
of Health Information Management
|
2
|
MI
5122
|
Introduction
to Medical Sciences and Human Patho-physiology
|
2
|
MI
5123
|
Human
Anatomy
|
2
|
MI
5124
|
Physiology
|
2
|
CORE SUBJECTS CURRICULUM
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
MI
5130
|
Medical
Terminology
|
2
|
MI
5131
|
ICD
9 CM
|
2
|
MI
5132
|
Lean
Six-Sigma
|
2
|
MI
5133
|
Data
Mining And Medical Knowledge Management
|
2
|
MI
5134
|
Health
Care Politics, Policy and Services
|
2
|
SPECIALTY SUBJECTS CURRICULUM
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
MI
5140
|
Security
and Privacy
|
3
|
MI
5141
|
Clinical
Decision Support and Improving Healthcare
|
3
|
MI
5142
|
Data
Warehousing and Business intelligence
|
3
|
MI
5143
|
Statistical
Methods for Intrusion Detection
|
3
|
MI
5144
|
Designing
Security Systems
|
3
|
MI
5145
|
Healthcare
Security Management
|
3
|
MI
5146
|
Health
Care Ethics
|
3
|
RESEARCH ACTIVITY
Code
|
Activity
|
Semester Units
|
RES
5699
|
Thesis
|
2
|
Return to Top
11.05.02 Ph.D. in Medical Informatics
The PhD degree allows graduates to lead research in
academic or industry positions. Our faculty and students pursue research across
the spectrum of medical informatics, from bioinformatics through translational
and clinical informatics. All prospective applicants should note that the
program in Biomedical Informatics emphasizes research in novel computational
methods aimed at advancing biology and medicine. Student may want to
investigate degree programs from other computational and quantitative graduate programs
(Bioengineering, Computer Science, and Statistics) and other programs in the
Biosciences Programs (such as Genetics, Chemical Systems Biology, or Structural
Biology). In contrast to the other computational/quantitative programs, AUSTC
focuses more on informatics issues of knowledge representation and reasoning,
data mining and analysis, and machine learning, while in contrast to the
Biosciences program, AUSTC places greater emphasis on method development and
evaluation than on basic science.
Faculty from many departments have research projects
of a computational nature, and in some cases there is considerable overlap, but
our applications committee evaluates the fit of students’ application to our
program, so the choice of a home program is an important one as befits an
interdisciplinary program, our students come from diverse backgrounds and
training experiences.
Some enter straight from baccalaureate training, while
others have pursued advanced degrees, such as an MS, MPH, or MD, or worked in
clinical medicine, bioengineering, biotechnology, or software engineering.
Admission Prerequisites
Graduates
of M.S. in Medical Informatics qualify for admission.
Or
• One year of calculus. Further
coursework in multivariate calculus is strongly recommended.
• Coursework in probability and
statistics, and linear algebra
•
One year of
computer programming/computer science coursework. The focus should be
fundamentals of computer science and software engineering principles, including
abstraction, modularity, and object-oriented programming, not merely the syntax
of a programming language, scripting, or web programming.
• One year of
college biology at the level required of biology majors.
Objectives:
Through AUSTC
Ph.D. in medical informatics program, graduates will:
•
Gain
a specialized in-depth understanding of new and existing digital technology and
health information management systems within the context of the U.S. health
care system.
•
Be
prepared to lead in the development, implementation, evaluation and management
of information technology solutions to improve patient health and the health
care delivery process.
•
Use
health informatics to reduce the occurrence of medical errors.
•
Utilize
health information technology for decision making support, knowledge
management, strategic planning, and outcomes assessment and management to
optimize cost efficiencies in the health care system.
•
Effectively
interface between the data systems developers and the user community.
•
Facilitate
the development and advancement of e-Health initiatives and other emerging
information technologies to improve health care delivery and cost efficiencies.
• Analyze data to
identify early patterns of diseases, illness, and injury and review prevention
and treatment options.
Program Features
The
doctoral program is a full-time, residential, research-oriented program. AUSTC
does not offer part-time or distance education leading to the PhD in Medical
Informatics. However, some students may apply to the part-time distance
education program at the master’s degree, and then submit a separate
application to the PhD program. There is no guarantee that distance learning
Master’s graduates will be accepted into the PhD full time program, unless all
prerequisites shall be satisfied.
PhD
students start in the fall quarter. They spend an average of five years at
AUSTC and are expected to undertake significant research projects.
Candidates are encouraged to explore the various
research interests of the medical informatics core and participating faculty.
Practice rotations during the first year expose students to different
disciplines and faculty. Prior to being formally admitted to candidacy for the
doctoral degree at the end of the second year of study, each student must
demonstrate knowledge of informatics fundamentals and a potential for
succeeding in research by passing a qualifying oral examination. Students later
complete and defend a doctoral dissertation.
MDs interested in the PhD in Medical Informatics
should contact us as early as possible, especially if student is coordinating
the AUSTC training with further medical residency or fellowship training. It is
also important to ensure that appropriate math and computer science
prerequisites are completed before applying.
Program Requirements:
- To graduate, students are
required to take 60 credits at AUSTC and research work
- Each student may qualify for
transfer of 8 semester units from previously obtained education and/or training
at an accredited or recognized facility.
Required = 62 Semester Units
Maximum Credit Transfer = 8 Semester Units
Minimum Taken at AUSTC = 52 Semester Units
2 Information Research Strategies (Optional, if not
taken earlier)
10 Credits - Fundamental subjects
10 Credits - Core subjects
30 Credits - Advanced specialty subjects
2 Credits - Submission of Concept Paper,
2 Credits - Comprehensive Exam
6 Credits – Dissertation
Curriculum
GENERAL
KNOWLEDGE (2 Semester Units):
Code
|
General Studies
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
ALS
6010
|
Information
Research Strategies
|
2
|
FUNDAMENTAL
SUBJECTS (10 Semester Units):
Code
|
Fundamental
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
RES
6120
|
Statistical
Modeling and Analysis for Complex Data Problems
|
2
|
RES
6121
|
Optimal
Experimental Design
|
2
|
RES
6122
|
Mathematical
Modeling
|
2
|
RES
6123
|
Research
Methods and Design
|
2
|
RES
6124
|
Dissertation
Planning, Writing, and Defending
|
2
|
CORE
SUBJECTS (10 Semester Units):
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
MI
6I30
|
Gene
Expression Data Analysis
|
2
|
MI
6I31
|
Data
Analysis and Graphics Using R
|
2
|
MI
6132
|
Tools
of Bioinformatics
|
2
|
MI
6133
|
Biometeorology
|
2
|
MI
6134
|
Ethical,
Legal and Social Issues in Biotechnology
|
2
|
FOCUS
(30 Semester Units):
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
MI
6140
|
Bioinformatics
|
3
|
MI
6141
|
Fundamentals
of Healthcare Programming
|
3
|
MI
6142
|
Informatics
in Medical Imaging
|
3
|
MI
6143
|
Probabilistic
Modeling in Medical Informatics
|
3
|
MI
6144
|
Clinical
Information Systems
|
3
|
MI
6145
|
Health
Information Technology & Management
|
3
|
MI
6146
|
Comparative
Health Information Management
|
3
|
MI
6147
|
Medical
Devices Design for Six-Sigma
|
3
|
MI
6148
|
Essentials
of Health Information Management
|
3
|
MI
6149
|
Knowledge
Management and Data Mining in Biomedicine
|
3
|
RESEARCH
ACTIVITIES (10 Semester Units):
Code
|
Research Subjects /
Activity
|
Semester Units
|
RES
7160
|
Concept
Paper
|
2
|
RES
7161
|
Doctoral
Comprehensive Examination
|
2
|
RES
7162
|
Doctoral
Dissertation Research l
|
2
|
RES
7163
|
Doctoral
Dissertation Research ll
|
2
|
RES
7164
|
Doctoral
Dissertation Research lll
|
2
|
Return to Top
11.05.03 – M.S.
Nutritional Sciences
The courses and programs in nutrition and food sciences have
emerged from and are integrated with the physical and life sciences. The
natural resource of food is studied as it exists in nature, is consumed and
utilized, and is made available to consumers. The science of nutrition is
concerned with the ingestion and utilization of food for the purposes of
survival, prevention of disease, and the promotion of positive health. Courses
for non-majors, as well as majors, are offered in order to facilitate optimal
lifetime nutritional status.
Program
Objectives:
The MS in Nutritional Science provides an opportunity
for students to:
- Obtain full
knowledge on Dietetics which is the study of the relationship of food to the
health and well-being of individuals and groups. Traditional occupations in
clinics, hospitals, educational programs, public health agencies, research, and
teaching are increasingly available for Nutrition and Food Science majors.
- Meet the
requirements for increased need for dietitians and nutritionists
- Graduates may
also work in food service and processing industries, wellness programs,
computer systems management, public communication, and product development and
promotion. Courses in the Option in General Dietetics meet the requirements of
the American Dietetic Association for an approved Didactic Program in Dietetics
(DPD).
- Gain knowledge
and skills in medical nutrition, sports nutrition, community nutrition, food
science, and foodservices administration.
- Present
graduates to an area of specialization for exercise physiology, child
development, nursing, health and community services, and others. The Minor in
Foodservice Administration offers an area of specialization for majors in
business administration, management, marketing, recreation, and tourism.
- Provide an
opportunity for students to increase competence in food and nutrition subject
matter in preparation for college teaching, research, administrative positions
in public and private agencies, and graduate study beyond the master’s degree.
The Option in Nutrition Education is designed specifically to facilitate
nutrition professionals in communicating information to promote optimal health
and nutritional status.
- Specialize in
nutrition, food science, clinical nutrition, or community nutrition.
- Increase competence in food and
nutrition subject matter in preparation for college teaching, research,
graduate study beyond the master’s degree, and administrative positions in
public and private agencies.
Admission
Prerequisites:
1. An acceptable baccalaureate from
a recognized institution, or an equivalent approved by the Office of Graduate
Programs, which includes a minimum of 24 upper-division units among the subject
areas of biochemistry, chemistry, nutrition and food science, mathematics,
microbiology, physiology, and statistics.
2. Computer literacy is also
required. Students with deficiencies in undergraduate preparation may be
required to take prerequisite course work at the discretion of the Graduate
Coordinator after consultation with the student and faculty in the subject
matter area(s) considered deficient.
3. Required subjects must have been
completed within the five years prior to taking the graduate courses. Outdated
prerequisites must be validated either by examination or by registration
(credit will not be earned for validating this course work).
4.
Approval by
the Nutrition and Food Science Graduate Coordinator.
Faculty and Facilities:
Faculty members, in addition to teaching and advising,
are actively involved in research, and other professional activities.
Facilities include collaborative practices for courses and experiments in food
science and nutrition. Presented computer activities improve instruction
quality with programs for nutrition analyses of diets, food cost control,
recipe and menu evaluation, tutorials, and simulations. Internships are
coordinated for majors in a variety of community settings.
Requirements
Required = 45 Semester Units
Maximum Credit Transfer = 8
Semester Units
Minimum Taken at AUSTC = 32
Semester Units
2 Credits - ALS 6010
(Required)
10 Credits - Fundamental
Subjects
10 Credits - Core Subjects
21 Credits - Specialty
Subjects
2 Credits - Thesis
Curriculum
GENERAL KNOWLEDGE
Code
|
General Studies
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
ALS
6010
|
Information
Research Strategies
|
2
|
FUNDAMENTAL
Code
|
Fundamental
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
NTR
5120
|
Food
Biochemistry and Food Processing
|
2
|
NTR
5121
|
Advanced
Nutrition and Human Metabolism
|
2
|
NTR
5122
|
Statistical
Methods and Variance Analysis
|
2
|
NTR
5123
|
Experimental
Design
|
2
|
NTR
5124
|
Group
Therapy
|
2
|
CORE
Code
|
Core
Subjects
|
Semester
Units
|
NTR 5130
|
Biostatistics
|
2
|
NTR 5131
|
Food Intake: Regulation, Assessing and Controlling
|
2
|
NTR 5132
|
Nutritional Education Theories and Practice
|
2
|
NTR 5133
|
Metabolic Disorders
|
2
|
NTR 5134
|
Nutrition Research Methods
|
2
|
SPECIALTY
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
NTR
5140
|
Laboratory
Nutritional Assessment
|
3
|
NTR
5141
|
Advanced
Medical Nutrition Therapy
|
3
|
NTR
5142
|
Medical
Nutrition Therapy
|
3
|
NTR
5143
|
Food
and Nutritional Toxicology
|
3
|
NTR
5144
|
Nutritional
Epidemiology
|
3
|
NTR
5145
|
Molecular
Biology/Genetics
|
3
|
NTR
5146
|
Behavioral
Group Therapy
|
3
|
RESEARCH ACTIVITY
Code
|
Research Subjects /
Activity
|
Semester Units
|
RES
5699
|
Thesis
|
2
|
Return to Top
11.05.04 – PhD, Nutritional Sciences
The Department of
Nutrition and Food Studies at the school of Sciences offers an
interdisciplinary program of advanced study in nutrition and dietetics that
prepares graduates for teaching, research, administrative, and leadership
positions in academic, public health, industry, and other institutions.
Program
Objectives
Upon satisfactory completion of a PhD in
Nutritional Sciences, graduates will be able to:
1.
Describe
human nutrient requirements and their relationship to metabolic pathways and physiological
function;
2.
Perform an in
depth assessment of the nutritional status of individuals and groups;
3.
Describe how
nutritional factors across the lifespan affect etiology, incidence, and
prevalence of major diseases, quality of life, and productivity at work and
school in the population;
4.
Describe the
process, rationale and issues related to establishing nutrient requirements and
dietary guidance for the population;
5.
Apply
conceptual models of evidence-based approaches to promoting nutritional health;
6.
Construct
testable hypotheses, develop appropriate study designs, and conduct research,
which will significantly expand knowledge of nutritional sciences;
7.
Disseminate
research findings through oral presentations and peer reviewed journals;
8.
Prepare
proposals for procuring research funding; and
9.
Develop and
provide instruction in a higher education academic setting.
ADMISSION Prerequisites:
1.
Undergraduate
or master's degree from a recognized institution
2.
Competitive
applicants typically have a combined Graduate Record Examination (GRE) score of
at least 1200.
3.
TOEFL scores
(international students only). Successful candidates typically score 600 on the
paper-based exam; 250 on the computer-based exam; or 100 on the internet-based
exam.
4.
Current
resume or curriculum vitae, including information about:
·
Previous
academic training in nutrition or dietetics and the undergraduate or master's
level b Previous work experience in nutrition or dietetics
·
Potential to
make a contribution to the profession
5.
Statement of
Purpose (about 500 words) explaining:
·
Why you are
applying to the doctoral program
·
Your career
goals and how doctoral training will help you achieve these goals
·
How doctoral
work will help you contribute to the profession
6.
Three letters
of recommendation from employers, former professors, or professional colleagues
who have observed applicant’s work
Program Requirements:
To graduate, students are required to take
60 credits at AUSTC and research work. Each student may qualify for transfer of
8 semester units from previously obtained education and/or training at an
accredited or recognized facility.
Required = 62 Semester Units
Maximum Credit Transfer = 8 Semester Units
Minimum Taken at AUSTC = 52 Semester Units
2 Information Research Strategies (Optional, if not
taken earlier)
10 Credits - Fundamental subjects
10 Credits - Core subjects
30 Credits - Advanced specialty subjects
2 Credits - Submission of Concept Paper,
2 Credits - Comprehensive Exam
6 Credits – Dissertation
Curriculum
GENERAL
KNOWLEDGE (2 Semester Units):
Code
|
General Studies
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
ALS
6010
|
Information
Research Strategies
|
2
|
FUNDAMENTAL
SUBJECTS CURRICULUM (10 Semester Units):
Code
|
Fundamental
Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
RES
6120
|
Statistical
Modeling and Analysis for Complex Data Problems
|
2
|
RES
6121
|
Optimal
Experimental Design
|
2
|
RES
6122
|
Mathematical
Modeling
|
2
|
RES
6123
|
Research
Methods and Design
|
2
|
RES
6124
|
Dissertation
Planning, Writing, and Defending
|
2
|
CORE
SUBJECTS CURRICULUM (10 Semester Units):
Code
|
Core Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
NTR
6130
|
Human
Nutrition Science
|
2
|
NTR
6131
|
General
Biochemistry
|
2
|
NTR
6132
|
Human
Physiology
|
2
|
NTR
6133
|
Foundations
of Public Health
|
2
|
NTR
6134
|
Principles
and Practices of Epidemiology
|
2
|
FOCUS
SUBJECTS CURRICULUM (30 Semester Units):
Code
|
Concentration /
Specialty / Focus Subjects
|
Semester Units
|
NTR
6140
|
Evaluation
of Nutritional Status
|
3
|
NTR
6141
|
Genome
Organization, Structure and Maintenance
|
3
|
NTR
6142
|
Genome
Expression and Regulation
|
3
|
NTR
6143
|
Health
Benefits of Functional Foods
|
3
|
NTR
6144
|
Metabolic
Disorders
|
3
|
NTR
6145
|
Advanced
Medical Nutrition Therapy
|
3
|
NTR
6146
|
Food
Intake: Regulation, Assessing and Controlling
|
3
|
NTR
6147
|
Laboratory
Nutritional Assessment
|
3
|
NTR
6148
|
Advanced
Community Nutrition
|
3
|
NTR
6149
|
Advanced
Nutrition and Human Metabolism
|
3
|
RESEARCH
(10 Semester Units):
Code
|
Research Subjects /
Activity
|
Semester Units
|
RES
7160
|
Concept
Paper
|
2
|
RES
7161
|
Doctoral
Comprehensive Examination
|
2
|
RES
7162
|
Doctoral
Dissertation Research l
|
2
|
RES
7163
|
Doctoral
Dissertation Research ll
|
2
|
RES
7164
|
Doctoral
Dissertation Research lll
|
2
|
Return to Top
12
- courses’ Description:
12.01 - General Knowledge:
ALS 1007: Information
Research Methods: By providing an introduction to the scholarly research process,
with an emphasis on using both print and electronic information resources and
services, this course is designed to help Learners develop information
literacy—the ability to locate, evaluate, and use information to become
independent, life-long Learners.
ALS 6010: Information
Research Strategies: Introduction to information research including electronic resources.
This course is designed to help researchers locate, evaluate, and use
information. It includes exploration of the research process, search
strategies, locating resources, source documentation, and organization of
research.
HU 1007: Modern American History:
This course is a study of the development of American
characteristics and nationality from colonial beginnings through the period of
Reconstruction, emphasizing the factors and forces which produced the
Revolution, the Constitution, westward expansion, sectionalism and the Civil
War. It also includes a study of the social, economic, and political forces
that moved the United States through changing times from the
post-Reconstruction era to the present, focusing on both domestic and foreign
affairs in the country’s last century of development.
HU 1009: World's Religions:
Provides an introduction to the historical, geographic, mythical,
ritual, psychosocial, anthropological, and doctrinal differences among the
major world religions.
LS 1002: English Composition
I: The purpose of this course is to guide the learner through the
writing process to develop expository prose with an emphasis on effective
organization and on correctness. Utilizes exercises in developing, drafting,
revising, proofreading in APA writing style for attaining collegiate writing
skills.
LS 2002: English
Composition II: This course focuses on applied writing using references,
citations, and a bibliography. This course requires the completion of an 8-10
page research paper. This research paper may be on any subject of interest to
the Learner. However, cited outside sources of information (rather than just
your opinion) must be used.
LS 1009: College Algebra: This
course is a general purpose algebra course. It is a skill oriented course with
an emphasis on the development of these skills through the use of real data. A
basic understanding of high school algebra is necessary. The use of graphics
calculator or computer software which has the same capabilities is required. If
the Learner has access to a graphics calculator, the Learner should use it in
the completion of all course objectives and assignments. However, if a
computational and graphing device must be purchased, it is recommended that
Math-Cad software be purchased. It is recommended that the Learner contact the
faculty mentor within the first week of the course for the most economical
source for this software.
NS 1002: Introduction to
Meteorology: An introductory course about the atmosphere environment, intended
to relate one's everyday experiences to meteorological concepts and to stress
the understanding and application of principles. It explains the ‘how’ and
‘why’ behind the nightly weather reports.
NS 1004: Controversial
Environmental Issues: This course presents major environmental
issues facing today’s world, such as: political issues; the effect of
technology; waste disposal and the future of the environment. Advocates for
each side of the issues present their views. The Learner is expected to analyze
both sides of the controversy as well as present his/her critical opinions.
PS 1002: U.S. Government: This
course is an elitist introduction to American government. Elite theory is
contrasted to democratic theory and to modern pluralist political theory and
includes examining the U.S. Constitution, American political history, power
structures, public opinion, mass media, elections, parties, interest groups,
the presidency, Congress, the bureaucracy, the courts, federalism, protest
movements, and public policy.
SS 1004: Sociology: Looks
into the principles and problems of group behavior, socialization, culture, and
social organizations.
LS 1004: Introduction to
Statistics: This is a first course in basic statistics exposing students to both
descriptive and inferential statistics with emphasis on applications and the
mathematical formulae. Graphing of data and computer or calculator statistical
analyses will be required, with hand calculations of even the most elementary
computations being discouraged.
LS 1006: Logic and
Critical Thinking: This course helps learners to think more clearly, critically, and
competently as well as sharpen reasoning abilities when encountering new and
unexpected situations. Besides the development of higher order thinking,
Learners will learn to formulate, analyze, and model problems, select relevant
information in order to devise plans and test solutions. This includes an
introduction to the principles of correct reasoning and their application.
Emphasis is on improving the skills of thinking and reading critically,
analyzing and evaluating arguments objectively, and constructing sound
arguments based on relevant evidence.
NS 1006: Health and
Nutrition: Focuses on the personal responsibility of health for a lifetime of
physical, psychological, emotional and social well-being
SS 1007: Psychology of
Business: This course teaches Learners how to apply established
psychological concepts to improve personal effectiveness in business
situations. It demonstrates practical application of these concepts through case
studies of problem situations commonly occurring in the workplace.
Return to Top
12.02 - Business and
Technology Management
12.02.01 - Accounting:
AC 4130 Accounting Principles I: Introduction
to basic principles, concepts, and theoretical framework of financial
accounting with the emphasis on its use by economical rational decision makers.
Topics include the decision-making environment and the accounting cycles,
processes, and statements.
AC 4131: Accounting
Principles II: Emphasizes the role of accounting information within a firm.
Topics include budgeting, responsibility accounting, cost allocations, cost
behavior, decision models, capital budgeting, and an introduction to product
costing in manufacturing and service sector firms.
AC 4132: Accounting
Theory/Practice I: Studies the theory, concepts, and practices underlying financial
reporting and measurement. Primary focus is on income measurement, and the
valuation of assets, like cash, receivables, inventory, and long-lived assets,
as well as multinational issues.
AC 4133: Accounting
Theory/Practice Il: A continuation of ACC 3000 with theories, concepts, and practices
underlying financial measurement and reporting. Focuses on the measurement and
reporting of liabilities and equities, and includes multinational issues.
AC 4134: Managerial/Cost
Accounting I: The primary emphasis is on traditional and contemporary product
costing techniques, cost allocation practices, and basic cost-management
issues. Topics include process costing, standard costing, activity-based
costing, back-flush costing, cost allocation issues, balanced scorecard,
strategic profitability analysis, and the role of accounting in contemporary
management practices.
AC 4135: Foundations of
Taxation: Introduction to basic principles, concepts, and theoretical framework
of taxation systems, emphasizing income taxation and its impact on decision
making. Topics include tax planning and compliance for individuals,
corporations, and partnerships.
AC 4136: Advanced
Accounting: The theory and practice of financial accounting and reporting
pertaining to business combinations and consolidated financial statements,
accounting for partnerships, and related business forms, foreign currency
transactions, and financial statement translations, and other advanced
accounting topics.
AC 4140: Accounting
Systems: Introduction to the basic principles, concepts, and theoretical
framework for the design and operation of accounting information systems,
emphasizing its use to enhance decision making. Topics include system design,
internal controls, the use of databases, and electronic commerce.
AC 4141: Principles of
Finance: Introduction to the principles of finance. Topics include
financial mathematics, the capital investment decision, financial assets
valuation, and the risk-return relationship
AC 4142: Managerial/Cost
Accounting II: Emphasizes information requirements of contemporary management
decision-making and strategic-planning processes. Covers contemporary control
and evaluation practices (such as activity-based management), determining the
costs of quality, and productivity analysis in the context of accounting
information systems.
AC 4143: Intellectual
Property Management: Covers principles of intellectual property, addressing managerial
and policy issues in copyright, trademark, trade secret, and patents. Readings
and discussions also cover how these property and legal systems impact the
balance between property exclusivity, technological innovation and public
access.
AC 4144: Attestation and
Assurance: Auditing procedures and techniques associated with public
accounting and with internal auditing for business entities. Topics include
auditor's responsibilities, professional ethics, generally accepted auditing
standards, purpose and types of audits, objectives, internal control, evidence,
organization within the public accounting profession, the audit program, and
auditing procedures and techniques.
AC 4145: Applied Portfolio
Management: Covers issues in the management and administration of investments
in an institutional setting. Students form a new investment firm and manage a
real portfolio of financial assets.
AC 4146: Investment
Analysis and Portfolio Management: Develops a framework to make
intelligent investment decisions and achieve successful investment results
through a global outlook. Covers the theoretical and technical concepts
involved in investing in marketable securities. A framework for making
intelligent investment decisions and achieving successful investment results is
developed
AC 4147: Advanced
Financial Management: Advanced topics in managerial finance: Advanced
capital budgeting, project analysis, capital acquisition, capital structure and
dividend policy, and other topics.
AC 4148: Derivatives and
Financial Engineering: Covers the pricing and use of options,
financial futures, swaps, and other derivative securities.
AC 4149: Financial Risk
Management and Financial Engineering: Detailed analysis of the
measurement of financial risk and the tools and techniques available to manage
financial risk. Topics include financial disasters, risk measurement (market,
default, currency exchange, value-at-risk) and the hedging of these risks.
AC 4150: Governmental and
Not-for-Profit Accounting: focuses on Governmental and Not-for-Profit
Accounting Environment and Characteristics, The Use of Funds in Governmental
Accounting, Budgetary Considerations in Governmental Accounting, An
Introduction to General and Special Revenue Funds, General and Special Revenue
Funds, Capital Projects Funds, Debt Service Funds, and Permanent Funds,
Proprietary-Type Funds, Fiduciary Funds, Reporting Principles and Preparation
of Fund Financial Statements, Government-Wide Financial Statements, Federal
Government Accounting and Reporting, Accounting for Not-For-Profit
Organizations, Accounting for Health Care Organizations, Analysis of Financial
Statements and Financial Condition, Fundamentals of Accounting
AC 4151: Global Finance: Studies
international financial systems and markets. Covers the principle of
comparative advantage, balance of payments, exchange rate systems, theories of
international finance, identification of international risk exposures, the
management and treatment of risk, and special topics of international finance
Return to Top
12.02.02 - Applied
Computer Sciences:
ACS 4140: Introduction to
Business Programming: Develops business problem solving skills
through the application of a commonly used high-level business programming
language. Topics include the nature of the business programming environment,
fundamentals of the language (e.g., programming constructs, data management,
manipulation of simple data structures), structured programming concepts,
desirable programming practices and design, debugging and testing techniques.
ACS 4141: Business
Development: Focuses on the development of a business plan including marketing
plans, organization, distribution, and financial projections. Emphasis is on
the senior design project or enterprise project assigned to the student.
ACS 4142: Computer
Administration: Administration of non-networked computers. Topics include: operating
system installation; boot-up and shutdown; process management; account
management; file systems; storage technology; backups; serial devices.
ACS 4143: Visual Basic
Programming: Lecturing and training on the language including how to run the
environment and creating applications with full coverage of data structure,
procedures, event management, looping and object oriented programming
ACS 4144: Networking and
Internet: Focuses on operating systems concepts including the design, kernel
and application on several platforms
ACS 4145: Computer
Networking: Focuses on different computer network topologies and methods as
well as setting up and management with methods of access control and
troubleshooting
ACS 4146: Web Technology
and Development: Comprehensive coverage of web design and methods of transcription
including web programming languages and transcripts, static and dynamic pages
ACS 4147: Web Programming:
Extensive training on how to build Web sites with traditional HTML
and its successor XHTM, study of how CSS can be used to make Web pages more
attractive by controlling the presentation and formatting of pages, and how to
access databases and to use JavaScript™ to enhance the power of web pages,
along with how to make pages work in several generations of Web browsers.
ACS 4148: Information
Technology Management: Up-to-date coverage on how new technology is
changing the way organizations operate and compete Every day, new technology
influences how organizations operate and compete in the current global
environment, and this updated edition of a classic provides authoritative and
streamlined coverage of this evolving topic. High-profile topics are discussed,
such as social networks, green IS, and business intelligence, and global examples
span a wide range of subject matter.
ACS 4149: Business Process
Analysis: Studies business decision management discipline using business
rules, process models (e.g. flowcharts, unified modeling language, swim lanes),
and information systems to improve efficiency and effectiveness. Emphasis on
industry standards and business process management used to increase
productivity.
ACS 4150: Business
Database Systems: Emphasizes database principles that are constant across different
database software products through concrete examples using a relational
database management system. Provides a well-rounded business perspective about
developing, utilizing, and managing organizational databases
ACS 4151: Systems Analysis
and Design: Provides an understanding of the IS development and modification
process and the evaluation choices of a system development methodology.
Emphasizes effective communication with users and team members and others in
association with the development and maintenance of the information system, and
stresses analysis and logical design of departmental-level information system
ACS 5140: Theory of
Computation: Topics covered include Turing machines and their variants, the
halting problem and decidability, computability, reducibility, NP-completeness,
time and space complexity, and topics from recursive function theory.
ACS 5141: Distributed
Systems: Covers time and order in distributed systems; mutual exclusion,
agreement, elections, and atomic transactions; Distributed File Systems,
Distributed Shared Memory, Distributed System Security; and issues in
programming distributed systems. Uses selected case studies.
ACS 5142: Systems Design
and Integration: System specification and design with an overview of technical
performance measurements, activity management, risk management, decision
analysis, cost analysis, and concurrent engineering. A broad view of customer
and vendor integration, design reviews, quality systems, predictability, and
sustainability are also presented.
ACS 5143: Systems Quality
and Reliability: Technology and methodology for setting standards and measuring
component performance. Testing and methods for evaluating internal and external
subcontractor components and data are also presented. Contemporary issues of
continuous improvement in quality and manufacturing, 6-sigma, and service
industries are examined. Documentation related to offshore manufacturing is
also introduced.
ACS 5144: Systems Project
Management: Management techniques for large scale projects with multiple
components and subsystems. Includes establishing and tracking responsibilities
and costs of both internal and external value streams; Methods of investigating
delivery, payment, and mechanical performance are also presented.
ACS 5145: Business
Database Management: Emphasizes database principles that are constant across different
database software products through concrete examples using a relational
database management system. Provides a well-rounded business perspective about
developing, utilizing and managing organizational databases
ACS 5146: Web Applications
and Server Administration: In-depth study of Apache web server,
Microsoft Internet Information Server (IIS) and email services. Topics include
server configuration, load balancing, connecting to the Internet, web security
and administration, communication media, HTTP, fault tolerance, and proxy
servers.
ACS 6140: Decision Support
and Expert Systems: Explains fundamentals of artificial intelligence and expert
systems that manipulate data and arrive at decisions through a programming
process that resembles the human thinking process.
ACS 6141: E-Commerce
Concepts: Electronic commerce touches each of us daily. As consumers we are
continually offered products and services via the Internet. In our jobs, no
matter what profession we are in, electronic commerce is being used more and
more to conduct business, for training purposes and daily communications. This
course examines the principles of electronic commerce and business transactions
on the Internet.
ACS 6142: Concepts of
Database Management: Focuses on data as a valuable organizational resource that must be
managed, distributed, and maintained in a secure manner.
ACS 6143: Integrated
Business Processes with ERP Systems: Covers the key processes
supported by modern ERP systems and examines in depth the core concepts
applicable to all ERP environments, and it explains how those concepts can be
utilized to implement business processes in SAP systems.
ACS 6144: Monitoring
Web-Based Applications and Infrastructure: Provides Learners with the
skills to build powerful Web-based applications for the electronic commerce
environment.
ACS 6145: Managerial
Electronic Commerce: Provides a thorough explanation of what EC is, how it’s being
conducted and managed, and how to assess its opportunities, limitations,
issues, and risks.
ACS 6146: Electronic
Payment Systems: Examines in detail the transformation of the VISA system from a
collection of non-integrated, localized, paper-based bank credit card programs
into the cooperative, global, electronic value exchange network it is today.
ACS 6147: Network Defense:
Security and Vulnerability Assessment: covers the fundamental skills in
evaluating internal and external threats to network security and design, how to
enforce network level security policies, and how to ultimately protect an
organization's information. I also cover a broad range of topics from secure
network fundamentals, protocols & analysis, standards and policy, hardening
infrastructure, to configuring IPS, IDS, firewalls, bastion host and honey-pots.
ACS 6148: Data Mining
Concepts and Techniques: Provides an understanding and application of
the theory and practice of discovering patterns hidden in large data sets, it
also focuses on new, important topics in the field: data warehouses and data
cube technology, mining stream, mining social networks, and mining spatial,
multimedia and other complex data. Each lesson is a stand-alone guide to a
critical topic, presenting proven algorithms and sound implementations ready to
be used directly or with strategic modification against live data. This is the
resource you need if student may want to apply today’s most powerful data
mining techniques to meet real business challenges. It also presents dozens of
algorithms and implementation examples, all in pseudo-code and suitable for use
in real-world, large-scale data mining projects, and addresses advanced topics
such as mining object-relational databases, spatial databases, multimedia
databases, time-series databases, text databases, the World Wide Web, and
applications in several fields. *Provides a comprehensive, practical look at
the concepts and techniques student may need to get the most out of managed
data.
ACS 6149: Computer
Networking: Focuses on different computer network topologies and methods as
well as setting up and management with methods of access control and
troubleshooting
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12.02.03
- Business Administration:
BUS 4121: Human Resource
Management And Development: Examines methods that
organizations use to meet organizational goals through influencing worker
attitudes, behaviors, and performance. Topics include recruitment, selection,
training, performance appraisal, and compensation.
BUS 4122: Organizational
Behavior: Covers concepts of human relations and organizational behavior
through the study of people's behavior at work. Develop understanding,
attitudes, and skills leading to increased personal effectiveness.
BUS 4123: Principles of
Marketing: Emphasizes decisions made in developing both strategic and tactical
marketing plans. Uses computer simulations, experiential learning assignments,
and marketing plan development to demonstrate principles of market
segmentation, product development, pricing, distribution planning, and
promotion
BUS 4124: Business Statistics:
Introduction to basic concepts and methods of probability and
statistics, including the following topics: collection, description and
presentation of data, probability, random variables, sampling, probability
distributions, estimation and hypothesis testing, ANOVA, and selected
non-parametric techniques.
BUS 4125: Introduction to
Business: Introduction to planning, organizing, decision-making, leadership
and control in a business. Business disciplines of accounting, finance,
information systems, management, marketing, and operations are introduced,
along with discussions of business ethics and social responsibility.
BUS 4126: Basic Business
law: Provides an understanding of the legal basis of contracts and
their enforcement in the areas of general contracts, contracts of commercial
sales and of agency, and commercial paper.
BUS 4127: Principles of
Economics: An introduction to economics. The microeconomics portion covers
consumer choice, the firm, value and price theory, and distribution theory. The
macroeconomics portion covers national income analysis, fiscal policy, money
and monetary policy, the commercial banking system, and the Federal Reserve
System.
BUS 4128: Business Process
Analysis: Studies business decision management discipline using business
rules, process models (e.g. flowcharts, unified modeling language, swim lanes),
and information systems to improve efficiency and effectiveness. Emphasis on
industry standards and business process management used to increase
productivity.
BUS 4130: Foundation of
Financial Management: Focuses on the financial management in
general including statements review, analysis and reporting methods
BUS 4131: Business
Statistics: Introduction to basic concepts and methods of probability and
statistics, including the following topics: collection, description and
presentation of data, probability, random variables, sampling, probability
distributions, estimation and hypothesis testing, ANOVA, and selected
non-parametric techniques.
BUS 4132: Rules of Marketing
and Public Relations: Focuses on marketing principles and rules
that controls business relations within the business or organization as well as
the business and public relations between vendors and customers and/or
consumers in general
BUS 4133: Developing
Management Skills: Methods of evaluation and development of applied management skills
at the levels of lower, middle and senior management and methods to select
leaders from working force
BUS 4134: Practical
Business Accounting: Comprehensive coverage of accounting and financial methods from
the basics to reporting and analysis including comparison between manual and
automated systems.
BUS 4135: Essentials of
Marketing Management: Covers the principals and essentials of
marketing management including methods of planning, practice, analysis,
evaluation and re-planning with marketing research methods
BUS 4136: Essentials of
Human resources Management: Focuses on human resources
management including recruiting, benefits design, evaluation and legal management
BUS 4140: Administrative
Office Management: Integrates the software applications skills, business
communication skills, critical thinking, and concepts and activities that
address the workplace environment, customer service, mail, travel, meetings, and
events, records management; Students take this course because they'll be
entering the workforce as administrative professionals and need to learn about
office procedures, communication styles, financial factors and methods, meeting
preparation, and office technology among other topics.
BUS 4141: Introduction to
Material Management: covers all the essentials of modern supply chain management,
manufacturing planning and control systems, purchasing, and physical
distribution.
BUS 4142: Small Business
Management: Introduces small business management and the multitudes of
management skills required for successful operation.
BUS 4143: Manufacturing
Planning and Control: Covers both basic and advanced concepts and
applications and provides an understanding of supply chain planning and control
techniques with topics including purchasing, manufacturing, warehouse, and
logistics systems and focuses on the integration of manufacturing with the
supply chain.
BUS 4144: Product Design
and Development: Presents in a clear and detailed way a set of product development
techniques aimed at bringing together the marketing, design, and manufacturing
functions of the enterprise. The integrative methods facilitate problem solving
and decision making with different disciplinary perspectives, reflecting the
current industry toward designing and developing products in cross-functional
teams.
BUS 4145: Marketing
Research: Covers marketing research theory and practice and demonstrates how
marketing concepts can be carried out in reality, and which methods are most
appropriate for particular types of research with utilization of digital
developments and case studies enabling students to understand the issues
involved in carrying out research and the potential pitfalls to be aware of, thereby
ensuring a clear understanding of the overall subject.
BUS 4146: Advertising
Principles and Practice: The New World of Marketing Communication,
Integrated Brand Communication, Brand Communication and Society, How Brand
Communication Works, Segmenting and Targeting the Audience, Strategic Research,
Strategic Planning, Creative Strategy, Copywriting, Visual Communication, Media
Basics, Traditional Media, Digital Media, Media Planning and Buying, Public
Relations, Direct-Response, Promotions, The IMC Umbrella, Evaluation of
Effectiveness
BUS 4147: Promotion and
Marketing Communications: Focuses on THE IMC FOUNDATION, Integrated
Marketing Communications, Corporate Image and Brand Management, Buyer
Behaviors, The IMC Planning Process, IMC ADVERTISING TOOLS, Advertising
Management, Advertising Design: Theoretical Frameworks and Types of Appeals,
Advertising Design: Message Strategies and Frameworks, IMC MEDIA TOOLS,
Traditional Media Channels, E-active Marketing, Alternative Marketing, IMC
PROMOTIONAL TOOLS, Database and Direct Response Marketing and Personal Selling,
Sales Promotions, Public Relations and Sponsorship Programs, IMC ETHICS,
REGULATION, AND EVALUATION, Regulations and Ethical Concerns, and Evaluating an
Integrated Marketing Program.
BUS 4148: Retail
Management: An Introduction to Retailing, Building and Sustaining
Relationships in Retailing, Strategic Planning in Retailing, Retail
Institutions by Ownership, Retail Institutions by Store-Based Strategy, Web,
Non-store-Based, and Other Forms of Nontraditional Retailing, Identifying and
Understanding Consumers, Information Gathering and Processing in Retailing,
Trading-Area Analysis, Selection, Retail Organization and Human Resource
Management, Operations Management: Financial Dimensions, Operations Management:
Operational Dimensions, Developing Merchandise Plans, Implementing
Merchandise, Financial Merchandise Management, Pricing in Retailing,
Establishing and Maintaining a Retail Image, Promotional Strategy and
integrating and Controlling the Retail Strategy.
BUS 4149: Sales Force
Management: Effective selling demands knowledge not only of the business
product or service, but also the techniques of dealing with the customer’s
needs and wants and overcoming objections. Effective selling focuses on the
customer’s perceived product value and customer need satisfaction
BUS 4150: Project
Management: Focuses on project definition, selection, planning, scheduling,
implementation, performance monitoring, evaluation and control. Emphasis will
be on product, service and process development and emerging concepts related to
development on the internet. Some advanced concepts in resource constraint
management and design matrix are included.
BUS 4151: Operations
Strategy: Addresses issues in operations management, quality,
finance/accounting, marketing, supply chain, and technology to provide an
interdisciplinary focus on strategic planning for operations. Also addresses
issues associated with global initiatives and changing technology.
BUS 5120: Financial
Reporting and Control: This class covers the collection, reporting
and analysis of financial information with emphasis on the use of that
information to support decision making.
BUS 5121: Financial Risk
Management and Decision Making: Explores the theory and practice
of finance and capital markets. Topics include role of the financial manager
and goals of the firm, financial mathematics, valuation of assets, cost of
capital, project evaluation, capital structure, forecasting, financing
vehicles, special topics in finance.
BUS 5122: Derivative
Securities: Studies futures, forwards, and option pricing and their uses for
speculation, arbitrage and hedging. The option pricing framework is extended to
cover exotic options and options embedded in real assets.
BUS 5123: Business Process
Management: Applications and case studies focusing on contemporary issues in
operations and quality management to include lean manufacturing practices, ERP,
quality and environmental management systems/standards, Six Sigma, statistical
process control, and other current topics.
BUS 5124: Operations
Strategy: Application and case studies are used to address issues in
operations management, quality, research and development, capacity planning,
budgeting, marketing, supply chain, and technology to provide an
interdisciplinary, quantitative focus on decision making and strategic planning
for operations.
BUS 5130: Operations
Strategy: Application and case studies are used to address issues in
operations management, quality, research and development, capacity planning,
budgeting, marketing, supply chain, and technology to provide an
interdisciplinary, quantitative focus on decision making and strategic planning
for operations.
BUS 5131: Global
Operations and Supply Chain Management: Case analysis, in-depth article
reviews, and course projects are used to address issues in the design and
management of global supply chains. Topics include global sourcing strategies,
strategic alliances, demand and supply uncertainties, logistic network design,
managing variability and risk, supply chain interactions and the value of
information.
BUS 5132: Project
Management: Focuses on project definition, selection, planning, scheduling,
implementation, performance monitoring, evaluation and control. Emphasis will
be on product, service and process development and emerging concepts related to
development on the internet. Some advanced concepts in resource constraint
management and design matrix are included.
BUS 5133: Business Process
Simulation: Discrete event and continuous simulation modeling techniques
applied to the analysis of business processes. Special- purpose simulation
software will be used to analyze cases and problems from the manufacturing and
service sectors.
BUS 5134: Managing
Behavior in Organizations: Discusses managing effectively within the
environmental context of the organization. Topics include corporate culture,
managing in a global environment, planning and strategy, organizational
structure, human resources management, managing change, leadership, motivation,
communication, conflict management, and teamwork.
BUS 5140: Business and
Corporate Strategies: Introduces students to a repertoire of
strategies that have been found useful in the creation of competitive advantage:
cost leadership, business model differentiation, vertical integration,
diversification, globalization, mergers and acquisitions, tacit collusion,
alliance, and flexibility-agility-adaptability strategies.
BUS 5141: Launching
Entrepreneurial Ventures: Focuses on the development of new
technology-based businesses. Topics include creativity, screening technological
opportunities, analyzing markets, testing business concepts, protecting
intellectual property, strategy development, entrepreneurial team selection,
securing financing, and developing a business plan.
BUS 5142: Growing and
Managing New Ventures: Focuses on growing new technology-based
businesses. Topics include building an effective entrepreneurial team, ethics
and social responsibility, financial planning/reporting, working capital
management, growth marketing, product/process development, raising capital,
managing change and development, and planning for succession.
BUS 5143: Managing
Innovation and Technology: An evolutionary strategic perspective is
taken viewing how technology strategy evolves from underlying technological
competencies, patterns of innovation, sources of external technological
knowledge and modes of transfer.
BUS 5144: Strategic
Managerial Processes: Introduces students to advanced topics in
strategic change, strategy formation, and strategy implementation through a
review of organization theories and processes. Course materials are applied to
specific projects through individual specialized strategic management research
projects.
BUS 5145: Corporate Social
Responsibility & Business Ethics: Explores corporate social
responsibility (CSR), business ethics, and corporate governance. Topics include
organizational and environmental forces which drive CSR (e.g., sustainability,
fair trade, and globalization); stakeholder theory; the strategic context of
CSR; and implementation of CSR into strategy and culture.
BUS 5146: Managing Change:
This course focuses on theory, research, and practice of both
'planned' and 'unplanned' change. The course considers the dynamics of change
in complex organizations, variables which facilitate or impede change, and how
to lead change and motivate others to change.
BUS 6130: Business Process
Management: Applications and case studies focusing on contemporary issues in
operations and quality management to include lean manufacturing practices, ERP,
quality and environmental management systems/standards, Six Sigma, statistical
process control, and other current topics.
BUS 6131: Operations
Strategy: Application and case studies are used to address issues in
operations management, quality, research and development, capacity planning,
budgeting, marketing, supply chain, and technology to provide an
interdisciplinary, quantitative focus on decision making and strategic planning
for operations.
BUS 6132: Project
Management: Focuses on project definition, selection, planning, scheduling,
implementation, performance monitoring, evaluation and control. Emphasis will
be on product, service and process development and emerging concepts related to
development on the internet. Some advanced concepts in resource constraint
management and design matrix are included.
BUS 6133: Business and
Corporate Strategies: Introduces students to a repertoire of
strategies that have been found useful in the creation of competitive advantage:
cost leadership, business model differentiation, vertical integration,
diversification, globalization, mergers and acquisitions, tacit collusion,
alliance, and flexibility-agility-adaptability strategies.
BUS 6134: Managing Change:
This course focuses on theory, research, and practice of both
'planned' and 'unplanned' change. The course considers the dynamics of change
in complex organizations, variables which facilitate or impede change, and how
to lead change and motivate others to change.
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12.02.04
- Construction Project Management:
CPM 4140: Essentials of
Human resources Management: Focuses on human resources
management including recruiting, benefits design, evaluation and legal
management
CPM 4141: Project
management for construction: Introduction to Project
Management for design and construction processes, elements of planning,
estimating, scheduling, bidding, and contractual relationships, computer
scheduling and cost control, critical path method, design and construction activities
and field supervision.
CPM 4142: Drafting and
Plan Reading: Theoretical and Hands on training course covers introduction to
architecture, architectural drafting fundamentals, basic architectural
drawings, presentation methods, foundations and construction systems, framing
systems, electrical and mechanical design drawings and drawing management and
support services.
CPM 4143: Building
Services Engineering: Focuses on Climate Change, Post Occupancy,
Built Environment, Energy Economics, Ventilation and Air Conditioning, Heat
Demand, Heating, Water Services, Electrical, Lighting, Condensation, Gas, Plant
& Service Areas, Fire, Protection, Room Acoustics and Mechanical Transport
CPM 4144: Surveying and
Setting Out Technology in Construction: To analyze and evaluate the way
in which the construction industry has improved due to surveying instruments,
in terms of increased productivity and greater degree of accuracy. One of the
key forces in modern construction is to develop a technologically advanced and
competitive construction industry which is able to deliver high quality
buildings and infrastructure. So how important is surveying and setting
equipment in the modern construction industry in helping to increase
productivity by cutting costs, reducing time and increasing the quality of the
work? The results and findings in this book should help shed some light on
surveying technology and should be especially useful to professionals in the
construction industry, students looking to do more research in the area of
surveying or anyone else who is interested in the general topic of surveying
and setting out.
CPM 4145: Construction
Documents and Specification: Comprehensive, practical, and
professional guidance to understanding the purposes and processes for
preparation of construction specifications using real-world document examples
that reflect current writing practices shaped by the well-established
principles and requirements of major professional associations
CPM 4146: Construction
Accounting & Financial Management: Master the principles of
financial management, and adapt and apply them to the challenge of profitably
managing construction companies. It integrates content that has traditionally
been taught through separate accounting, finance, and engineering economics
texts. Students learn how to account for a construction company’s financial
resources; how to manage its costs, profits, and cash flows; how to evaluate
different sources of funding a company’s cash needs; and how to quantitatively
analyze financial decisions as well as gaining hands-on experience through
example problems and practice problems.
CPM 4147: Project
Management: Focuses on project definition, selection, planning, scheduling,
implementation, performance monitoring, evaluation and control. Emphasis will
be on product, service and process development and emerging concepts related to
development on the internet. Some advanced concepts in resource constraint
management and design matrix are included.
CPM 4148: Finite Elements:
differential equations focus on formulation and application of the
finite element to engineering problems such as stress analysis, heat transfer,
fluid flow and electromagnetic. Topics include: finite element formulation for
one-dimensional problems, such as trusses, electrical and hydraulic systems,
scalar field problems in two dimensions, such as heat transfer, and vector
field problems such as elasticity and finally usage of the commercial finite
element program. Detailed course description: Focus on formulation and
application of the finite element method to engineering problems such as stress
analysis, heat transfer, fluid flow and electromagnetic. The course material is
organized in three chronological units one month each: (1) the finite element
formulation for one-dimensional problems, such as trusses, electrical and
hydraulic systems, (2) the finite element formulation for scalar field problems
in two dimensions, such as heat transfer and (3) the finite element formulation
for vector field problems such as elasticity, and (4) finite element
programming and usage of commercial finite element program.
CPM 4149: Project
Planning, Scheduling and Control: strategies for dealing
effectively with team members, clients, senior managers and other key
stakeholders and is the perfect prescription for project success including
Chapters on Full-spectrum Project Management and how to manage a virtual
project team, Managing and facilitating project meetings, Techniques for
dealing with contractors and Guidelines for setting up a project office
CPM 4150: Construction
Safety and Health: A definitive review and comprehensive introduction of the
construction industry best practices and fundamental concepts of environmental
health and safety management systems for the Construction Management field. How
modern EH&S management system techniques and theories not only result in
improved safe work environments but ultimately enhance operational processes
and performance in construction projects.
CPM 4151: Quality
Improvement: Focus on quantitative aspects of quality improvement, Lean
Enterprise, Six Sigma, Experimental Design, and Taguchi’s and Quality
Engineering with comprehensive coverage of fundamental statistical quality
improvement concepts. A practical state-of-the-art approach is stressed
throughout, and sufficient theory is presented to ensure that students develop
a solid understanding of basic quality principles.
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12.02.05
- HealthCare Management:
HCA 5140: Health Care
Financial Management: Reviews of the budget formulation process for
health care delivery systems, and explores both private and public funding
sources and payment methods, and the role of public sector in determining fee
schedules.
HCA 5141: Health Care
Politics, Policy and Services: Presents an overview of the
factors which govern and affect the development of health care policy in
America.
HCA 5142: Healthcare
Strategic Planning: Addresses major functions and issues surrounding public health
service institutions, particularly within the context of a general administrative
structure. A framework for developing a foundation and understanding of
administrative, environmental, regulatory, financial and planning factors,
which influence public health services, is established.
HCA 5143: Implementing
Continuous Quality Improvement In Health Care: Examines
Total Quality Management and its philosophy of continuous quality improvement
in all business and clinical functions including problem-solving, and patient
satisfaction.
HCA 5144: Health Care
Ethics: Examines the legal and ethical issues affecting health care
delivery in America including abortion, organ donation and transplantation,
termination of life support, rights of the terminally ill and consent issues,
state and federal regulation, and patient and provider relationship.
HCA 5145: Comparative
Health Care Systems: The comparison of major health care systems, their measurement and
effects are studied. The focus is on the health care systems in Canada, United
States, Japan, Russia, Cuba, China, England, and Sweden.
HCA 5146: Assessment And
Planning In Health Programs: Analyzes the strengths,
weaknesses, and future potential for survival of health care corporations
preparing for the new millennium. Strategic planning is the ongoing corporate
process which allows such organizations to wisely grasp the opportunities of
the future.
HCA 6140: Health Care
Financial Management: Reviews of the budget formulation process for
health care delivery systems, and explores both private and public funding
sources and payment methods, and the role of public sector in determining fee
schedules.
HCA 6141: Health Care
Politics, Policy and Services: Presents an overview of the
factors which govern and affect the development of health care policy in
America.
HCA 6142: Healthcare
Strategic Planning: Analyzes the strengths, weaknesses, and future potential for
survival of health care corporations preparing for the new millennium.
Strategic planning is the ongoing corporate process which allows such
organizations to wisely grasp the opportunities of the future
HCA 6143: Health Care
Grants: Introduces the methods and means of acquiring a public or private
sector health care grant.
HCA 6144: Implementing
Continuous Quality Improvement In Health Care: Examines
Total Quality Management and its philosophy of continuous quality improvement
in all business and clinical functions including problem-solving, and patient
satisfaction.
HCA 6145: Essentials Of
Managed Health Care: Prepares learner to assume roles in the management dimension of
HMO's/PPO's in the private-for-profit/not-for-profit and publicly-sponsored
HMO's.
HCA 6146: Health Care
Ethics: Examines the legal and ethical issues affecting health care
delivery in America including abortion, organ donation and transplantation,
termination of life support, rights of the terminally ill and consent issues,
state and federal regulation, and patient and provider relationship.
HCA 6147: Comparative
Health Care Systems: The comparison of major health care systems, their measurement and
effects are studied. The focus is on the health care systems in Canada, United
States, Japan, Russia, Cuba, China, England, and Sweden.
HCA 6148: Assessment And
Planning In Health Programs: Analyzes the strengths,
weaknesses, and future potential for survival of health care corporations
preparing for the new millennium. Strategic planning is the ongoing corporate
process which allows such organizations to wisely grasp the opportunities of
the future.
HCA 6149: Health Care
Administration Research Project: Field study in health care
administration or the presentation of a position paper on a major issue facing
the health care community. This course requires the graduate Learner to conduct
a research study in an area of Health Care Administration and to document the
results in a formal project report.
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12.02.06
- Human Resources Management:
HRM 5140: Human resources
Information systems: Introduction to human resources management and human resources
information systems, determining human resources information systems needs
human resources implementation and acceptance, human resources information
systems application and special topics in human resources information systems.
HRM 5141: Strategic
Compensation in Human Resources Management: Addressing traditional
aspects of compensation, such as job analysis and pay structure, as well as
recent topics including knowledge-based pay and executive compensation; contains
sections on the context of compensation practice, bases for pay, designing
compensation systems, employee benefits, and contemporary strategic
compensation challenges. Includes chapter objectives, summaries, key terms,
discussion questions, and exercises
HRM 5142: Labor Relations:
Reviews the history and development of labor relations, the
structure of union organizations, and the process of negotiations and contract
administration. Applicable laws and regulations governing collective bargaining
and impasse resolution are also examined.
HRM 5143: Leadership: Theory
and Practice: Being a Leader, Recognizing Your Traits, Recognizing Your
Philosophy and Style of Leadership, Attending to Tasks and Relationships,
Developing Leadership Skills, Creating a Vision, Setting the Tone, Listening to
Out-Group Members, Overcoming Obstacles and Addressing Ethics in Leadership.
HRM 5144: Managing Human
resources for Innovation and Change: Provides learners with the
technical background needed to be a knowledgeable consumer of human resource
(HR) products and services, to manage HR effectively, or to be a successful HR
professional. While clearly strategic in nature, the course also emphasizes how
managers can more effectively acquire, develop, compensate, and manage the
internal and external environment that relates to the management of human
resources.
HRM 5145: Human Resource
Management in Public Service: Throughout history the challenge
to managers has been to manage the organization's human resources to achieve
peaceful, productive and profitable organizational outcomes. This
specialization studies the interrelationships between human resources and the
business organization, equipping the manager to function as a HRM specialist in
business, industry, and service organizations.
HRM 5146: Employment Law
for Human Resource Practice: explains the major issues and
rules of employment law and how they apply to your human resource career.
Clippings of current news stories and events, hypothetical situations, and real
cases help you understand how the law applies to each stage of employment—from
hiring, to managing, to firing—and emphasize the application of legal concepts
to future business situations.
HRM 6140: Human resources
Information systems: Introduction to human resources management and human resources
information systems, determining human resources information systems needs
human resources implementation and acceptance, human resources information
systems application and special topics in human resources information systems.
HRM 6141: Strategic
Compensation in Human Resources Management: Addressing traditional
aspects of compensation, such as job analysis and pay structure, as well as
recent topics including knowledge-based pay and executive compensation; Contains
sections on the context of compensation practice, bases for pay, designing
compensation systems, employee benefits, and contemporary strategic
compensation challenges. Includes chapter objectives, summaries, key terms,
discussion questions, and exercises
HRM 6142: Labor Relations:
Reviews the history and development of labor relations, the
structure of union organizations, and the process of negotiations and contract
administration. Applicable laws and regulations governing collective bargaining
and impasse resolution are also examined.
HRM 6143: Leadership: Theory
and Practice: Being a Leader, Recognizing Your Traits, Recognizing Your
Philosophy and Style of Leadership, Attending to Tasks and Relationships,
Developing Leadership Skills, Creating a Vision, Setting the Tone, Listening to
Out-Group Members, Overcoming Obstacles and Addressing Ethics in Leadership.
HRM 6144: International
Human resources Management: Uncovering precisely why
International Human Resource Management is important for success in
international business and how International Human Resource Management policies
and practices function within the multinational enterprise, this comprehensive
textbook provides an outstanding foundation for understanding the theory and
practice of International Human Resource Management.
HRM 6145: Managing Human
resources for Innovation and Change: Provides learners with the
technical background needed to be a knowledgeable consumer of human resource
(HR) products and services, to manage HR effectively, or to be a successful HR
professional. While clearly strategic in nature, the course also emphasizes how
managers can more effectively acquire, develop, compensate, and manage the
internal and external environment that relates to the management of human
resources.
HRM 6146: Human Resource
Management in Public Service: Throughout history the challenge
to managers has been to manage the organization's human resources to achieve
peaceful, productive and profitable organizational outcomes. This
specialization studies the interrelationships between human resources and the
business organization, equipping the manager to function as a HRM specialist in
business, industry, and service organizations.
HRM 6147: Employment Law
for Human Resource Practice: explains the major issues and
rules of employment law and how they apply to your human resource career.
Clippings of current news stories and events, hypothetical situations, and real
cases help you understand how the law applies to each stage of employment—from
hiring, to managing, to firing—and emphasize the application of legal concepts
to future business situations.
HRM 6148: Quality
Management for Organizational Excellence: Covers the theories and
principles of total quality in the real world, current and comprehensive, it
covers every aspect of total quality -- including several that receive little
or no attention in other total quality books, and makes an understanding in
order to compete in the global arena, businesses must achieve consistent peak
performance, continual improvement, and maximum competitiveness with coverage
of Lean and Lean Six Sigma. Key topics covered include global competitiveness;
strategic management; ethics and corporate social responsibility; partnering
and strategic alliances; quality culture; customer satisfaction and retention;
employee empowerment; leadership; teamwork; communication; education and
training; overcoming negativity; the ISO 9000 quality management system; tools
and techniques; and implementing total quality management.
HRM 6149: Work Motivation
and Attitudes: Analysis and application of motivational theories and principles
to individuals and groups in the workplace. Evaluation of the theory and
application of various programs and techniques tried previously, including job
enrichment, participative management, improved supervision, compensation
systems, goal setting, and management by objectives, reinforcement, and
leadership development and influence techniques.
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12.02.07
- International Business Administration:
IB 5140: International
Business: Studies Background for International Business, Comparative
Environmental Frameworks, Theories and Institutions, Trade and Investment,
World Financial Environment, Global Strategy, Structure, Implementation, and
Managing International Operations.
IB 5141: The Cultural
Dimension of International Business: Focuses on understanding the
interaction between global business and culture, discussion of comparative
values and cultural differences and knowing the importance of understanding
nonverbal communication patterns prevalent in the international business arena,
and examination of three functional processes critical to success in conducting
global business: negotiating, partnering, and managing
IB 5142: International
Human resources Management: Uncovering precisely why
International Human Resource Management is important for success in
international business and how International Human Resource Management policies
and practices function within the multinational enterprise, this comprehensive
textbook provides an outstanding foundation for understanding the theory and
practice of International Human Resource Management.
IB 5143: International
Business Law: Brings the most important aspects of international business law
into one work, discusses issues from a truly international, rather than a
comparative, perspective, deals with topics such as sovereignty, risks, regulatory
aspects of international business, transfer of technology and turn-key
contracts.
IB 5144: Global Business
Strategic Management: Covers the process of globalization, managing
globally, broad issues in globalization and Global trends.
IB 5145: International
Economics: Presents the economic foundations of international trade,
investment, governmental intervention in international business, international
monetary system, balance of payments analysis, the foreign exchange markets and
currencies.
IB 5146: International
Marketing: Analyzes the environmental conditions that enhance or inhibit the
international firm's efforts to use the most effective marketing techniques for
demand cultivation in selected regions of the world.IB5014 - Cultural
Environment of International Business - Examines the complexities of operating
in foreign environments and managing organizational relationships and responses
to different cultural logics and objectives.
IB 6140: International
Business: Focuses on the overview of world trade and the international
economic, political, and cultural environments for business.
IB 6141: International
Marketing: Analyzes the environmental conditions that enhance or inhibit the
international firm's efforts to use the most effective marketing techniques for
demand cultivation in selected regions of the world.IB5014 - Cultural
Environment of International Business - Examines the complexities of operating
in foreign environments and managing organizational relationships and responses
to different cultural logics and objectives.
IB 6142: International
Business Law: Brings the most important aspects of international business law
into one work, discusses issues from a truly international, rather than a
comparative, perspective, deals with topics such as sovereignty, risks,
regulatory aspects of international business, transfer of technology and
turn-key contracts.
IB 6143: Total Quality
Management in International Business: Examines the key issues of
competitiveness, globalization, computerization, and ethical behavior within a
total quality framework, and stresses the importance of balancing quality and
competitiveness in global markets.
IB 6144: The Cultural
Dimension of International Business: Provides a foundation for
understanding the impact of culture on global business and global business on
culture.
IB 6145: International
Economics: Presents the economic foundations of international trade,
investment, governmental intervention in international business, international
monetary system, balance of payments analysis, the foreign exchange markets and
currencies.
IB 6146: Global Business
Strategic Management: Develops a systems management model for
planning and achieving desired organizational outcomes for the global business.
IB 6147: Operations
Strategy: Application and case studies are used to address issues in
operations management, quality, research and development, capacity planning,
budgeting, marketing, supply chain, and technology to provide an
interdisciplinary, quantitative focus on decision making and strategic planning
for operations. Credits: 3.0 Lec-Rec-Lab: (3-0-0)
IB 6148: Supply Chain
Logistics Management: This course is concerned with applying
evolving methods in more closely integrating the processes of product
distribution and supply chain management using the power and speed of
electronic connectivity. The concepts presented can be applied to the
activities of businesses, government agencies and nonprofit organizations.
IB 6149: International
Business Administration Research Project: Field study to apply
international business administration to a situation of the Learner’s choice.
This course requires the graduate Learner to conduct a research study in an
area of International Business and to document the results in a formal project report.
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12.02.08
- Electronic Commerce
ECM 5140: Introduction to
E-Commerce: Fundamental study of computer application in commerce including
software applications supply management, retail management, e-payment, web
based commerce with an example of purchase cart management and control. Also
included is a hand on design and programming assignment that evolves dynamic
web pages and visual applications.
ECM 5141: E-Commerce
Concepts: Electronic commerce touches each of us daily. As consumers we are continually
offered products and services via the Internet. In our jobs, no matter what
profession we are in, electronic commerce is being used more and more to
conduct business, for training purposes and daily communications. This course
examines the principles of electronic commerce and business transactions on the
Internet.
ECM 5142: Monitoring
Web-Based Applications and Infrastructure: Provides Learners with the
skills to build powerful Web-based applications for the electronic commerce
environment.
ECM 5143: Managerial
Electronic Commerce: Provides a thorough explanation of what EC is how it’s being
conducted and managed, and how to assess its opportunities, limitations,
issues, and risks all from a managerial perspective.
ECM 5144: Electronic
Payment Systems: Examines in detail the transformation of the VISA system from a
collection of non-integrated, localized, paper-based bank credit card programs
into the cooperative, global, electronic value exchange network it is today.
ECM 5145: Supply Chain
Logistics Management: This course is concerned with applying
evolving methods in more closely integrating the processes of product
distribution and supply chain management using the power and speed of
electronic connectivity. The concepts presented can be applied to the
activities of businesses, government agencies and nonprofit organizations.
ECM 5146: E-Commerce
Marketing for Internet: This course develops the framework for
concept marketing on the Internet and is an extension of traditional marketing
courses. The Learner will look at the Internet as a content resource, channel
resource, and communication resource for marketing "business to
business" and "business to consumer".
ECM 6140: E-Commerce
Concepts: Electronic commerce touches each of us daily. As consumers we are
continually offered products and services via the Internet. In our jobs, no
matter what profession we are in, electronic commerce is being used more and
more to conduct business, for training purposes and daily communications. This
course examines the principles of electronic commerce and business transactions
on the Internet.
ECM 6141: E-Commerce for
Entrepreneurs: This course is designed specifically for the entrepreneur
launching a business. The Learner will look at email targeting, direct email
marketing, use of brochure websites, choice and use of mailing lists, website
development and maintenance, and generation of website traffic.
ECM 6142: E-Commerce
Marketing for Internet: This course develops the framework for
concept marketing on the Internet and is an extension of traditional marketing
courses. The Learner will look at the Internet as a content resource, channel
resource, and communication resource for marketing "business to
business" and "business to consumer".
ECM 6143: Electronic Commerce
Research Project: A field study in electronic commerce in an area of the Learner’s
choosing. This course requires the graduate Learner to conduct a research study
in an area of electronic commerce and to document the results in a formal
project report.
ECM 6144: Electronic
Payment Systems: Examines in detail the transformation of the VISA system from a
collection of non-integrated, localized, paper-based bank credit card programs
into the cooperative, global, electronic value exchange network it is today.
ECM 6145: Integrated
Supply Chain Management: This course is concerned with applying
evolving methods in more closely integrating the processes of product
distribution and supply chain management using the power and speed of
electronic connectivity. The concepts presented can be applied to the
activities of businesses, government agencies and nonprofit organizations.
ECM 6146: Localization
Strategies for E-Business: The acceleration of globalization and the
growth of emerging economies present significant opportunities for business
expansion. One of the quickest ways to achieve effective international
expansion is by leveraging the web, which allows for technological connectivity
of global markets and opportunities to compete on a global basis. To systematically
engage and thrive in this networked global economy, professionals and students
need a new skill set; one that can help them develop, manage, assess and
optimize efforts to successfully launch websites for tapping global markets.
ECM 6147: Managerial
Electronic Commerce: Provides a thorough explanation of what EC is how it’s being
conducted and managed, and how to assess its opportunities, limitations,
issues, and risks—all from a managerial perspective.
ECM 6148: Monitoring
Web-Based Applications and Infrastructure: Provides Learners with the
skills to build powerful Web-based applications for the electronic commerce
environment.
ECM 6149: Supply Chain
Logistics Management: This course is concerned with applying
evolving methods in more closely integrating the processes of product
distribution and supply chain management using the power and speed of
electronic connectivity. The concepts presented can be applied to the
activities of businesses, government agencies and nonprofit organizations.
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12.02.09
- Financial Management:
FIN 5140: Investment
Analysis and Portfolio Management: Develops a framework to make
intelligent investment decisions and achieve successful investment results
through a global outlook. Covers the theoretical and technical concepts
involved in investing in marketable securities. A framework for making
intelligent investment decisions and achieving successful investment results is
developed
FIN 5141: Financial
Markets and Institutions: Overview of the Financial System and fundamentals
of financial markets, interest rates mean and role in valuation, fundamentals
of financial institutions, central banking and the conduct of monetary policy,
financial markets, financial institutions industry and management of financial
institutions.
FIN 5142: International
Finance, Transactions, Policy, and Regulation: Studies
international financial systems and markets; Covers the principle of
comparative advantage, balance of payments, exchange rate systems, theories of
international finance, identification of international risk exposures, the
management and treatment of risk, and special topics of international finance.
FIN 5143: Financial Risk
Management and Financial Engineering: Detailed analysis of the
measurement of financial risk and the tools and techniques available to manage
financial risk. Topics include financial disasters, risk measurement (market,
default, currency exchange, value-at-risk) and the hedging of these risks.
FIN 5144: Accounting for
Nonprofit Organizations: Provides a complete review of accounting
principles used in not-for-profit organizations with emphasis on governmental
accounting practices.
FIN 5145: Financial
Management : Theory & Practice: Fundamental Concepts of Corporate
Finance, Fixed Income Securities, Stocks and Options, Projects and Their
Valuations, Corporate Valuation and Governance, Cash Distribution and Capital
Structure, Tactical Financing Decisions, Mergers, LBOs, Divestitures, and
Holding Companies, Bankruptcy, Reorganization, Liquidation, Derivatives and
Risk Management, Portfolio Theory, Asset Pricing Models, and Behavioral
Finance, Real Options, Analysis of Capital Structure Theory, Providing and
Obtaining Credit, Advanced Issues in Cash Management and Inventory Control,
Pension Plan Management and Financial Management in Not-For-Profit Businesses.
FIN 5146: Managerial
Accounting: Focus study of Managerial Accounting and Cost Concepts, Job-Order
Costing, Process Costing, Cost-Volume-Profit Relationships, Variable Costing
and Segment Reporting, Activity-Based Costing, Profit Planning, Flexible
Budgets and Performance Analysis, Standard Costs and Variances, Performance
Measurement in Decentralized Organizations, Differential Analysis, Capital
Budgeting Decisions, Statement of Cash Flows and Financial Statement Analysis.
FIN 6140: Investment
Analysis and Portfolio Management: Develops a framework to make
intelligent investment decisions and achieve successful investment results
through a global outlook. Covers the theoretical and technical concepts involved
in investing in marketable securities. A framework for making intelligent
investment decisions and achieving successful investment results is developed
FIN 6141: Financial
Markets and Institutions: Overview of the Financial System and
fundamentals of financial markets, interest rates mean and role in valuation,
fundamentals of financial institutions, central banking and the conduct of
monetary policy, financial markets, financial institutions industry and
management of financial institutions.
FIN 6142: International
Finance, Transactions, Policy, and Regulation: Studies
international financial systems and markets; Covers the principle of
comparative advantage, balance of payments, exchange rate systems, theories of
international finance, identification of international risk exposures, the
management and treatment of risk, and special topics of international finance.
FIN 6143: Foundations of
Financial Management: The lifeblood of every organization -
private, public, religious or corporate - is its financial resources. Managers
must know how to manage and allocate resources in order to ensure long-term
profitability and organizational health. This specialization concentrates on
developing these essential skills.
FIN 6144: Accounting for
Nonprofit Organizations: Provides a complete review of accounting
principles used in not-for-profit organizations with emphasis on governmental
accounting practices.
FIN 6145: Quality Concepts
in Financial Management: Examines how the financial function is
changing in organizations committed to Total Quality Management practices.
Emphasizes the importance of the financial function in emerging and developing
Total Quality Management systems
FIN 6146: Financial
Statement Analysis: Shows how accounting is used for analysis and managerial
decision-making by comparing ratios to directly measure and evaluate economic
outcomes.
FIN 6147: Accounting for
Nonprofit Organizations: Provides a complete review of accounting
principles used in not-for-profit organizations with emphasis on governmental
accounting practices.
FIN 6148: Financial
Management Research Project: Field study in financial
management in a situation of the Learner’s choosing. This course requires the
graduate Learner to conduct a research study in an area of Financial Management
and to document the results in a formal project report.
FIN 6149: Electronic
Payment Systems: Examines in detail the transformation of the VISA system from a
collection of non-integrated, localized, paper-based bank credit card programs
into the cooperative, global, electronic value exchange network it is today.
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12.02.10
- Management:
MGT 4140: Business
Communications: Covers foundations of business communication, the writing process,
brief messages, reports and oral presentations, and employment messages.
Learning features include on-the-job vignettes, Web links, profiles of business
communication professionals, and many sample documents for analysis and
critique. Other features include cases and questions and case-based exercises.
Also includes writing for the Web and e-business communication with
intercultural communication, workplace ethics, career skills, and technology.
MGT 4141: Organizational
Behavior: Covers concepts of human relations and organizational behavior
through the study of people's behavior at work. Develop understanding,
attitudes, and skills leading to increased personal effectiveness.
MGT 4142: Foundation of
Financial Management: Focuses on the financial management in
general including statements review, analysis and reporting methods
MGT 4143: Business
Statistics: Introduction to basic concepts and methods of probability and
statistics, including the following topics: collection, description and
presentation of data, probability, random variables, sampling, probability
distributions, estimation and hypothesis testing, ANOVA, and selected
non-parametric techniques.
MGT 4144: Developing
Management Skills: Methods of evaluation and development of applied management skills
at the levels of lower, middle and senior management and methods to select
leaders from working force
MGT 4145: Managerial
Accounting: Explores the nature of managerial accounting as it relates to
decision-making, analyses concepts and systems. It Presents planning and
control methods such as cost-volume-profit analysis and budgeting.
MGT 4146: Essentials of
Marketing Management: Covers the principals and essentials of
marketing management including methods of planning, practice, analysis,
evaluation and replanting with marketing research methods
MGT 4147: Essentials of
Human resources Management: Focuses on human resources
management including recruiting, benefits design, evaluation and legal
management
MGT 4148: Money, Banking
and Financial Market: Focuses on the basic functions served by the
financial system while deemphasizing its current structure and rules, and
provides students with knowledge and training to gain the ability to understand
and evaluate whatever financial innovations and developments they confront
learning the economic rationale behind current financial tools, rules, and
structures is much more valuable than concentrating on the tools, rules, and
structures themselves..
MGT 4149: Supervisory
Management: Give the tools to develop superior supervisory skills and a firm
grasp of management principles. Through hands-on approach to Supervision, the
course inspires with its positive approach to working WITH people to develop and
empower them in their jobs; incorporating cutting-edge content with real-world
cases and Skill Builders that give students plenty of opportunities to hone new
Supervision skills.
MGT 4150: Administrative
Office Management: Integrates the software applications skills, business
communication skills, critical thinking, and concepts and activities that
address the workplace environment, customer service, mail, travel, meetings,
and events, records management; Students take this course because they'll be entering
the workforce as administrative professionals and need to learn about office
procedures, communication styles, financial factors and methods, meeting
preparation, and office technology among other topics.
MGT 4151: Small Business
Management: Introduction to both entrepreneurship and small business
management with a focus on achieving and maintaining a small organization and
features a special focus on the impact of the financial crisis on small
business management.
MGT 5140: Organizational
Behavior and Management: Behavioral theories of the organization are
inherent in the operation of all organizations. Behavior of individuals and
groups in organizations serve to determine the organizational climate and
health. This course examines the nature of the behavior of organizations.
MGT 5141: Managerial
Economics & Business Strategy: The Fundamentals of Managerial
Economics, Market Forces: Demand and Supply, Quantitative Demand Analysis The
Theory of Individual Behavior, The Production Process and Costs, The
Organization of the Firm, The Nature of Industry Managing in Competitive,
Monopolistic, and Monopolistically Competitive Markets, Basic Oligopoly Models,
Chapter 10: Game Theory: Inside Oligopoly, Pricing Strategies for Firms with
Market Power, The Economics of Information, Advanced Topics in Business
Strategy, A Manager’s Guide to Government in the Marketplace, Case Study: Challenges
at Time Warner: A Case Study in Business Strategy
MGT 5142: Retail
Management -: An Introduction to Retailing, Building and Sustaining
Relationships in Retailing, Strategic Planning in Retailing, Retail
Institutions by Ownership, Retail Institutions by Store-Based Strategy, Web,
Non-store-Based, and Other Forms of Nontraditional Retailing, Identifying and
Understanding Consumers, Information Gathering and Processing in Retailing,
Trading-Area Analysis, Selection, Retail Organization and Human Resource Management,
Operations Management: Financial Dimensions, Operations Management: Operational
Dimensions, Developing Merchandise Plans, Implementing Merchandise, Financial
Merchandise Management, Pricing in Retailing, Establishing and Maintaining a
Retail Image, Promotional Strategy and integrating and Controlling the Retail
Strategy.
MGT 5143: Strategic
Management Theory: An Integrated Approach: Presents the complexities
of strategic management through up-to-date scholarship and hands-on
applications. Highly respected authors Charles Hill and Gareth Jones integrate
cutting-edge research on topics including corporate performance, governance,
strategic leadership, technology, and business ethics through both theory and
case studies. Based on real-world practices and current thinking in the field,
the tenth edition of STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT features an increased emphasis on the
changing global economy and its role in strategic management. The high-quality
case study program contains 31 cases covering small, medium, and large
companies of varying backgrounds. All cases are available in the main student
text or the core case text.
MGT 5144: Operations
Management: Application and case studies are used to address issues in
operations management, quality, research and development, capacity planning,
budgeting, marketing, supply chain, and technology to provide an
interdisciplinary, quantitative focus on decision making and strategic planning
for operations.
MGT 5145: Managerial
Accounting: Focus study of Managerial Accounting and Cost Concepts, Job-Order
Costing, Process Costing, Cost-Volume-Profit Relationships, Variable Costing
and Segment Reporting, Activity-Based Costing, Profit Planning, Flexible
Budgets and Performance Analysis, Standard Costs and Variances, Performance
Measurement in Decentralized Organizations, Differential Analysis, Capital
Budgeting Decisions, Statement of Cash Flows and Financial Statement Analysis.
MGT 5146: Organizational
Development: Survey of methodological approaches to planned change, including
organizational diagnosis, data collection, interventions, feedback, and
evaluation. Specific types of interventions covered include strategic planning,
organizational design, culture change, team building, survey feedback, goal
setting, and career development.
MGT 6140: Managerial
Economics & Business Strategy: The Fundamentals of Managerial
Economics, Market Forces: Demand and Supply, Quantitative Demand Analysis The
Theory of Individual Behavior, The Production Process and Costs, The
Organization of the Firm, The Nature of Industry Managing in Competitive,
Monopolistic, and Monopolistically Competitive Markets, Basic Oligopoly Models,
Chapter 10: Game Theory: Inside Oligopoly, Pricing Strategies for Firms with
Market Power, The Economics of Information, Advanced Topics in Business
Strategy, A Manager’s Guide to Government in the Marketplace, Case Study: Challenges
at Time Warner: A Case Study in Business Strategy
MGT 6141: Financial
Management : Theory & Practice: Fundamental Concepts of Corporate
Finance, Fixed Income Securities, Stocks and Options, Projects and Their
Valuations, Corporate Valuation and Governance, Cash Distribution and Capital
Structure, Tactical Financing Decisions, Mergers, LBOs, Divestitures, and
Holding Companies, Bankruptcy, Reorganization, Liquidation, Derivatives and
Risk Management, Portfolio Theory, Asset Pricing Models, and Behavioral
Finance, Real Options, Analysis of Capital Structure Theory, Providing and
Obtaining Credit, Advanced Issues in Cash Management and Inventory Control,
Pension Plan Management and Financial Management in Not-For-Profit Businesses.
MGT 6142: Strategic
Management Theory: An Integrated Approach: Presents the complexities
of strategic management through up-to-date scholarship and hands-on applications.
Highly respected authors Charles Hill and Gareth Jones integrate cutting-edge
research on topics including corporate performance, governance, strategic
leadership, technology, and business ethics through both theory and case
studies. Based on real-world practices and current thinking in the field, the
tenth edition of STRATEGIC MANAGEMENT features an increased emphasis on the
changing global economy and its role in strategic management. The high-quality
case study program contains 31 cases covering small, medium, and large
companies of varying backgrounds. All cases are available in the main student
text or the core case text.
MGT 6143: Operations
Management: Application and case studies are used to address issues in
operations management, quality, research and development, capacity planning,
budgeting, marketing, supply chain, and technology to provide an
interdisciplinary, quantitative focus on decision making and strategic planning
for operations.
MGT 6144: Leadership in
Organizations: Investigates leadership roles, styles, philosophy and behavior in
organizations.
MGT 6145: Managerial
Communication: Strategies and Applications: focuses on skills and
strategies that managers need in today’s workplace. This book continues to
stand out in the field for its strategic approach, solid research base,
comprehensive range of topics, even-handed examination of oral and written
channels, and focus on managerial, not entry-level, competencies. The
overriding principle for the revision was to preserve the book’s key strengths
while reflecting the realities of the twenty-first century workplace. The
chapters have been streamlined and condensed to meet the needs of a busy
contemporary manager and content has been added to reflect current business
practices.
MGT 6146: Entrepreneurship:
Focuses on Decision to Become an Entrepreneur, Developing
Successful Business Ideas, Moving from an Idea to an Entrepreneurial Firm and
Managing and Growing an Entrepreneurial Firm
MGT 6147: Business and
Management Consulting: Explores the process and dimensions of
management consulting including identification and nature of the client system,
definition of the problem(s) in establishing the contract, ethics, tools, and
techniques of the consulting practice.
MGT 6148: Organizational Development:
Survey of methodological approaches to planned change, including
organizational diagnosis, data collection, interventions, feedback, and
evaluation. Specific types of interventions covered include strategic planning,
organizational design, culture change, team building, survey feedback, goal
setting, and career development.
MGT 6149: Crisis
Management: Focuses on how to identify, isolate, and manage a crisis by
analyzing actual crisis situations.
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12.02.11
- Management Information Systems:
MIS 5140: Management
Information Systems: Provides an overview of MIS from the manager's perspective,
including major system components, processing and reporting.
MIS 5141: Information
Systems Project Management: The Nature Of Information
Technology Projects, Conceptualizing And Initializing The IT Project, The
Project Infrastructure, The Human Side Of Project Management, Defining And
Managing Project And Product Scope, The Work Breakdown Structure And Project
Estimation, The Project Schedule And Budget, Managing Project Risk, Project
Communication, Tracking, And Reporting, IT Project Quality Management, Managing
Organizational Change, Resistance And Conflict, Project Procurement Management
And Outsourcing, Leadership And Ethics, and Project Implementation, Closure,
And Evaluation.
MIS 5142: Fundamentals of
Database Management Systems: Focuses on data as a valuable
organizational resource that must be managed, distributed, and maintained in a
secure manner.
MIS 5143: Decision Support
and Business Intelligence Systems: Presents the various managerial
information support systems such as transaction processing, structured
decision, decision support and knowledge systems.
MIS 5144: Telecommunications
and Business Strategy: Provides the necessary management tools for business
system configurations for networks, data distribution, and telecommunication.
MIS 5145: Systems Analysis
and Design: Provides an understanding of the IS development and modification
process and the evaluation choices of a system development methodology. It emphasizes
effective communication with users and team members and others associated with
the development and maintenance of the information system and stresses analysis
and logical design of departmental-level information system.
MIS 5146: IT Systems
Management: Develops a step-by-step approach to becoming an effective
consultant based upon the skills developed in computer programming, networking,
computer analysis, systems installation, development, and related areas.
MIS 6140: Management
Information Systems: Provides an overview of MIS from the manager's perspective,
including major system components, processing and reporting.
MIS 6141: Information
Systems Development: Examines the MIS development process and the tools and techniques
of systems development from analysis, design, and acquisition, to
implementation and evaluation.
MIS 6142: Database
Management Systems: Focuses on data as a valuable organizational resource that must be
managed, distributed, and maintained in a secure manner.
MIS 6143: Decision Support
and Business Intelligence Systems: Presents the various managerial
information support systems such as transaction processing, structured
decision, and decision support and knowledge systems.
MIS 6144: Telecommunications
and Business Strategy: Provides the necessary management tools for
business system configurations for networks, data distribution, and telecommunication.
MIS 6145: Local Area
Networks Switching and Wireless: Presents LAN implementation and
examines how different architectures reflect standards and compatibility.
MIS 6146: Total Quality
Management in MIS: Presents the application of Total Quality Management principles,
tools and techniques in defining, constructing, and delivering automated
information systems and services to meet the challenges of modern
organizational requirements.
MIS 6147: Wide Area
Networks (WAN): Focuses on the technical aspects of computer communication for
worldwide communication through wide area networking.
MIS 6148: IT Systems
Management: Develops a step-by-step approach to becoming an effective
consultant based upon the skills developed in computer programming, networking,
computer analysis, systems installation, development, and related areas.
MIS 6149: Management
Information Systems Research Project: Provides learners with an
opportunity to do a real-world field study in management information systems.
This course requires the Graduate Learner to conduct a research study in an
area of Management Information Systems and to document the results in a formal
project report.
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12.02.12
- Marketing Management:
MK 4140: Integrated Supply
Chain Management: This course is concerned with applying evolving methods in more
closely integrating the processes of product distribution and supply chain
management using the power and speed of electronic connectivity. The concepts
presented can be applied to the activities of businesses, government agencies
and nonprofit organizations.
MK 4141: Business
Communications: Covers foundations of business communication, the writing process,
brief messages, reports and oral presentations, and employment messages.
Learning features include on-the-job vignettes, Web links, profiles of business
communication professionals, and many sample documents for analysis and
critique. Other features include cases and questions and case-based exercises.
Also includes writing for the Web and e-business communication with
intercultural communication, workplace ethics, career skills, and technology.
MK 4142: Marketing
Essentials: Shows how to improve sales and develop new markets for products
and services.
MK 4143: Rules of
Marketing and Public Relations: Focuses on marketing principles
and rules that controls business relations within the business or organization
as well as the business and public relations between vendors and customers
and/or consumers in general
MK 4144: Marketing
Research: Covers marketing research theory and practice and demonstrates how
marketing concepts can be carried out in reality, and which methods are most
appropriate for particular types of research with utilization of digital
developments and case studies enabling students to understand the issues
involved in carrying out research and the potential pitfalls to be aware of,
thereby ensuring a clear understanding of the overall subject.
MK 4145: Essentials of
Marketing Management: Covers the principals and essentials of
marketing management including methods of planning, practice, analysis,
evaluation and planning with marketing research methods
MK 4146: Small Business
Management: Introduction to both entrepreneurship and small business
management with a focus on achieving and maintaining a small organization and
features a special focus on the impact of the financial crisis on small
business management.
MK 4147: Advertising
Principles and Practice: The New World of Marketing Communication,
Integrated Brand Communication, Brand Communication and Society, How Brand
Communication Works, Segmenting and Targeting the Audience, Strategic Research,
Strategic Planning, Creative Strategy, Copywriting, Visual Communication, Media
Basics, Traditional Media, Digital Media, Media Planning and Buying, Public
Relations, Direct-Response, Promotions, The IMC Umbrella, Evaluation of
Effectiveness
MK 4148: Retail Management:
An Introduction to Retailing, Building and Sustaining
Relationships in Retailing, Strategic Planning in Retailing, Retail Institutions
by Ownership, Retail Institutions by Store-Based Strategy, Web,
Non-store-Based, and Other Forms of Nontraditional Retailing, Identifying and
Understanding Consumers, Information Gathering and Processing in Retailing,
Trading-Area Analysis, Selection, Retail Organization and Human Resource
Management, Operations Management: Financial Dimensions, Operations Management:
Operational Dimensions, Developing Merchandise Plans, Implementing
Merchandise, Financial Merchandise Management, Pricing in Retailing,
Establishing and Maintaining a Retail Image, Promotional Strategy and
integrating and Controlling the Retail Strategy.
MK 4149: Sales Force
Management: Effective selling demands knowledge not only of the business
product or service, but also the techniques of dealing with the customer’s
needs and wants and overcoming objections. Effective selling focuses on the
customer’s perceived product value and customer need satisfaction
MK 4150: Developing
Management Skills: Methods of evaluation and development of applied management skills
at the levels of lower, middle and senior management and methods to select
leaders from working force
MK 4151: Introduction to
Digital Marketing: Covers all the key topics including search engine optimization and
social media marketing. With real-world case studies to illustrate digital
marketing in practice and exercises to help you analyze, plan and execute
effective strategies within the workplace, this practical resource will prepare
you to undertake digital marketing across a variety of organizations.
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12.02.13
- Management of Engineering and Technology
MET 5130: Principles of
Productivity and Operation Management: Presents a broad introduction to
the field of operations in a realistic and practical manner, while offering the
largest and most diverse collection of problems on the market; and covers
operations strategy for competitive advantage, forecasting, design of goods and
services, human resources, e- commerce, project management, inventory
management, and maintenance.
MET 5132: Operations
Research: introduces deterministic models, probabilistic models, and
nonlinear models of decision making and problem solving, with example
applications of the Tora, Excel, Lingo, and Ampl programs
MET 5132: Applied Decision
Theory: Causal decision theory, Decision theory, Evidential decision
theory, 0-1 loss function, Action axiom, Admissible decision rule, Aggregated
Indices Randomization Method, Ambiguity aversion, Analysis paralysis, Analytic
Hierarchy Process, Analytic network process, Anthony Triangle, Applied
information economics, Behavioral operations research, Belief decision matrix,
Belief structure, Binary decision, Brown Gibson Model, Business rules engine,
Buyer decision processes, Cause-effect graph, Choice, Choice architecture,
Choice-supportive bias, Coquet integral, Clarity test, Clinical decision
support system, Cognitive bias, Cognitive inertia, Collaborative method,
Connectionist expert system, Consensus decision-making, Consensus-seeking
decision-making, Consensus-expectations gap, Cost-benefit analysis, Crossover
voting, Cumulative prospect theory, Decision aids, Decision analysis, Decision
analysis cycle, Decision engineering, Decision making, Decision making models,
Decision making software, Decision matrix, Decision model, Decision rule,
Decision support system, Decision table, Decision tree, Decision-matrix method,
Decision-theoretic rough sets, Decoy effect, Deployment cost-benefit selection
in physiology, Distinction bias, Dominating decision rule, Dynamic decision
making, Economic appraisal, Election, ELECTRE, Ellsberg paradox, Emotional
bias, Emotions in decision making, E-Rule-making, European Working Group on
Multiple Criteria Decision Aiding, Evidence-based design, Evidential reasoning
approach, Executive information system, Expected value of including
uncertainty, Expected value of perfect information, Expected value of sample
information, Expert system, Expert systems for mortgages, Faustmann's formula,
Flipism, Fuzzy-trace theory, Gittins index, Group decision making, Health
management system, Hierarchical Decision Process, High-dimensional statistics,
Homothetic preferences, House of Quality, Hyperbolic absolute risk aversion,
IDF model, Inference engine, Influence diagram, Info-gap decision theory, Institutionalism
in international relations, Intelligent decision support systems, Inter-temporal
choice, James-Stein estimator, Kelly criterion, Kepner-Tregoe Inc., Linear
partial information, Litmus test (politics), Lock-in (decision-making), Loss
aversion, Loss function, Management information system, Mean-preserving spread,
Mental accounting, Minimax, Minimax estimator, Model-based reasoning, Movement
pattern analysis, Multi-Attribute Global Inference of Quality, Multi-criteria
decision analysis, Multi-criteria classification, Multi-scale decision making,
Naive diversification, Nash equilibrium, Naturalistic decision making,
Negotiation theory, New Approach to Appraisal, Nominal group technique,
Nonstructural Fuzzy Decision Support System, Omission bias, Optimal decision,
Optimal stopping, Organizational ethics, Path dependence, Policy, Polynomial
conjoint measurement, Potentially all pair wise rankings of all possible
alternatives, Price of stability...and much more
MET 5133: Quality
Management for Organizational Excellence: Covers the theories and
principles of total quality in the real world, current and comprehensive, it
covers every aspect of total quality -- including several that receive little
or no attention in other total quality books, and makes an understanding in
order to compete in the global arena, businesses must achieve consistent peak
performance, continual improvement, and maximum competitiveness with coverage
of Lean and Lean Six Sigma. Key topics covered include global competitiveness;
strategic management; ethics and corporate social responsibility; partnering
and strategic alliances; quality culture; customer satisfaction and retention;
employee empowerment; leadership; teamwork; communication; education and
training; overcoming negativity; the ISO 9000 quality management system; tools
and techniques; and implementing total quality management.
MET 5134: Occupational
Safety and Health: Full study of the history and current state of occupational safety
and health, the causes and consequences of accidents, the relevant laws and
regulations, safety analysis, accident investigation, training, ethics, and
specific concern areas. These include: ergonomics, stress, machine hazards,
temperature extremes, pressure, electricity, fire, industrial hygiene,
radiation, noise, emergencies, bloodborne pathogens, environmental safety,
product safety, and violence
MET 5140: Technology,
Management, and Society: Comprehensive coverage of Information,
Communications, and Understanding, Management's New Role, Work and Tools,
Technological Trends in the current Century, The Pre-technological Civilization
of 1900, The Once and Future Manager, The First Technological Revolution and
Its Lessons, Long-range Planning, Business Objectives and Survival Needs, The
Manager and the Moron and The Technological Revolution.
MET 5141: Industrial
Organization: Theory and Practice: Theory and Practice–which
features early coverage of Antitrust–punctuates its modern introduction to
industrial organization with relevant empirical data and case studies to show
how to apply theoretical tools.
MET 5142: Technology
Management: Activities and Tools: Practical approach to developing
operational efficiency and productivity with an accessibility that provides a
wealth of examples, tools and activities designed to increase the dynamic
capability of an organization. There is no single best way to manage technology
in a company: but there are lessons that can be learned from other companies
via case studies, and theoretical frameworks to guide learners towards
successful analysis and implementation.
MET 5143: Managing
Research and Development Organizations: Focus on ways to improve R&D
organization productivity and foster excellence in such companies and describes
how to design jobs, organize hierarchies, resolve conflicts, motivate
employees, and create an innovative work environment, with an extensive
cross-cultural coverage of European and Pacific Rim R&D organizations and
policies which greatly differ from the US and includes an entirely new section
on various strategic planning elements unique to an R&D organization along
with a case study.
MET 5144: Project
Management: Focuses on project definition, selection, planning, scheduling,
implementation, performance monitoring, evaluation and control. Emphasis will
be on product, service and process development and emerging concepts related to
development on the internet. Some advanced concepts in resource constraint
management and design matrix are included.
MET 5145: Managing Human
resources for Innovation and Change: Provides learners with the
technical background needed to be a knowledgeable consumer of human resource
(HR) products and services, to manage HR effectively, or to be a successful HR
professional. While clearly strategic in nature, the course also emphasizes how
managers can more effectively acquire, develop, compensate, and manage the
internal and external environment that relates to the management of human
resources.
MET 5146: Process
Technology Equipment and Systems: Study of process technology
learners with state-of-the-art graphics and photos, alongside updated
information that keeps pace with industry developments and launches several
process technicians into the chemical processing industry in a student and
industry-oriented approaches and contains excellent line art to better
illustrate key points and processes. Key topics include valves, vessels, and
piping, pumps and compressors, motors and turbines, heat exchangers, cooling
towers, boilers and furnaces, reactors and distillation, extraction and
separation systems, and process instrumentation.
MET 6140: Managing Human
resources for Innovation and Change: Provides learners with the
technical background needed to be a knowledgeable consumer of human resource
(HR) products and services, to manage HR effectively, or to be a successful HR
professional. While clearly strategic in nature, the course also emphasizes how
managers can more effectively acquire, develop, compensate, and manage the
internal and external environment that relates to the management of human
resources.
MET 6141: Principles of
Productivity and Operation Management: Presents a broad introduction to
the field of operations in a realistic and practical manner, while offering the
largest and most diverse collection of problems on the market; and covers
operations strategy for competitive advantage, forecasting, design of goods and
services, human resources, e- commerce, project management, inventory
management, and maintenance.
MET 6142: Operations
Research: introduces deterministic models, probabilistic models, and
nonlinear models of decision making and problem solving, with example
applications of the Excel, Lingo, and Ampl programs
MET 6143: Quality
Management for Organizational Excellence: Covers the theories and principles
of total quality in the real world, current and comprehensive, it covers every
aspect of total quality -- including several that receive little or no
attention in other total quality books, and makes an understanding in order to
compete in the global arena, businesses must achieve consistent peak
performance, continual improvement, and maximum competitiveness with coverage
of Lean and Lean Six Sigma. Key topics covered include global competitiveness;
strategic management; ethics and corporate social responsibility; partnering
and strategic alliances; quality culture; customer satisfaction and retention;
employee empowerment; leadership; teamwork; communication; education and
training; overcoming negativity; the ISO 9000 quality management system; tools
and techniques; and implementing total quality management.
MET 6144: Process
Technology Equipment and Systems: Study of process technology
learners with state-of-the-art graphics and photos, alongside updated
information that keeps pace with industry developments and launches several
process technicians into the chemical processing industry in a student and
industry-oriented approaches and contains excellent line art to better
illustrate key points and processes. Key topics include valves, vessels, and piping,
pumps and compressors, motors and turbines, heat exchangers, cooling towers,
boilers and furnaces, reactors and distillation, extraction and separation
systems, and process instrumentation.
MET 6145: Technology,
Management, and Society: Comprehensive coverage of Information,
Communications, and Understanding, Management's New Role, Work and Tools,
Technological Trends in the current Century, The Pre-technological Civilization
of 1900, The Once and Future Manager, The First Technological Revolution and
Its Lessons, Long-range Planning, Business Objectives and Survival Needs, The
Manager and the Moron and The Technological Revolution.
MET 6146: Industrial
Organization: Theory and Practice: Theory and Practice–which
features early coverage of Antitrust–punctuates its modern introduction to
industrial organization with relevant empirical data and case studies to show
how to apply theoretical tools.
MET 6147: Technology
Management: Activities and Tools: Practical approach to developing
operational efficiency and productivity with an accessibility that provides a
wealth of examples, tools and activities designed to increase the dynamic
capability of an organization. There is no single best way to manage technology
in a company: but there are lessons that can be learned from other companies
via case studies, and theoretical frameworks to guide learners towards
successful analysis and implementation.
MET 6148: Managing
Research and Development Organizations: Focus on ways to improve R&D
organization productivity and foster excellence in such companies and describes
how to design jobs, organize hierarchies, resolve conflicts, motivate
employees, and create an innovative work environment, with an extensive
cross-cultural coverage of European and Pacific Rim R&D organizations and
policies which greatly differ from the US and includes an entirely new section
on various strategic planning elements unique to an R&D organization along
with a case study.
MET 6149: Project
Management: Focuses on project definition, selection, planning, scheduling,
implementation, performance monitoring, evaluation and control. Emphasis will
be on product, service and process development and emerging concepts related to
development on the internet. Some advanced concepts in resource constraint
management and design matrix are included.
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12.02.14
- Public Administration:
PUB 5140: Introduction to
Public Administration: Examines bureaucracy at the federal, state,
and local levels with particular focus on the government's working, public
policies, and making choices for the benefit of society.
PUB 5141: The Practice of
Government Public Relations: Deals with the issues of lobbying
in Washington, D.C. and how the government tries to influence public opinion
for the sake of providing public benefit.*Prerequisite: fundamental
requirement in General Management
PUB 5142: Strategic
Managerial Processes: Introduces students to advanced topics in
strategic change, strategy formation, and strategy implementation through a
review of organization theories and processes. Course materials are applied to
specific projects through individual specialized strategic management research
projects.
PUB 5143: Public Budgeting
Systems: Focuses on the administration and management of public funds for
organizations in the public sector at the local, state, and federal levels, and
for private nonprofit organizations
PUB 5144: Essentials Of
Public Health Management: Addresses major functions and issues
surrounding public health service institutions, particularly within the context
of a general administrative structure. A framework for developing a foundation
and understanding of administrative, environmental, regulatory, financial and
planning factors, which influence public health services, is established.
PUB 5145: Public and
Non-Profit Private Sector Partnership: Illustrates a five step model
that guides governments, NGOs, non-profit private and business sectors and
academicians to decide on coordination and collaboration mechanisms, initiate
partnership, develop shared plans and monitor partnership performance. It puts
forward concepts, approaches and key elements of partnership. Memorandum of
understanding which clarifies roles and responsibilities of partners is a
prerequisite for productive partnerships
PUB 5146: Accounting for
Nonprofit Organizations: Provides a complete review of accounting
principles used in not-for-profit organizations with emphasis on governmental
accounting practices.
PUB 6140: The Practice of
Government Public Relations: Deals with the issues of lobbying
in Washington, D.C. and how the government tries to influence public opinion
for the sake of providing public benefit.*Prerequisite: fundamental
requirement in General Management
PUB 6141: Public Urban
Politics in a Global Age: Discusses far-reaching ramifications of urban
politics on every walk of public life, such as health, racism, public housing,
poverty, unemployment, and inner-city school systems.
PUB 6142: Regional
Planning for Contemporary Urban Regions: Examines public planning
as a useful tool for the management of public resources, and its impact on
villages, townships, towns, cities, states, and the nation.
PUB 6143: Public Budgeting
Systems: Focuses on the administration and management of public funds for
organizations in the public sector at the local, state, and federal levels, and
for private nonprofit organizations
PUB 6144: Essentials Of
Public Health Management: Addresses major functions and issues
surrounding public health service institutions, particularly within the context
of a general administrative structure. A framework for developing a foundation
and understanding of administrative, environmental, regulatory, financial and
planning factors, which influence public health services, is established.
PUB 6145: Public Program
Evaluation: Focuses on methods, procedures, techniques, and methodologies and
in evaluating publicly funded programs.
PUB 6146: Complex Public
Organizations: Examines the principal conceptual and theoretical bases for
understanding the structure and environment of public organizations. Also
explores the problems bureaucracy poses for democratic theory and vigorous
economy.
PUB 6147: Public Personnel
Management: Addresses the most current issues in public personnel management
and focuses on controversial–issues in public personal management, such as
comparative personnel management, pensions, sexuality, health, succession
planning, unions, and the multi-generational workforce.
PUB 6148: Healthcare
Strategic Planning: Addresses major functions and issues surrounding public health
service institutions, particularly within the context of a general
administrative structure. A framework for developing a foundation and
understanding of administrative, environmental, regulatory, financial and
planning factors, which influence public health services, is established.
PUB 6149: Quality
Management in Public Administration: Examines the principles and
methods for implementing an effective Total Quality Management system in a
governmental environment and provides a variety of planning methods to sustain
the system
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12.03 -
Engineering
12.03.01 Architectural
Engineering:
ARCE 4120: Architecture
Principles: Focus on the role of architecture principles and provides both a
theoretical and a practical perspective on architecture principles. The
theoretical perspective involves a brief survey of the general concept of
principle as well as an analysis of different flavors of principles.
Architecture principles are regarded as a specific class of normative
principles that direct the design of an enterprise, from the definition of its
business to its supporting IT. The practical perspective on architecture
principles is concerned with an approach to the formulation of architecture
principles, as well as their actual use in organizations. To illustrate their
use in practice, several real-life cases are discussed, an application of
architecture principles in TOGAF is included, and a catalogue of example
architecture principles is provided.
ARCE 4121: Introduction to
Building Information Modeling: Provides an in-depth
understanding of BIM technologies, the business and organizational issues
associated with its implementation and the profound advantages that can be
provided effectively through usage of BIM to all members of a project team. It
also includes completely updated material covering the current practice and
technology in this fast-moving field, with an expanded coverage of lean
construction and its use of BIM, with special focus on Integrated Project
Delivery throughout the course.
ARCE 4122: Fundamentals of
Engineering Thermodynamics: Covers energy and the first Law
of thermodynamics, evaluating properties, control volume analysis using energy,
the second law of thermodynamics, using entropy, analysis, vapor power systems,
gas power systems, refrigeration and heat pump systems, thermodynamic
relations, ideal gas mixtures and, reacting mixtures and combustion and
chemical and phase equilibrium.
ARCE 4123: Fundamentals of
Structural Analysis: Introduces engineering and architectural learners to the basic
techniques for analyzing the most common structural elements, including beams,
trusses, frames, cables, and arches. The subject covers the classical methods
of analysis for determinate and indeterminate structures, and provides an
introduction to the matrix formulation on which computer analysis is based. It
also features an expanded treatment of snow, earthquake, and wind loads that
are part of the updated ANSI/ASCE 7 standards.
ARCE 4124: Structural
Concrete Design: Complete guidance to the analysis and design of reinforced and
pre-stressed concrete structures and coverage the latest ACI 318 - 11 code
rules, emphasizing the code's strength approach and strain limits. Additional
codes, standards, and specifications, as well as material properties and
specific loads and safety provisions are also examined in detail. Includes full
coverage of the application of shear design to beams with variable length in
actual structure, the design of deep beams employing ACI and AASHTO strut-and-tie
approach, the design of stepped-type reinforced concrete stairs, not covered
anywhere else, seismic design and analysis utilizing the IBC 2012 and ASCE 7-10
code, the design of curved beams subject to flexure, shear, and torsion,
pre-stressed concrete bridge design according to AASHTO specifications, and
examples for predicting shrinkage and creep of concrete in both U.S. and SI
units.
ARCE 4125: Soil Mechanics
and Foundations: Covers introduction to soil mechanics and foundations, geological
characteristics of soils and particle sizes of soils, soils investigation,
physical soil parameters and soil classification, soil compaction,
one-dimensional flow of water through soils, stresses, strains, and elastic
deformations of soils, stress path, one-dimensional consolidation settlement of
fine-grained soils, shear strength of soils, a critical state model to
interpret soil behavior, bearing capacity of soils and settlement of shallow
foundations, pile foundations, two-dimensional flow of water through soils,
stability of earth retaining structures and slope stability.
ARCE 4126: Construction
Equipment and Methods: Establishes a full ability to understand and
solve problems, communicate solutions, and manage their implementation. This
subject helps build these skills through: a holistic view of construction
technology, safe use to maximize productivity and how the principles of science
are being applied; linking the material in this course to previously obtained
knowledge such as statics, geotechnical engineering; and pedagogy designed to
promote knowledge, and skill acquisition, such as case studies and open-ended
problems.
ARCE 4127: Before Building:
Site Planning in the Digital Age: It covers every topic required in
site planning, including land use controls and the history behind the law. It
also presents detailed coverage of the role of computer technologies in
supporting site planning, including up-to-date hardware, software, and
applications.
ARCE 4128: Engineering
Ethics and Professional Practice: Bridging the gap between theory
and practice, helps students quickly understand the importance of their conduct
as a professional and how their actions can affect the health, safety, and
welfare of the public and provides dozens of diverse engineering cases and a
proven and structured method for analyzing them; practical application of the
Engineering Code of Ethics; focus on critical moral reasoning as well as
effective organizational communication; and in-depth treatment of issues such
as sustainability, acceptable risk, whistle-blowing, and globalized standards
for engineering.
ARCE 4130: Construction
and Detailing for Interior Design: Explains the principles of sound
construction for interiors, and provides the means to create successful
variations on standard types of detailing. It also covers the relation of
existing building shells to the construction and detailing of new elements.
Practical tips are given throughout the course including comprehensive and
professional annotated drawings together with explanatory photographs of
techniques, materials, and tools.
ARCE 4131: Building
Construction Materials: Examines the contribution that material
selection makes to sustainable construction practice, considering the
availability of raw materials, production, recycling and reuse, which all
contribute to the life cycle assessment of structures, as well as being brought
up-to-date with current usage and performance standards, each section now also
contains an extra chapter on recycling covering Metals, concrete, ceramics
(including bricks and masonry), polymers, fiber composites, bituminous
materials, timber and glass.
ARCE 4132: Fundamentals of
Building Construction: Materials and Methods: making
buildings, foundations, wood, heavy timber frame construction, wood light frame
construction, exterior finishes for Wood Light Frame Construction, interior
finishes for wood light frame construction, brick masonry, stone and concrete
masonry, masonry load-bearing wall construction, steel frame construction,
light gauge steel frame construction, concrete construction, site-cast concrete
framing systems, precast concrete framing systems, roofing, glass and glazing,
windows and doors, designing cladding systems, cladding with masonry and
concrete, cladding with metal and glass, selecting interior finishes, interior
walls and partitions, finish ceilings and floors.
ARCE 4133: Mechanics of
Materials: Introduction to mechanical behavior of materials, including
stress/strain at a point, principle stresses and strains, stress-strain
relationships, determination of stresses and deformations in situations
involving axial loading, torsional loading of circular cross sections, and
flexural loading of straight members. Also covers stresses due to combined
loading and buckling of columns.
ARCE 4134: Fundamentals of
HVAC Control Systems: Covers principles and characteristics of HVAC
controls and describes how to use, select, specify and design control systems
and develops in-depth knowledge of HVAC Control Systems and improve the
understanding and skills.
ARCE 4135: The
Construction of Houses: Covers Foundations; External Load-bearing
Walls; Ground Floors; Upper Floors; Roof Structure; Roof Coverings; Flat Roofs;
Plastering; Partitions; External Rendering; Timber-Framed Housing; Non-traditional
Housing; Windows/Doors/Stairs; Thermal Insulation; Cold Water Supply; Hot Water
Supply; Space Heating; Drainage; and Electrical Installations
ARCE 4136: Formwork for
Concrete Structures: Provides current information on designing and building formwork
and temporary structures during the construction process including the latest
structural design recommendations by the National Design Specification (NDS
2005), and covers recent advances in materials, money- and energy-saving
strategies, safety guidelines, OSHA regulations, and dimensional tolerances.
Up-to-date sample problems illustrate practical applications for calculating
loads and stresses.
ARCE 4137: Introduction to
Geometrics: Covers definition of surveying, geometrics, units, significant
figures, field notes, theory of errors in observations, leveling theory,
methods and equipment, leveling field procedures and computations, distance
measurement, angels, azimuths, bearings, total station instruments, angle
observations, traversing, traversing computations, coordinate geometry in
surveying calculations, area, global navigation, satellite systems, adjustments
by least squares, mapping surveys, mapping control surveys and geodetic
reductions, state plane coordinates and other map projections, boundary
surveys, surveys of public lands, construction surveys, horizontal curves,
vertical curves, volumes, photogrammetric techniques and introduction to
geographic information systems.
ARCE 4138: Landscape
Surveying: Prepares students to easily apply the principles and methods of
surveying in a variety of occupational settings through illustrations,
examples, and sample problems, students will not only learn methods for
measuring distances and angles and completing surveys, but will also learn to
determine which method is best suited for specific situations with coverage of
relevant terms, methodologies, equipment, and topography.
ARCE 4141: Matrix
Structural Analysis: Analysis of trusses and frames by the direct stiffness method. Use
of a typical commercial computer code is stressed as a tool for complex
structures. Introduces three-dimensional structures
ARCE 4142: Building
Specifications and Contracts: Provides current writing
practices shaped by the well-established principles and requirements of major
professional associations. Also included are guidelines for correct
terminology, product selection, organization of specifications according to
recognized CSI formats, and practical techniques for document production.
ARCE 4143: Construction
Estimating: Provides everything students need for a course in Estimating. It
combines sound coverage of principles with step-by-step procedures to help
students learn concepts more easily. It reflects the popular approach of
tracing a complete project's progress with a discussion of computers in
estimating, different types of estimates (e.g., square foot, project
comparison, and assembly estimating), and how to determine labor productivity,
and how to determine labor burden.
ARCE 4144: Design of
Plumbing, Electricity and Acoustics: Cover all topics in the field of
sustainable environmental control. It provides knowledge appropriate for the
level of complexity needed at the schematic design stage and presents the most
up-to-date information available in a concise, logical, accessible manner and
arrangement and provides the skills and knowledge needed to create buildings
that use electricity and water efficiently. In addition, addresses ways to
reduce electricity usage through more efficient lighting systems and appliances
and by incorporating automatic switches and control systems that turn off
systems not in use, covers the design of well-planned effluent treatment
systems that protect against potential health hazards while also becoming a
valuable source of reclaimed water and fertilizer, and provides coverage of
fire protection and conveyance systems, including very efficient types of
elevators and escalators and designs that encourage the use of stairs or ramps.
ARCE 4145: Structural
Steel Design: Introduction to Structural Steel Design, Specifications, Loads,
and Methods of Design, Analysis of Tension Members, Design of Tension Members,
Introduction to Axially Loaded Compression Members, Design of Axially Loaded
Compression Members, Design of Axially Loaded Compression Members (Continued)
and Column Base Plates, Introduction to Beams, Design of Beams for Moments,
Design of Beams, Bending and Axial Force, Bolted Connections, Eccentrically
Loaded Bolted Connections and Historical Notes on Rivets, Welded Connections,
Building Connections, Composite Beams, Composite Columns, Cover-Plated Beams
and Built-up Girders and Design of Steel Buildings.
ARCE 4146: Architectural
Drafting and Design: Step-by-step instructions for the design and layout of each type
of drawing associated with a complete set of architectural plans, with projects
that can be completed using either CAD or manual drawing methods. The basics of
residential design, commercial drafting, basic materials used for construction,
common construction methods, and drawings typically associated with commercial
construction are all covered.
ARCE 4147: Wood and
Masonry Design: Covers every step of construction in detail, From the layout,
excavation, and formwork, through finish carpentry, sheet metal and painting,
with clear illustrations and step-by-step instructions and includes everything
that a student need to know about framing, roofing, siding, insulation and
vapor barriers, interior finishing, floor coverings, millwork and cabinets,
stairs, chimneys, driveways, walks ... complete "how-to" information
on everything that goes into building a wood-frame house.
ARCE 4148: Construction
Planning and Scheduling: This comprehensive subject is designed for
construction management, planning and scheduling. It follows a logical
progression, introducing precedence diagramming early and following with
sessions on activity durations, resource allocations, network schedules, and
more. It includes a unique discussion of contract provisions related to
scheduling and incorporates a sample project throughout.
ARCE 4149: Construction
Safety and Health: Focuses on the specific needs of modern construction professionals
and on the requirements set forth by OSHA and other regulators., Each session
focuses on one key area of concern, and all sessions are sequenced to reflect
the typical organization of college-level construction safety and health
courses. This course includes LEED accreditation; effects of design on
construction safety; new material on ergonomics, human factors, and
behavior-based safety; and much more.
ARCE 4150: Construction
Management: Introduces the discipline of construction management including
estimating, cost control, analysis of construction operations and focus on the
history and basic concepts of the field; preparing the bid package; issues that
evolve during the construction phase; construction contracts; legal structures;
time planning and control; project cash flow and funding; equipment ownership
and safety.
ARCE 4151: Sustainable
Construction and Design: Covers Green building assessment, The green
building process, Ecological design, Sustainable sites and landscaping, Energy
and atmosphere, The building hydrologic system, Closing materials loops, Indoor
environmental quality, Construction operations, Building commissioning,
Economic analysis of green buildings and Future directions
ARCE 4152: Introduction to
Consulting Engineering: Covers the role of consultants,
organizational structure, accounting, getting work and dealing with clients,
preparing proposals, presentations, estimating costs, project management,
liability, and professional ethics.
ARCE 5120: Construction
Planning and Scheduling: Follows a logical progression, introducing
precedence diagramming early and following with sessions on activity durations,
resource allocations, network schedules, and more, and reflects current trends
in scheduling (short-interval scheduling, computer scheduling, linear
scheduling etc.) and includes sessions on arrow diagramming and PERT. With an
eye on application, it includes a unique discussion of contract provisions
related to scheduling and incorporates a sample project throughout.
ARC 5130: Construction
Equipment and Methods: Establishes a full ability to understand and solve
problems, communicate solutions, and manage their implementation. This subject
helps build these skills through: a holistic view of construction technology,
safe use to maximize productivity and how the principles of science are being
applied; linking the material in this course to previously obtained knowledge
such as statics, geotechnical engineering; and pedagogy designed to promote
knowledge, and skill acquisition, such as case studies and open-ended problems.
ARC 5131: Accounting
Fundamentals for Construction: Covers the basic financial skills
required for being successful in the management of a construction company and
its projects, including usage of financial reports, supply and managerial
skills, time scheduling and control, planning and budgeting, and control of
project costs and financial commitments.
ARC 5132: Construction
Project Scheduling and Control: Provides an efficient,
well-thought-out project scheduling crucial to achieving success and manages
all aspects of the project, such as adjusting staff requirements at various
stages, overseeing materials deliveries and equipment needs, organizing
inspections, and estimating time needs for curing and settling—all of which
requires a deep understanding on the part of the scheduler.
ARC 5133: Legal
Environment for Engineers and Architects: Basic principles of the
law and court systems in both the United States and globally, Basic principles
of contracts, Relationships of individuals and society focusing upon such areas
as agency, partnerships, corporations, insurance and governmental regulations,
Basic principles of tort law including concepts of negligence and product
liability, Basic principles of property ranging from real property to
intellectual property, Impact to the daily practice of a design professional
involved in a construction project and The role of the design professional in
litigation.
ARC 5134: Probabilistic
Methods for Structural Safety Evaluation: Presents recent
developments on the use of probabilistic methods to ensure safety of structures
following a review of the state of the art in this field, introduces an
artificial neural network design algorithm using Bayesian method and
application in damage detection; a probabilistic approach for multiple cracks
identification in beams; and reliability analysis of single-degree-of-freedom
system using important sampling method.
ARCE 5121: Physical
Performance of Buildings: Examines performance rationale and
performance requirements. Outdoor and indoor climate conditions are described and
calculation values are discussed, the performance concept is specified at the
building level and at the building envelope level, and heat-air-moisture
material properties are defined.
ARCE 5122: Method of
Construction Projects Risk Assessment: Comprehensive risk analysis in
construction projects. MOCRA can be described as a hybrid method. Unlike other
methods, MOCRA allows its user to allocate risks in the material-financial
plans. This substantially increases its utilitarian value because it gives a project
manager or a direct contractor the possibility to evaluate the consequences of
risk factors occurrence
ARCE 5123: Statics and
Strength of Materials for Building Construction: An
accessible and visually oriented introduction to structural theory, with illustrations
and examples of building frameworks and components to enable students to
visually connect theoretical concepts with the experiential nature of real
buildings and materials.
ARCE 5124: Control of
Traffic Systems in Buildings: Presents the state of the art in
the analysis and control of transportation systems in buildings focusing
primarily on elevator groups and covers the theory and design of passenger
traffic and cargo transport systems, together with actual operational examples
and topics of special current interest such as noisy, on-line and algorithmic
optimization; simulation-based modeling of passengers and goods; control of
cooperative agent-oriented systems; proposal for a benchmark to compare new
control methods and deployment and testing of transportation systems.
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12.03.02
- Building Systems
BSYS 5140: Plumbing,
Electricity, Acoustics and Fire Protection: Covers all topics in the
field of sustainable environmental control and provides knowledge appropriate
for the level of complexity needed at the schematic design stage and presents
the most up-to-date information available in a concise, logical, accessible
manner and arrangement. Although sustainability deals with many issues, those
concerning energy and efficiency are the most critical, making an additional
goal of this book one of providing architects with the skills and knowledge
needed to create buildings that use electricity and water efficiently.
Guidelines and rules-of-thumb are provided to help designers make their
buildings use less energy, less water, and less of everything else to achieve
their primary objectives. Addresses ways to reduce electricity usage through
more efficient lighting systems and appliances and by incorporating automatic
switches and control systems that turn off systems not in use, Covers the
design of well-planned effluent treatment systems that protect against
potential health hazards while also becoming a valuable source of reclaimed
water and fertilizer and Provides coverage of fire protection and conveyance
systems, including very efficient types of elevators and escalators and designs
that encourage the use of stairs or ramps.
BSYS 5141: Building
Enclosure Design: Defines, and categorizes the current state of the art in long-span
glass facade design and construction, with a focus on structural systems, glass
cladding options, and implementation strategies for innovative design. A
comparative analysis of these various systems is included, along with designs
and design practices for enhancing transparency; engineering issues; material,
process, and fabrication considerations; installation means and methods; and
project delivery strategies for implementing innovative building technology in
today's construction marketplace.
BSYS 5142: Concrete
Structures: Protection, Repair and Rehabilitation: Brief
Overview of the Development and History of Concrete Construction, Through-life
Management of Existing Structures, Previous Experience – In-service Performance
of Concrete Structures and Remedial Interventions, Conservation Management -
Overview of Philosophy and Process Steps, Deterioration and Damage Mechanisms,
Condition Survey – Testing and Investigations, Structural Condition Assessment,
Condition Evaluation and Decision-Making, Structural Assessment and Repair
after a Fire, Recording and Reporting, Application Example, Proactive
Durability Management – Example from Practice of the Protection and Repair of a
Concrete Structure, Case Study – Reliability Assessment of a Bridge Subject to
Chloride-Induced Corrosion and Associated Structural Deterioration and Future
Outlook.
BSYS 5143: Alternative
Energy Systems in Building Design: An overview of the major national
rating systems, including LEED®, Green Globes®, the National Green Building
Standard, and ENERGY STAR, An in-depth look at each rating system, including
its evolution, objectives, point structure, levels of certification, benefits,
and shortcomings, How the ratings systems work for different types of
buildings—commercial, multi-family residential, and single-family residential
construction, Illustrated case studies from different climate regions with
project descriptions, cost data, and lessons learned by design teams,
constructors, and owners, and An overview of local, regional, and international
rating systems
BSYS 5144: Building
Services Engineering: Focuses on Climate Change, Post Occupancy,
Built Environment, Energy Economics, Ventilation and Air Conditioning, Heat
Demand, Heating, Water Services, Electrical, Lighting, Condensation, Gas, Plant
& Service Areas, Fire, Protection, Room Acoustics and Mechanical Transport
BSYS 5145: Heating
Ventilation Refrigeration and Air Conditioning: Elements
of heat transfer for buildings. Thermodynamic properties of moist air, human
comfort and the environment, solar energy fundamentals and applications, water
vapor transmission in building structures, heating and cooling load
calculations.
BSYS 5147: Probabilistic
Methods for Structural Safety Evaluation: Presents recent
developments on the use of probabilistic methods to ensure safety of structures
following a review of the state of the art in this field, introduces an
artificial neural network design algorithm using Bayesian method and
application in damage detection; a probabilistic approach for multiple cracks
identification in beams; and reliability analysis of single-degree-of-freedom
system using important sampling method.
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12.03.03
- Civil Engineering:
CE 4130: Civil Engineering:
An introduction to the civil engineering profession with emphasis
on careers open to the civil engineering students. Topics include: scope,
specialties, education, professional practice, life-long learning, contemporary
issues, ethics and societal impacts related to civil engineering.
CE 4131: Civil Engineering
Materials: Covers properties and behavior of typical civil engineering
materials, including wood, metals, aggregates, asphalt cement concrete, Portland
cement concrete, and composites. Laboratory exercises demonstrate selected
engineering mechanics principles, including elastic, inelastic, and
time-dependent material behavior. Additional topics include testing techniques,
materials standards, report writing, and presentation of experimental data.
CE 4132: Structural
Analysis: Introduction to structural concepts and techniques for analyzing
trusses, determinate and indeterminate beams, and frame structures. Apply
concepts from statics and mechanics of materials to determine internal forces
and deflections of structural members and systems, including loads and load
paths.
CE 4133: Transportation
Engineering: Introduction to transportation in the United States, highway types
and systems, principles of route location, vehicle characteristics, highway
geometrics and design standards, drainage, environmental considerations,
pavement design, and economic principles and engineering criteria for highway
improvements.
CE 4134: Water Resources
planning and Management: Economic and environmental aspects of water
use. Topics include flood damage reduction, water demand and hydrologic
forecasting, water supply planning, and water resource systems operation.
CE 4135: Bituminous
Materials: Applications and properties of asphalt binder, aggregates for
bituminous mixtures, and analysis and design of asphalt concrete mixtures.
Includes asphalt cement production, chemistry, and grading, aggregate grading
and blending, mixture design and characterization; and discusses asphalt
mixture production, construction, and recycling.
CE 4136: Matrix Structural
Analysis: Analysis of trusses and frames by the direct stiffness method. Use
of a typical commercial computer code is stressed as a tool for complex
structures. Introduces three-dimensional structures
CE 4137: Structural
Concrete Design: Covers analysis and design of reinforced and pre-stressed concrete
structures and brings all material up to date while maintaining practical,
logical, easy-to-follow approach. Covers the latest ACI 318 - 11 code rules,
emphasizing the code's strength approach and strain limits with additional
codes, standards, and specifications, as well as material properties and
specific loads and safety provisions are also examined in detail, with
explanation of all key concepts to be known before tackling design formulas,
including The application of shear design to beams with variable length in
actual structure, The design of deep beams employing ACI and AASHTO
strut-and-tie approach, The design of stepped-type reinforced concrete stairs,
not covered anywhere else, Seismic design and analysis utilizing the IBC 2012
and ASCE 7-10 code, The design of curved beams subject to flexure, shear, and
torsion, Pre-stressed concrete bridge design according to AASHTO specifications
and Examples for predicting shrinkage and creep of concrete in both U.S. and SI
units.
CE 4138: Structural Timber
Design: Provides detailed information and in-depth guidance on the design
of timber structures based on the common rules and rules for buildings and
provides a step-by-step approach to the design of all of the most commonly used
timber elements and connections using solid timber, glued laminated timber or
wood based structural products.
CE 4140: Topological
Quantum Field Theory And Four Manifolds: Emphasis on the
topological aspects of fermions manifested through handling the generation of
mass. This has its relevance in electroweak theory where it is observed that
weak interaction gauge bosons attain mass topologically. These geometrical and
topological features help to consider massive fermions for a composite state we
can realize the internal symmetry of hadrons from reflection group. Also, an
overview of non-commutative geometry presentation and it is observed that the
manifold M 4 x Z2 has its relevance in the description of a massive fermions
when the discrete space is considered as the internal space and the symmetry
breaking gives rise to chiral anomaly leading to topological features.
CE 4141: GIS and
Cartographic Modeling: An introduction to the concepts, conventions,
and capabilities of map algebra as a general language, this book describes the
analytical use of raster-based GIS. By focusing on the fundamentals of
cartographic modeling techniques, illustrates concepts that can be applied to
any GIS.
CE 4142: Mathematical
Foundation of Geodesy: Covers Linear Equations.- The Adjustment
Procedure in Tensor Form.- The Theory of Rounding Errors in the Adjustment by
Elements.- A Contribution to the Mathematical Foundation of Physical Geodesy.-
A Remark on Approximation of T by Series in Spherical Harmonics.- On the
Geometry of Adjustment.- Remarks to the Discussion Yesterday.- Letters on
Molodenskiy’s Problem.- On the Spectrum of Geodetic Networks.- Mathematical
Geodesy.- Foundation of a Theory of Elasticity for Geodetic Networks.-
Integrated Geodesy.- On Potential Theory.- La Formule de Stokes Est-Elle
Correct?.- Some Remarks About Collocation.- Apropos Some Recent Papers by Willi
Freeden.- S-Transformation.- Integrated Geodesy.- A Measure for Local
Redundancy.- A Convergence Problem in Collocation Theory.- Non-Linear
Adjustment and Curvature.- Mechanics of Adjustment.- Angelica Returning or The
Importance of a Title.- Evaluation of Isotropic Covariance Functions.-
Contribution to the Geometry of the Helmert Transformation.- Letter on a
Problem in Collocation Theory.
CE 4143: Geodesy: Covers
the entire field of geodesy and is intended to serve as an introductory course
in the fields of geodesy, geophysics, surveying engineering, and geometrics. It
provides a systematic overview of fundamental theory in physical geodesy,
reference systems, and space and terrestrial measurement methods, together with
the respective modeling techniques.
CE 4144: Urban
infrastructure systems: Introduction to: (a) the infrastructure
systems that support urban socioeconomic activities, and (b) fundamental system
design and analysis methods. This course Coverage of water resources, vertical,
transportation, communications and energy infrastructure, Emphasis upon the
purposes that these systems serve, the factors that influence their
performance, the basic mechanisms that govern their design and operation, and
the impacts that they have regionally and globally. Student teams complete a
semester-long design/analysis project with equal emphasis given to water
resources / environmental engineering, geotechnical engineering and
construction engineering and management topics.
CE 4145: Structural
analysis and design: Methods of structural analysis. Trusses, arches, cables, frames;
influence lines; deflections; force method; displacement method; computer
applications. And Design criteria for varied structural applications, including
buildings and bridges; design of elements using steel, concrete, masonry, wood,
and other materials.
CE 4146: Hydro-systems
engineering: A quantitative introduction to hydrologic and hydraulic systems,
with a focus on integrated modeling and analysis of the water cycle and
associated mass transport for water resources and environmental engineering.
Coverage of unit hydrologic processes such as precipitation, evaporation,
infiltration, runoff generation, open channel and pipe flow, subsurface flow
and well hydraulics in the context of example watersheds and specific
integrative problems such as risk-based design for flood control, provision of
water, and assessment of environmental impact or potential for non-point source
pollution and spatial hydrologic analysis using GIS and watershed models.
CE 4147: Water Resources
planning and Management: Economic and environmental aspects of water
use. Topics include flood damage reduction, water demand and hydrologic
forecasting, water supply planning, and water resource systems operation.
CE 4148: Bridge design and
management: Bridge design history, methods of analysis, loads: static, live,
dynamic. Design: allowable stress, ultimate strength, load resistance factor,
supply/demand. Steel and concrete superstructures: suspension, cable stayed,
pre-stressed, arches. Management of the assets, life-cycle cost, expected
useful life, inspection, maintenance, repair, reconstruction, bridge
inventories, condition assessments, data acquisition and analysis, forecast, selected
case histories and field visits.
CE 4149: Foundation Design:
Theory and Practice: Covers principles of testing, interpretation,
analysis, soil-structure interaction modeling, construction guidelines and
applications to rational design, presents a wide array of numerical methods
used in analyses so that learners can employ and adapt them on their own and
emphasis on practical application, trains learners in actual design procedures
using the latest codes and standards in use throughout the world.
CE 4150: Structural
Concrete Design: Design of concrete slabs, deep beams, walls, and other plane
structures; introduction to design of pre-stressed concrete structures.
CE 4151: Managing
engineering and construction processes: Introduction to the principles,
methods and tools necessary to manage design and construction processes, elements
of planning, estimating, scheduling, bidding and contractual relationships.
Valuation of project cash flows, critical path method, survey of construction
procedures, cost control, and field supervision.
CE 5120: Green Building
Design: An overview of practice for designing and constructing sustainable
building following Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED)
guidelines. Intensive two week class will include hands on practice with LEED,
energy modeling, and an exploration of sustainable construction.
CE 5121: Bituminous
Materials: Applications and properties of asphalt binder, aggregates for
bituminous mixtures, and analysis and design of asphalt concrete mixtures.
Includes asphalt cement production, chemistry, and grading, aggregate grading
and blending, and mixture design and characterization and discusses asphalt
mixture production, construction, and recycling.
CE 5122: Advanced Concrete
Materials: Properties and applications of Portland cement and Portland cement
concrete, cement production, chemistry and hydration, concrete admixtures, and
the properties of fresh and hardened concrete. Presents concrete microstructure
and durability. Other topics include high-strength and high early-strength
concrete, fiber-reinforced concrete and advanced cement-based materials.
CE 5123: Advanced
Structural Analysis: Investigate and apply methods in structural analysis, elastic
buckling of beams, beam-columns, and frames, including numerical methods for
stability analysis. Course Includes analysis of cable structures, arches, beams
on elastic foundations, plates, and shells.
CE 5124: Finite Element
Analysis: Introduction to the use of finite element methods in structural
analysis. Course covers the finite element formulation, 1- and 2-D elements,
including iso-parametric elements, ax-symmetric analysis, plate and shell
elements, dynamics, buckling, and nonlinear analysis.
CE 5130: Pre-stressed
Concrete Design: Theory of pre-stressed and post-tensioned members. It covers
analysis and design of pre-stressed concrete beams, slabs, box girders, and
bridge girders by elastic and ultimate strength methods. Precast and
cast-in-place system construction techniques will be included.
CE 5131: Concrete and
Masonry Building Systems: Design of reinforced concrete two-way slabs and
reinforced masonry systems for buildings and includes design of bearing walls,
shear walls, lintels, pilasters, slender columns, tensional beams and
connections. A design project may be included during the semester.
CE 5132: Advanced
Structural Timber Design: Advanced design of timber structures,
including arches and traditional timber frames, advanced shear wall design,
advanced connection design, including timber connectors, and advanced analysis
and behavior of wood, including cumulative damage modeling.
CE 5133: Structural
Dynamics: Free and forced vibration of un-damped and damped single degree of
freedom systems. Multiple degree-of-freedom systems, including shear buildings,
frames and basic seismic design.
CE 5134: Project Delivery
Systems for Construction: Traditional and alternative project delivery
systems, including Design-Bid-Build, Design-Build, Construction Management
At-Risk, and Integrated Project Delivery. Covers management approaches,
procurement options, basis of reimbursement, roles and responsibilities,
Building Information Modeling, lean construction, and sustainability are also
discussed relative to these delivery systems.
CE 5140: Bridge Design and
Construction: Introduction to design and behavior of short and medium span
bridges. Topics include aesthetics, preliminary design and layout, design of
pre-stresses and plate girders bridges, deck design, foundation design. Project
may alternate between structural steel and pre-stressed concrete member design.
CE 5141: Highway Design: Advanced
highway design, including horizontal and vertical alignment, cross-section
elements, super elevation, and other road design topics. Course Includes
extensive use of highway design computer software with a complete roadway
design project using software.
CE 5142: Transportation
Planning: Introduction to urban transportation planning, travel
characteristics, demand forecasting techniques, corridor studies, traffic
impact studies, and public transit planning and operations.
CE 5143: Airport Planning
and Design: Introduction to the air transportation system, airport planning
studies, demands forecasting, aircraft characteristics, runway requirements,
airport layout and design. Also includes environmental impacts, airport
capacity and operations, terminal and ground access planning and analysis.
CE 5144: Railroad Track
Engineering and Design: Railroad location and operation, track
structure, curves, grades, sub-grade and drainage, ballast and sub-ballast,
ties, rail, turnouts and crossings, and rail facility planning and design.
CE 5145: Stochastic
Hydrology: Application of statistics to problems in surface hydrology. Topics
include the flood flow and stream flow frequency analysis, goodness-of-fit
tests, model selection, treatment of historical and censored data,
regionalization and regression, time series analysis, Bayesian inference,
sensitivity and uncertainty analysis methods.
CE 5146: Water Resources
planning and Management: Economic and environmental aspects of water
use. Topics include flood damage reduction, water demand and hydrologic
forecasting, water supply planning, and water resource systems operation.
CE 6140: Steel Design: Additional
topics in steel design including beam-columns, floor vibrations, diaphragms,
buckling behavior of thin elements, torsion buckling, and beam and column
bracing and includes an introduction to cold-formed steel design.
CE 6141: Public Transit: An
introduction to public transit, user characteristics, management, transit
modes, data collection and surveys, planning, operations, scheduling, transit
finances, and future trends.
CE 6142: Storm Water
Management and LID: Design techniques for storm water collection, conveyance,
infiltration, and detention storage systems are discussed, both traditional
storm water management systems and newer approaches based on the philosophy of
low impact development (LID) that seek not to alter the natural ecology of a
site.
CE 6143: Probabilistic
Analysis and Reliability: Examines probabilistic analysis of
engineering systems including first-order methods, Monte Carlo simulation, and
time-to-failure analysis. Reliability analysis will include capacity/demand
reliability and system reliability. Emphasis will be on civil and environmental
engineering systems.
CE 6144: Mathematical
Modeling of Earth Systems: Introduction to numerical techniques for
mathematical modeling of various earth-system phenomena, including groundwater
flow, heat transfer, and atmospheric transport. Numerical techniques covered
include finite-difference, finite-element, collocation, and characteristic
methods. Students write their own mathematical models. Prerequisite
CE 6145: Advanced Soil
Mechanics: Provides advanced studies in the topics of soil compressibility
and soil strength. Develop advanced procedures for determining stress
distribution and stress changes from a fundamental basis. Students are strongly
advised to take CE5820 concurrently.
CE 6146: Fundamentals of
Soil Behavior: Develop an understanding of the factors determining and
controlling the engineering properties of a soil. Topics include crystal
structure and surface characteristics, soil mineralogy, soil formation, rock
weathering, soil composition, soil water, clay-water electrolyte systems, soil
structure and stability, volume change behavior, and strength and deformation
behavior.
CE 6147: Engineering
Design Practicum: Advanced independent study for students in the Master of
Engineering program. In consultation with student's advisor, develop and
execute a project demonstrating capabilities in problem solving,
communications, and decision making. The practicum can be done on campus or at
the site of a Michigan Tech corporate partner.
CE 6148: Advanced
Structural Concrete Design: Advanced topics in behavior of
reinforced-concrete structures and relationships with design, code
requirements, reasoning behind theoretical and experimental studies for
understanding structural behavior, and current research issues. Other topics
include strut and tie, deep beams, corbel design, and yield-line analysis.
CE 6149: Soil Mechanics
and Foundations: Explains basic concepts and fundamental principles of basic
mechanics, physics, and mathematics from Practical Situations and Essential
Points to Practical Examples,
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12.03.04
- Construction Management:
CME 5140: Construction
Management: Introduces the discipline of construction management including
estimating, cost control, analysis of construction operations and focus on the
history and basic concepts of the field; preparing the bid package; issues that
evolve during the construction phase; construction contracts; legal structures;
time planning and control; project cash flow and funding; equipment ownership
and safety.
CME 5141: Structural
Analysis: Introduction to structural concepts and techniques for analyzing
trusses, determinate and indeterminate beams, and frame structures. Apply
concepts from statics and mechanics of materials to determine internal forces
and deflections of structural members and systems, including loads and load
paths.
CME 5142: Construction
Cost Estimating: Focuses on how to generate complete, accurate estimates for labor
and material costs, guides learners through the entire estimating process,
explaining in detail how to put together a reliable estimate that can be used
for developing a schedule, managing a project, dealing with contingencies, and
ultimately making a profit. Includes interpreting plans and specifications,
computer estimating techniques, parameter estimating allocate profit amounts,
unit price estimation, labor issues and budgeting.
CME 5143: Construction
Project Administration: Explains the basics of administering a
design-build project after the contract has been awarded, and breaks the
process into a series of learning modules, that explain the component steps
including an introduction to design-build project administration and covers
scheduling, design administration, design quality management, quality
management, change orders, progress payments, and close-out.
CME 5144: Construction
Materials: Covers a wide range of construction materials provides a
comprehensive foundation to the subject, and includes an overview of
performance characteristics and standards for many materials. Also, reviews
material properties, and examines and evaluates modes of deterioration while
emphasizing preventative techniques and remedial treatment.
CME 5145: Advanced
Construction Accounting and Finance: Focuses on the principles of
financial management, and apply them to the challenge of profitably managing
construction companies. It integrates content that has traditionally been
taught through separate accounting, finance, and engineering economics
subjects. Students learn how to account for a construction company’s financial
resources; how to manage its costs, profits, and cash flows; how to evaluate
different sources of funding a company’s cash needs; and how to quantitatively
analyze financial decisions.
CME 5146: Project Delivery
Systems for Construction: Traditional and alternative project delivery
systems, including Design-Bid-Build, Design-Build, Construction Management
At-Risk, and Integrated Project Delivery. Covers management approaches,
procurement options, basis of reimbursement, roles and responsibilities,
Building Information Modeling, lean construction, and sustainability are also
discussed relative to these delivery systems.
CME 6140: Project
Management: Focuses on project definition, selection, planning, scheduling,
implementation, performance monitoring, evaluation and control. Emphasis will
be on product, service and process development and emerging concepts related to
development on the internet. Some advanced concepts in resource constraint
management and design matrix are included.
CME 6141: Operations
Management: Application and case studies are used to address issues in
operations management, quality, research and development, capacity planning,
budgeting, marketing, supply chain, and technology to provide an
interdisciplinary, quantitative focus on decision making and strategic planning
for operations.
CME 6142: Construction
Equipment and Methods: Establishes a full ability to understand and
solve problems, communicate solutions, and manage their implementation. This
subject helps build these skills through: a holistic view of construction
technology, safe use to maximize productivity and how the principles of science
are being applied; linking the material in this course to previously obtained
knowledge such as statics, geotechnical engineering; and pedagogy designed to
promote knowledge, and skill acquisition, such as case studies and open-ended
problems.
CME 6143: Accounting Fundamentals
for Construction: Covers how to organize and use a company's financial reports, what
amount of cash must be made available to the contractor to complete a project,
why the early payment of supplier invoices can enhance profitability, how to
quantify the time value of money in financial decisions, what tax amount is
owed by a company and how it impacts the bottom line, how to control project
costs and what financial sources are available to a construction contractor for
capital expansion
CME 6144: Construction
Cost Estimating: Focuses on how to generate complete, accurate estimates for labor
and material costs, guides learners through the entire estimating process,
explaining in detail how to put together a reliable estimate that can be used
for developing a schedule, managing a project, dealing with contingencies, and
ultimately making a profit. Includes interpreting plans and specifications,
computer estimating techniques, parameter estimating allocate profit amounts,
unit price estimation, labor issues and budgeting.
CME 6145: Construction
Project Scheduling and Control: Covers adjusting staff
requirements at various stages, overseeing materials deliveries and equipment
needs, organizing inspections, and estimating time needs for curing and settling—all
of which requires a deep understanding on the part of the scheduler through an
up-to-date coverage detailing all the steps needed to devise a technologically
advanced schedule geared toward streamlining the construction process.
CME 6146: Legal Environment
for Engineers and Architects: Basic principles of the law and
court systems in both the United States and globally, Basic principles of
contracts, Relationships of individuals and society focusing upon such areas as
agency, partnerships, corporations, insurance and governmental regulations,
Basic principles of tort law including concepts of negligence and product
liability, Basic principles of property ranging from real property to
intellectual property, Impact to the daily practice of a design professional
involved in a construction project and The role of the design professional in
litigation.
CME 6147: Construction
Project Administration: explains the basics of administering a
design-build project after the contract has been awarded. As with Preparing for
Design-Build Projects—about design-build projects during the proposal stage—by
the same three broadly experienced authors, this book breaks the process into a
series of learning modules that explain the component steps. It begins with an
introduction to design-build project administration and goes on to cover topics
such as scheduling, design administration, and design quality management.
CME 6148: Computer
Applications in Construction: Focuses on utilizing information
technology in construction projects and architectural back-office, including an
overview of applied engineering, administrative and financial applications as
well as information technology based quality management methods.
CME 6149: Project Delivery
Systems for Construction: Traditional and alternative project delivery
systems, including Design-Bid-Build, Design-Build, Construction Management
At-Risk, and Integrated Project Delivery. Covers management approaches,
procurement options, basis of reimbursement, roles and responsibilities, Building
Information Modeling, lean construction, and sustainability are also discussed
relative to these delivery systems.
Return to Top
12.03.05
- Construction Engineering:
CON 5140: Statics and
Strength of Materials for Construction: An accessible and visually oriented
introduction to structural theory, with illustrations and examples of building
frameworks and components to enable students to visually connect theoretical
concepts with the experiential nature of real buildings and materials.
CON 5141: Foundation
Design: Theory and Practice: Covers principles of testing,
interpretation, analysis, soil-structure interaction modeling, construction
guidelines and applications to rational design, presents a wide array of
numerical methods used in analyses so that learners can employ and adapt them
on their own and emphasis on practical application, trains learners in actual
design procedures using the latest codes and standards in use throughout the
world.
CON 5142: Masonry
Structural Design: Emphasizes the strength design of masonry and includes
allowable-stress provisions. Innovations such as autoclaved aerated concrete
masonry (AAC) are also discussed. Real-world case studies featuring a low-rise
building with reinforced concrete masonry and a four-story building with clay
masonry illustrate the techniques presented in this comprehensive resource.
Covers basic structural behavior and design of low-rise, bearing wall
buildings, materials used in masonry construction, code basis for structural
design of masonry buildings, including seismic design, introduction of MSJC
treatment of structural design, strength design of reinforced and unreinforced
masonry elements, allowable-stress design of reinforced and unreinforced
masonry elements, comparison of design by the allowable-stress approach versus
the strength approach, lateral load analysis of shear wall structure, design
and detailing of floor and roof diaphragms
CON 5143: Structural
Analysis with the Finite Element Method: Presents the basis of the
FEM for structural analysis and a detailed description of the finite element
formulation for axially loaded bars, plane elasticity problems, symmetric
solids and general three dimensional solids, describes the background theory
for each structural model considered, details of the finite element formulation
and guidelines for the application to structural engineering problems.
CON 5144: Beam Structures:
Classical and Advanced Theories: Unified approach to beam theory
that includes practically all classical and advanced models for beams and which
has become established and recognized globally as the most important
contribution to the field in the last quarter of a century.
CON 5145: Analysis of
Plates and Shells: Covers Introduction to structural analysis by the finite element method,
finite elements for axially loaded rods, advanced 1D rod elements and
requirements for the numerical solution, 2D solids, Linear triangular and
rectangular elements, 2D solids, higher order elements, shape functions and
isoperimetric formulation, ax-symmetric solids, three dimensional solids,
bending of slender beam, thick/slender beams, Timoshenko theory, thin plates.
Kirchhoff’s theory, thick/thin plates, analysis of shells using flat elements,
analysis of arbitrary shape shells using degenerate solid elements,
three-dimensional rods and shell stiffness, prismatic structures, miscellaneous:
inclined supports, displacements, constrains, nodal condensation error
estimation, pre and post-processing and Mesh generation and visualization of
computer results.
CON 5146: Earthquake
Resistant Buildings: Provides a general introduction to the design of buildings which
must be resistant to the effect of earthquakes, preventive building structure,
examines building structures and vertical components, and examines analyses the
disastrous influence of vertical components.
CON 6130: Decision-Making
in Complex Dynamic Systems: Introduces students to the theory
and application of modeling techniques and simulations in the analysis of
decision alternatives in complex engineering problems. Topics include queuing
theory, system dynamics modeling, agent-based modeling, discrete event
simulations, etc. Students will be required to conceptualize and implement an
appropriate research/engineering problem of choice (this could be a
dissertation/thesis problem).
CON 6131: Introduction to
System identification: Introductory course in system identification
theory, emphasis on fitting classical and modern control-theory models to
collected data using least squares and ERA. Preliminary topics include sampling
theory and frequency domain math.
CON 6132: Stability of
Earth Structures: Investigates the stability of both natural and anthropogenic
derived structures. Studies include the application of engineering geology to
slope issues, slope stability analysis procedures, computational methods. Also
covers the design and analysis of soil nail walls.
CON 6133: Engineering with
Developing Communities: Study of applying appropriate,
community-based, and sustainable engineering in developing communities.
Concepts of human-centered design and sustainable development are covered.
Topics are drawn from several areas of engineering, including water and
wastewater treatment, construction materials, solid waste, energy, and
information systems.
CON 6134: Pavement
Management Systems: Principles of pavement management, including inventory, condition
assessment, needs determination, and budget analysis. This course emphasis on
field condition assessment techniques and presents database design to illustrate
data handling techniques and introduces several software packages.
Return to Top
12.03.06
- Computer Sciences
CS 4130: Introduction to
Computer Science: Comprehensive presentation of Hardware, Software, Processors,
Operating Systems, Numerical Systems, an Example of High Level programming
language and sessions of hands on programming assignments along with hands on
creation and modification of Auto-executable modules.
CS 4131: Programming
Languages: Principles and Practices: An overview of programming
languages through general principles combined with details about many modern
languages. Major languages used in this course include C, C++, Smalltalk, Java,
Ada, ML, Haskell, Scheme, and Prolog; many other languages are discussed more
briefly. The course also contains extensive coverage of implementation issues,
the theoretical foundations of programming languages, and a large number of
exercises, making it the perfect bridge to compiler courses and to the
theoretical study of programming languages.
CS 4132: Data Abstraction
and Problem Solving with Java: Employs the analogies of Walls
(data abstraction) and Mirrors (recursion) to teach Java programming design solutions,
in a way that beginning students find accessible. The course has a
student-friendly pedagogical approach that carefully accounts for the strengths
and weaknesses of the Java language. Students will gain a solid foundation in
data abstraction, object-oriented programming, and other problem-solving
techniques.
CS 4133: Operating System
Concepts and Essentials: Straightforward coverage of the core concepts
of operating systems, Open-source operating systems, virtual machines, and
clustered computing are among the leading fields of operating systems and
networking that are rapidly changing. This book covers the core concepts of
operating systems without any unnecessary jargon or text. The authors put you
on your way to mastering the fundamental concepts of operating systems while
you also prepare for today’s emerging developments. Covers the core concepts of
operating systems, Bypasses unnecessary and wordy text or jargon, encourages
you to take your operating system knowledge to the next level, prepares you for
today’s emerging developments in the field of operating systems
CS 4134: C++ Programming
Language: Introduction to C++ programming and MATLAB for use in solving
problems encountered in engineering technology. C++ topics include the basics
of syntax and program structure and focuses on the basic capabilities of MATLAB
and its programming environment.
CS 4135: Data Structure
and Algorithms in C++/ Part I: Explores the specifications,
applications, and implementations of abstract data types with unmatched
accessibility. Updated with new case studies and exercises throughout, this
edition provides intuitive explanations that clarify abstract concepts, and
approaches the study of data structures with emphasis on computer science
theory and software engineering principles.
CS 4136: Data Structure
and Algorithms in C++/ Part II: Focuses on topics such as
modularization, data encapsulation, information hiding, object-oriented
decomposition, algorithm analysis, life-cycle software verification models, and
data abstraction are carefully presented to foster solid software engineering
techniques. In addition to real-world exercises and case studies that define
Nell Dale’s teaching philosophy, this Fifth Edition provides an increased
emphasis on object-oriented design and an early introduction of object-oriented
concepts.
CS 4137: JAVA Programming:
Hands-on introduction to developing applications with Farrell's
JAVA PROGRAMMING, 7E. This complete course provides the details and real-world
exercises today's readers need to master Java, one of the most widely used tool
among professional programmers for building visually interesting GUI and
Web-based applications. With JAVA PROGRAMMING, 7E even first-time programmers
can quickly develop useful programs while learning the basic principles of
structured and object-oriented programming. The text explains concepts clearly
and reinforces the reader-friendly presentation with meaningful real-world
exercises. Full programming examples emphasize learning in context. Updated "You
Do It" sections, all-new programming exercises, and new continuing cases
help students build skills critical for ongoing programming success.
CS 4138: Data Structure in
JAVA: Facilitates a student's transition from simple programs in the
first semester introductory programming course to more sophisticated,
efficient, and effective programs in the second semester Data Structures
course. Without delving too deeply into the details of Java, the author
emphasizes the importance of effective organization and management of data and
the importance of writing programs in a modern, object-oriented style.
CS 4140: Computer
Networking: Focuses on different computer network topologies and methods as
well as setting up and management with methods of access control and
troubleshooting
CS 4141: Service-Oriented
Architecture and Design Strategies: Realizing the Promise of SOA, SOA
— Architecture Fundamentals, Getting Started with SOA, Starting with the
Business, Service Context and Common Semantics, Designing Service Interfaces,
Designing Service Implementations, Composing Services, Using Services to Build
Enterprise Solutions, Designing and Using Integration in SOA Solutions, SOA
Security and SOA Governance.
CS 4142: Systems Analysis
and Design: Provides an understanding of the IS development and modification
process and the evaluation choices of a system development methodology, emphasizes
effective communication with users and team members and others associated with
the development and maintenance of the information system, stresses analysis
and logical design of departmental-level information system.
CS 4143: TCP/IP Protocol
Suite: Networking technologies have become an integral part of everyday
life, which has led to a dramatic increase in the number of professions where
it is important to understand these technologies. Provide comprehensive
coverage of TCP/IP for students and professionals, preparing people to succeed
in today's technical world. The presentation of these concepts, examples, and
practice exercises to reinforce concepts.
CS 4144: Information
Technology Project Management: The Nature Of Information
Technology Projects, Conceptualizing And Initializing The IT Project, The
Project Infrastructure, The Human Side Of Project Management, Defining And Managing
Project And Product Scope, The Work Breakdown Structure And Project Estimation,
The Project Schedule And Budget, Managing Project Risk, Project Communication,
Tracking, And Reporting, IT Project Quality Management, Managing Organizational
Change, Resistance And Conflict, Project Procurement Management And
Outsourcing, Leadership And Ethics, and Project Implementation, Closure, And
Evaluation.
CS 4145: Analysis and
Design of Information Systems: Provides a comprehensive
introduction and user-friendly survey to all aspects of business transformation
and analysis, and aims to provide the complex set of tools covering all types
of systems, including legacy, transactional, database, and web/e-commerce
topics. Focusing on the applied aspects of analysis to create systems that meet
the needs of their users, (consumers and businesses), to enhance the set of
techniques and tools that the analyst/designer requires for success and to
organizations to implement business transformation of operations.
CS 4146: Introduction to
Artificial Intelligence: Understand intelligence and to build
intelligent software and robots that come close to the performance of humans.
On their way towards this goal, A.I. researchers have developed a number of
quite different sub disciplines. This concise and accessible Introduction to
Artificial Intelligence supports a foundation or module course on A.I.,
covering a broad selection of the sub disciplines within this field. The
textbook presents concrete algorithms and applications in the areas of agents,
logic, search, reasoning under uncertainty, machine learning, neural networks
and reinforcement learning. Topics and features:
CS 4147: Visual Basic
Programming: Lecturing and training on the language including how to run the
environment and creating applications with full coverage of data structure,
procedures, event management, looping and object oriented programming
CS 4148: Advanced Visual
Basic Programming: Coverage of sophisticated tools and techniques used in the
industry today include various database, ASP.NET, LINQ, WPF and Web Services
topics. After studying the subject and completing the programming exercises,
students should be able to create small- to medium-sized Windows and Web
applications that use databases. They will also gain essential concepts in
object-oriented programming, event-driven programming, and test-driven
development. Each subject is presented in an understandable style that makes
this book a leader in the field.
CS 4149: Data Structure in
JAVA: facilitates a student's transition from simple programs in the
first semester introductory programming course to more sophisticated,
efficient, and effective programs in the second semester Data Structures
course. Without delving too deeply into the details of Java, the author
emphasizes the importance of effective organization and management of data and
the importance of writing programs in a modern, object-oriented style.
CS 4150: Software
Engineering Theory and Practice: Discusses concepts, principles, design,
construction, implementation, and management issues of software systems in an
organized systematically into brief, reader-friendly sections, with itemization
of the important points to be remembered and includes a number of Foster’s
original methodologies that add clarity and creativity to the software
engineering experience, while making a novel contribution to the discipline.
CS 4151: Robotics: An
introduction to the principles of industrial robotics, related systems, and
applications, a comprehensive tool in learning the technical aspects of
robotics and a coverage of power supply systems, degrees of freedom,
programming methods, sensors, end effectors, implementation planning, and
system maintenance
CS 5120: Compiler Design,
Theory, and Optimization: Design and theory of programming language
translators and the theory and implementation of optimizers. Topics include: intermediate
representations, advanced code generation, control- and data-flow analysis,
advanced compiler optimization, dynamic compilation, global register allocation
and instruction scheduling.
CS 5121: Theory of
Computation: Topics covered include Turing machines and their variants, the
halting problem and decidability, computability, reducibility, NP-completeness,
time and space complexity, and topics from recursive function theory.
CS 5122: Advanced
Algorithms: Design and analysis of advanced algorithms. Topics include
algorithms for complex data structures, probabilistic analysis, amortized
analysis, approximation algorithms, and NP-completeness. Design and analysis of
algorithms for string-matching and computational geometry are also covered.
CS 5123: Parallel
Algorithms: Advanced topics in the design, analysis, and performance
evaluation of parallel algorithms. Topics include advanced techniques for
algorithm analysis, memory models, run time systems, parallel architectures,
and program design, particularly emphasizing the interactions of these factors.
CS 5124: Advanced
Operating Systems: Advanced concepts in operating systems. Topics include real-time
and multiprocessor scheduling, I/O, modern file systems, and performance
analysis. Also requires a substantial implementation project.
CS 5130: Advanced Computer
Architecture: An in-depth study of various aspects of parallel processing, with
an emphasis on parallel architectures. The course has an analytical focus and
investigates models of various aspects of the design and analysis of parallel
systems. Topics include simple single processor /multiprocessor performance models,
pipelining, instruction-level parallelism and design issues.
CS 5131: Distributed
Systems: Covers time and order in distributed systems; mutual exclusion,
agreement, elections, and atomic transactions; Distributed File Systems,
Distributed Shared Memory, Distributed System Security; and issues in
programming distributed systems. Uses selected case studies.
CS 5132: Mobile Networks: Mobile
network issues including routing and mobility management strategies in ad hoc
networks, sensor networks, and personal area networks such as Bluetooth.
CS 5133: Systems
Performance Analysis: Analysis of the performance of computer
systems. Topics include: measurement techniques and tools, probability theory
and statistics, experiment design and analysis, simulation, queuing models.
Course includes a significant experimental component.
CS 5134: Software/Hardware
Design of Multimedia Systems: A comprehensive overview of the
design and implementation of the hardware and software of a platform for
multimedia applications. Topics include system level design methodology,
single-instruction-multiple data processor (SIMD), virtual platform
implementation, development of an SIMD parallel compiler, and real-time
operating systems (RTOS).
CS 5140: GPU and Multicore
Programming: Introduction to Graphics Processing units (GPU) and multi-core
systems, their architectural features and programming models, stream
programming and compute unified driver architecture (CUDA), caching
architectures, linear and non-linear programming, scientific computing on GPUs,
sorting and search, stream mining, cryptography, and fixed and floating point
operations.
CS 5141: Computer Graphics:
Advanced Rendering and Modeling: Topics include polygonal objects,
lighting models, shadows and textures, ray-tracing, photon mapping, parametric
curves and surfaces, meshes, and mesh modeling.
CS 5142: Data
Visualization: Introduction to scientific and information visualization. Topics
include methods for visualizing three-dimensional scalar and vector fields,
visual data representations, tree and graph visualization, large-scale data
analysis and visualization, and interface design and interaction techniques.
CS 5143: Immersive Virtual
Environments: An introduction to immersive virtual environment technologies and
their applications. Topics include: wall-sized displays, head-mounted
displays, 3D displays, orientation and position tracking, human perception, and
recent research utilizing virtual reality systems.
CS 5144: Human-Computer
Interactions and Usability Testing: Current issues in human-computer
interaction (HCI), evaluation of user interface (UI) design, and usability
testing of UI. Course requires documenting UI design evaluation, UI testing,
and writing and presenting a HCI survey, concept or topic paper.
CS 5145: Advanced
Artificial Intelligence: Course topics include current topics in
artificial intelligence including agent-based systems, learning, planning, use
of uncertainty in problem solving, reasoning, and belief systems.
CS 5146: Computational
Intelligence - Theory and Application: This course covers the four main
paradigms of Computational Intelligence, viz., fuzzy systems, artificial neural
networks, evolutionary computing, and swarm intelligence, and their integration
to develop hybrid systems. Applications of Computational Intelligence include
classification, regression, clustering, controls, robotics, etc.
CS 6130: Information
Theory: Mathematical models for channels and sources; entropy,
information, data compression, channel capacity, Shannon's theorems, and
rate-distortion theory.
CS 6131: Coding Theory: General
discussion on coding theory with emphasis on the algebraic theory of cyclic
codes using finite field arithmetic, decoding of BCH and RS codes, convolution
codes and trellis decoding algorithms.
CS 6132: Digital Image
Processing: Image formation, enhancement, and reconstruction, applications in
medical imaging, computer vision, and pattern recognition.
CS 6133: Computational
Intelligence - Theory and application: This course covers the four main
paradigms of Computational Intelligence, viz., fuzzy systems, artificial neural
networks, evolutionary computing, and swarm intelligence, and their integration
to develop hybrid systems. Applications of Computational Intelligence include
classification, regression, clustering, controls, robotics, etc.
CS 6134: Compiler Design,
Theory, and Optimization: Design and theory of programming language
translators and the theory and implementation of optimizers. Topics include: intermediate
representations, advanced code generation, control- and data-flow analysis,
advanced compiler optimization, dynamic compilation, global register allocation
and instruction scheduling.
CS 6140: Theory of
Computation: Topics covered include Turing machines and their variants, the
halting problem and decidability, computability, reducibility, NP-completeness,
time and space complexity, and topics from recursive function theory. The
course starts with a brief review of the computation models from CS3311.
CS 6141: Advanced
Algorithms: Design and analysis of advanced algorithms. Topics include
algorithms for complex data structures, probabilistic analysis, amortized
analysis, approximation algorithms, and NP-completeness. Design and analysis of
algorithms for string-matching and computational geometry are also covered.
CS 6142: Parallel
Algorithms: Advanced topics in the design, analysis, and performance
evaluation of parallel algorithms. Topics include advanced techniques for
algorithm analysis, memory models, run time systems, parallel architectures,
and program design, particularly emphasizing the interactions of these factors.
CS 6143: Advanced Computer
Architecture: An in-depth study of various aspects of parallel processing, with
an emphasis on parallel architectures. The course has an analytical focus and
investigates models of various aspects of the design and analysis of parallel
systems. Topics include simple single processor/multiprocessor performance
models, pipelining, instruction-level parallelism, and multiprocessor design
issues.
CS 6144: Distributed
Systems: Covers time and order in distributed systems; mutual exclusion,
agreement, elections, and atomic transactions; Distributed File Systems,
Distributed Shared Memory, Distributed System Security; and issues in
programming distributed systems. Uses selected case studies.
CS 6145: Systems
Performance Analysis: Analysis of the performance of computer
systems. Topics include: measurement techniques and tools, probability theory
and statistics, experiment design and analysis, simulation, queuing models.
Course includes a significant experimental component.
CS 6146: Software/Hardware
Design of Multimedia Systems: A comprehensive overview of the
design and implementation of the hardware and software of a platform for
multimedia applications. Topics include system level design methodology,
single-instruction-multiple data processor (SIMD), virtual platform implementation,
development of an SIMD parallel compiler, and real-time operating systems
(RTOS).
CS 6147: GPU and Multi-core
Programming: Introduction to Graphics Processing units (GPU) and multi-core
systems, their architectural features and programming models, stream
programming and compute unified driver architecture (CUDA), caching
architectures, linear and non-linear programming, scientific computing on GPUs,
sorting and search, stream mining, cryptography, and fixed and floating point
operations.
CS 6148: Data
Visualization: Introduction to scientific and information visualization. Topics
include methods for visualizing three-dimensional scalar and vector fields,
visual data representations, tree and graph visualization, large-scale data
analysis and visualization, and interface design and interaction techniques.
CS 6149: Advanced
Artificial Intelligence: Course topics include current topics in
artificial intelligence including agent-based systems, learning, planning, use
of uncertainty in problem solving, reasoning, and belief systems.
Return to Top
12.03.07
- Electrical Engineering:
EE 4120: Basic Electronics:
Introduction to basic electrical principles and devices including
DC and AC circuits, diodes, transistors, operational amplifier Ics, power
supply regulation, and elements of communication systems.
EE 4121: Circuits l: Defines
resistance, voltage, current, energy, and power, followed by DC network
analysis and network theorems. It includes the analysis of transients in
capacitive and inductive networks. Lab exercises use electronic test equipment
to analyze circuits constructed from schematics.
EE 4122: Circuits ll: Defines
and applies sinusoidal steady-state AC concepts such as impedance, complex
power, resonance, and frequency response. It applies basic network analysis
tools to AC single phase and balanced three-phase networks, bridge circuits,
and filters. AC circuit principles are reinforced by coordinated lab exercises.
EE 4123: Calculus with
Technology I: An introduction to single-variable calculus, which includes a
computer laboratory. Topics include trigonometric, exponential, and logarithmic
functions, differentiation and its uses, and basic integration and Integrates
symbolic tools, graphical concepts, data and numerical calculations.
EE 4124: Calculus with Technology
Il: An introduction to single-variable calculus, which includes a
computer laboratory. Topics include trigonometric, exponential, logarithmic
functions, differentiation and its uses, and basic integration. It integrates
symbolic tools, data and numeric, and graphical concepts, going at a slower
pace and incorporating cooperative learning study skills.
EE 4125: Electronic
Devices & Circuits: Introduction to solid-state electronic
devices and their application; Studies diodes, transistors and operational
amplifier ICs; Transistor biasing, temperature stabilization and gain
calculations of single and multistage amplifiers. Studies power amplifiers,
frequency response, heat sinking and power supply design.
EE 4126: Digital
Electronics and Microprocessor Fundamentals: A study of the fundamental
components used in digital logic circuits and microcomputer architecture and
programming. Topics include: number systems and codes, Boolean algebra,
combinational logic circuits, flip-flops, arithmetic circuits, counters and
registers, decoders, multiplexers, memory organization, microcomputer
addressing modes, stacks and subroutines.
EE 4127: Communication Systems:
Basic course in communication systems. Topics include noise
designation and calculation, bandwidth, frequency domain analysis, oscillators,
AM/FM analysis, AM/FM transmission and reception, super-heterodyne principle,
and SSB.
EE 4128: Programmable
Logic Devices: Emphasizes the concept of design, simulation and implementation of
large scale digital systems which incorporate digital devices at all complexity
levels.
EE 4130: Electrical
Machinery: Fundamental steady-state analysis of DC, AC poly-phase and AC
single-phase electrical machines as well as transformers.
EE 4131: Communication
Systems: Basic course in communication systems. Topics include noise
designation and calculation, bandwidth, frequency domain analysis, oscillators,
AM/FM analysis, AM/FM transmission and reception, super-heterodyne principle,
and SSB.
EE 4132: Introduction to
Programmable Controllers: The design of discreet sequential controls
using programmable logic controllers (PLCs). Relay logic is used to introduce
ladder logic and ladder logic is used to program the PLC; introduces a
structured approach to sequential control design. Data acquisition is
introduced using Bridgeview software.
EE 4133: Power Electronics
Fundamentals: Fundamentals of electronic power conversion circuits and devices;
Analyzes basic switching circuits and power converter topologies including
dc/dc converters, ac/dc rectifiers, and dc/ac inverters; Discuses the selection
criteria for reactive elements and models for solid-state switching devices.
EE 4134: Introduction to
Optical Fiber Communication Systems: Focuses on the basic principles
of optical fiber communications, including wave propagation, optical fiber,
optical transmitters and receivers, signal processing, analysis of system
impairments, and optical networks.
EE 4135: Digital Design
Fundamentals: Emphasizes the language concepts of digital systems design using
VHDL with emphasis on good design practices and writing verification test-benches.
Students will gain valuable hands-on experience writing efficient hardware
design code and performing simulations using Model Sims.
EE 4136: Physics and
Technology of Semiconductor Devices: Provides a comprehensive
treatment of semiconductor device physics and technology, with emphasis on
modern planar silicon devices. Physical principles are explained by the use of
simple physical models and illustrated by experimental measurements.
EE 4137: C++ and Mat-lab
Programming: Introduction to C++ programming and MATLAB for use in solving
problems encountered in engineering technology. C++ topics include the basics of
syntax and program structure; Focuses on the basic capabilities of MATLAB and
its programming environment.
EE 4138: Data
Communications: Introduction to the fundamentals of basic data communication
methods. Topics include data transmission, signal encoding techniques, digital
data communication techniques, transmission media, and frequency domain
analysis.
EE 4140: Instrumentation: An
investigation of transducers and where they are used. Topics include signal
conditioning, sensitivity, linearity, hysteresis, process measurements, and
position, motion and force measurements. Exposure to graphical data acquisition
tools is incorporated.
EE 4141: Computer
Architecture and Design: Computer system components, instruction set
design, hardwired control units, arithmetic algorithms/circuits, floating-point
operations, introduction to memory and I/O interfaces.
EE 4142: Programmable
Logic Devices: Emphasizes the concept of design, simulation and implementation of
large scale digital systems which incorporate digital devices at all complexity
levels.
EE 4143: Microcomputer
Interfacing: The design of systems, hardware, and software needed to perform
serial and parallel data transmission between microcomputers; Data collection
using analog to digital converters and analog and digital control outputs.
EE 4144: Digital Signal
Processing Applications: Provides students with knowledge in
architecture, instruction set, and hardware and software development tools
associated with a fixed point general purpose DSP; Includes applications of DSP
in control of electric drives and power electronic devices.
EE 4145: Real-Time
Robotics Systems: Covers the components of a robot system, safety, concepts of a
work-cell system, geometry, path control, automation sensors, programming
techniques, hardware, and software.
EE 4146: VLSI Circuits
Design: VLSI design methodology; specification of VLSI circuits at various
levels of abstraction; design, layout, and computer simulation of circuits;
high-level synthesis; design projects.
EE 4147: Industrial
Robotic Vision Systems and Advanced Programming: Procedures
for setting up, teaching, testing, and modifying robot vision systems widely
used in industrial automation. Introduces advanced Teach Pendant Programming to
develop complex scenarios for integrating robots into industrial cells.
EE 4148: Advanced Circuits
and Controls: This course considers the modeling, design and implementation of
basic and advanced process control strategies. Process modeling and dynamics
will be considered using La Place transform analysis. Control techniques
addressed will include feedback, cascade, feed forward, multivariable and model
based methods.
EE 4149: In-Vehicle
Communication Networks: Focuses on in-vehicle system domains and
their requirements, and in-vehicle communication bus Controller Area Networks
(CAN) and their related physical layers standards. It also covers LIN, Flex Ray,
and MOST. In-vehicle network examples, components, and tools are presented.
EE 4150: Wireless
Communications: Topics include television systems, wave propagation, antennas,
digital communications, wireless communications systems and standards, wireless
communications channels, multiple access schemes, modern wireless technologies,
wireless channel impairments and techniques to minimize them.
EE 4151: Electrical
Project Development and Troubleshooting: Covers soldering,
component layout, printed circuit board artwork, troubleshooting, electrical
and environmental factors in design as well as an overview of the practical
methods used by industry to process projects. The student designs and
fabricates a circuit board and assembles a project.
EE 5120: Test Engineering
Fundamentals: Fundamental concepts of testing electrical or mechatronics devices
are presented. Topics include design for testability, test economics and
product quality, fault models, functional and statistical techniques, IC
parametric tests, boundary scans, built-in self tests, and board level design
for testability.
EE 5121: Electronic
Manufacturing: Emphasizes fundamentals of signal transmission theory, digital
circuit design, the role of packaging in circuit performance, and PCB
manufacturing.
EE 5122: Quality Control: Fundamentals
of statistical quality control are studied. Areas of study include process
improvement, reduction of variation, root cause analysis, measures and costs of
quality, systems thinking, and analysis and use of non-numeric test results
such as modeling using ordinal variables.
EE 5123: EMC Test Engineering
Fundamentals: Introduction to concepts and methodologies used in Electromagnetic
Compatibility conformance testing. Course will explore common design flaws that
result in EMC issues as well as industry standard test methods used to uncover
those flaws; intended as preparation for NARTE EMC Technician and Engineer
exam.
EE 5124: Digital Hardware
Testing: The course emphasizes fundamentals of digital hardware design for
testability, faults in digital circuits, fault simulation and test generation,
memory testing, testing of sequential circuits, microprocessor testing, digital
circuit design, the role of packaging in circuit performance and PCB
manufacturing.
EE 5130: Optical System
Design and Testing: The fundamental concepts of optical system design and testing are
presented at the moderate level. Simulation tools for modeling a broad range of
optical components are designed to enhance the learning process. Laboratory
experiments are intended to provide hands-on experience.
EE 5131: Advanced Methods
in Power Systems: Advanced analysis and simulation methods for load flow,
symmetrical components, short circuit studies, optimal system operation,
stability, and transient analysis. Application of commonly used software
reinforces concepts and provides practical insights.
EE 5132: Transient
Analysis Methods: A study of transient behaviors and their analysis and prediction;
Addresses analytical methods and their numerical implementation, switching and
lightning surges, short circuits, and non-linear effects and Includes computer
simulations.
EE 5133: Advanced Electric
Machinery and Drives: Advanced electro-mechanics of rotating and
linear machines. Topics include dynamic analysis of machines, reference frame
transformations, reduced order models, models of mechanical loads, power
electric drives for motors, and digital simulation of machines and electric
drive systems. Applications discussed will include renewable energy and
electric propulsion systems.
EE 5134: Power System
Protection: Real-time monitoring and protection of modern power systems;
Secure and reliable operation of radial and grid systems. Protection of
transmission lines, buses, generators, motors, transformers, and other
equipment against disturbances.
EE 5140: Power System
Operations: Study of advanced engineering and economic algorithms and analysis
techniques for the planning, operation, and control of the electric power
system from generation through transmission to distribution.
EE 5141: Computer Modeling
of Power Systems: Topics include modeling and computer methods applied to electrical
power systems, matrix formulations, network topology and sparse matrix data
structures, loadflow, short- circuit and stability formulations, constrained
optimization methods for loadflow and state estimation, and time-domain
simulation methods for transient analysis.
EE 5142: Distribution
Engineering: Modeling and analysis of electrical distribution systems; load
characteristics, load modeling, unbalanced three-phase overhead and underground
line models, and distribution transformers. Analysis of primary system design,
applications for capacitors, voltage drop, power loss, distribution system
protection, and introduction to advanced distribution automation.
EE 5143: Wind Power: Wind
turbines are the fastest growing segment of the generator mix being added to
power systems today. There is a growing need to understand the many issues
caused by these additions. This course covers the theoretical background,
regulations, integration experience, and modeling.
EE 5144: Advanced
Propulsion for Hybrid Electric Drive Vehicles: Hybrid
electric vehicles (HEV) will be studied and simulated using advanced power train
component analysis and modeling. An in-depth analysis and study of power flows,
losses, and energy usage are examined for isolated power train components and
HEV configurations. Simulation tools will be developed and applied to specify
power train and vehicle components and to develop control and calibration for a
constrained optimization to vehicle technical specifications.
EE 5145: Engineering
Electromagnetic: A mathematically rigorous study of dynamic electromagnetic fields,
beginning with Maxwell's equations. Topics include scalar and vector
potentials, waves, and radiation.
EE 5146: Solar
Photovoltaic Science and Engineering: Solar photovoltaic materials, the
device physics of photovoltaic cells and practical applications of solar
electric systems engineering.
EE 6130: Test Engineering
Fundamentals: Fundamental concepts of testing electrical or mechatronics devices
are presented. Topics include design for testability, test economics and
product quality, fault models, functional and statistical techniques, IC
parametric tests, boundary scans, built-in self tests, and board level design
for testability.
EE 6131: Electronic
Manufacturing: Emphasizes fundamentals of signal transmission theory, digital
circuit design, the role of packaging in circuit performance, and PCB
manufacturing.
EE 6132: EMC Test
Engineering Fundamentals: Introduction to concepts and methodologies
used in Electromagnetic Compatibility conformance testing. Course will explore
common design flaws that result in EMC issues as well as industry standard test
methods used to uncover those flaws; Intended as preparation for NARTE EMC
Technician and Engineer exam.
EE 6133: Digital Hardware
Testing: The course emphasizes fundamentals of digital hardware design for
testability, faults in digital circuits, fault simulation and test generation,
memory testing, testing of sequential circuits, microprocessor testing, digital
circuit design, the role of packaging in circuit performance and PCB
manufacturing.
EE 6134: Optical System
Design and Testing: The fundamental concepts of optical system design and testing are
presented at the moderate level. Simulation tools for modeling a broad range of
optical components are designed to enhance the learning process. Laboratory
experiments are intended to provide hands-on experience.
EE 6140: Statistical
Processing Of Radar, Sonar, And Optical Signals: Concerned
with problems in statistical processing of Radar, Sonar and optical signals
including model order selection, parameter estimation, power spectral density
estimation, signal detection and classification. It is proved that the
exponentially embedded-families (EEF), which is a recently proposed model order
selection criterion, is consistent. It is also found in computer simulations
that the EEF works well in difficult situations.
EE 6141: Optical Fiber
Communications: Presents the fundamental principles for understanding and applying
optical fiber technology to sophisticated modern telecommunication systems as
optical-fiber-based telecommunication networks have become a major
information-transmission-system, with high capacity links encircling the globe
in both terrestrial and undersea installations. Numerous passive and active
optical devices within these links perform complex transmission and networking
functions in the optical domain, such as signal amplification, restoration,
routing, and switching. Along with the need to understand the functions of
these devices comes the necessity to measure both component and network
performance, and to model and stimulate the complex behavior of reliable
high-capacity networks.
EE 6142: Low-Power
High-Resolution Analog to Digital Converters: Focus on:
i) improving the power efficiency for the high-speed, and low spurious
spectral A/D conversion performance by exploring the potential of low-voltage
analog design and calibration techniques, respectively, and ii) development of
circuit techniques and algorithms to enhance testing and debugging potential to
detect errors dynamically, to isolate and confine faults, and to recover errors
continuously. The feasibility of the described methods has been verified by
measurements from the silicon prototypes fabricated in standard 180nm, 90nm and
65nm CMOS technology.
EE 6143: Digital Filters: Basics
and Design: Gives a substantial insight into the characteristics and the
design of digital filters. It briefly introduces to the theory of continuous-time
systems and the design methods for analog filters. Time-discrete systems, the
basic structures of digital filters, sampling theorem, and the design of IIR
filters are widely discussed. The author devotes important parts to the design
of non-recursive filters and the effects of finite register length.
EE 6144: Electricity from
Renewable Resources: Examines the technical potential for electric power generation
with alternative sources such as wind, solar-photovoltaic, geothermal,
solar-thermal, hydroelectric, and other renewable sources. The book focuses on
those renewable sources that show the most promise for initial commercial
deployment within 10 years and will lead to a substantial impact on the U.S.
energy system.
EE 6145: Electromagnets: Covers
Electrostatic Field in Free Space, Dielectrics, Capacitance, and Electric
Energy, Steady Electric Currents, Magneto static Field in Free Space, Magneto
static Field in Material Media, Slowly Time-Varying Electromagnetic Field,
Inductance and Magnetic Energy, Rapidly Time-Varying Electromagnetic Field,
Uniform Plane Electromagnetic Waves, Reflection and Transmission of Plane
Waves, Field Analysis of Transmission Lines, Circuit Analysis of Transmission
Lines, Waveguides and Cavity Resonators and Antennas and Wireless Communication
Systems.
EE 6146: Electro-Mechanical
Modeling of Charged Particulate Systems: Fundamental understanding
on the collective behavior of particulate systems under combined
electro-mechanical loading environments is sought in several interdisciplinary
applications. A few examples are, in the design of electrostatic granular
valves, piezoelectric powder compacts/sensors, electromechanical separators for
minerals and ores, powder injectors, and microbial particulate fuel cells. The
developments in Micro/Nano technologies are pushing the limits of miniature
particulate fabrications by designing particle interfaces with enhanced
functionalities.
EE 6147: Operational
Amplifiers: Presents a systematic circuit design of operational amplifiers,
Containing state-of-the-art material as well as the essentials, covers both the
circuit designer and the system designer. It is shown that the topology of all
operational amplifiers can be divided into nine main overall configurations.
These configurations range from one gain stage up to four or more stages. Many
famous designs are evaluated in depth and includes systematic design of
µV-offset operational amplifiers and precision instrumentation amplifiers by
applying chopping, auto-zeroing, and dynamic element-matching techniques. Also,
techniques for frequency compensation of amplifiers with high capacitive loads
have been added.
EE 6148: Introduction to
Subsurface Imaging: Describing and evaluating the basic principles and methods of
subsurface sensing and imaging, Introduction to Subsurface Imaging is a clear
and comprehensive treatment that links theory to a wide range of real-world
applications in medicine, biology, security and geophysical/environmental
exploration. It integrates the different sensing techniques (acoustic,
electric, electromagnetic, optical, x-ray or particle beams) by unifying the
underlying physical and mathematical similarities, and computational and
algorithmic methods. Time-domain, spectral and multi-sensor methods are also
covered, whilst all the necessary mathematical, statistical and linear systems
tools are given in useful appendices to make the book self-contained. Featuring
a logical blend of theory and applications, a wealth of color illustrations,
homework problems and numerous case studies, this is suitable for use as both a
course text and as a professional reference.
EE 6149: Computer
Architecture: Focuses on this dramatic shift, exploring the ways in which
software and technology in the cloud are accessed by cell phones, tablets,
laptops, and other mobile computing devices. Each chapter includes two
real-world examples, one mobile and one datacenter, to illustrate this
revolutionary change.
Return to Top
12.03.08
- Mechanical Engineering:
ME 4120: Mechanics of
Materials: Introduction to mechanical behavior of materials, including
stress/strain at a point, principle stresses and strains, stress-strain
relationships, determination of stresses and deformations in situations
involving axial loading, torsional loading of circular cross sections, and
flexural loading of straight members. Also covers stresses due to combined
loading and buckling of columns.
ME 4121: Thermodynamics: Introduces
fundamental concepts of heat and power. It presents property relationships
incompressible substances, simple pure substances, and ideal gases and applies
the first and second laws of thermodynamics to the analyses of processes for
open and closed systems. Also covers thermodynamic cycles.
ME 4122: Integrated Design
and Manufacturing: Focuses on practical aspects of design and manufacturing. Covers
fundamentals of manufacturing processes and includes weekly lab providing
hands-on experiences with manufacturing issues that influence component design
and incorporates computer-aided manufacturing tools.
ME 4123: Dynamics: First
course in the principles of dynamics, covering the motion of a particle, the
kinematics and kinetics of plane motion of rigid bodies, the principles of work
and energy, impulse and momentum. Uses vector methods.
ME 4124: Fluid Mechanics: Presentation/development
of the fundamentals of fluid dynamics, building on students' background in
mechanics and thermodynamics; Makes applications to fluid statics,
control-volume analyses, incompressible flows with friction (viscosity) and compressible
flows without friction and covers non-dimensional representation of
experimental results, power requirements for pumps and turbines, and energy
losses in pipes.
ME 4125: Heat Transfer: Covers
fundamental principles of steady-state and transient heat transfer, including
conduction, convection, and radiation. Also covers applications to heat
exchangers and extended surfaces.
ME 4126: Product
Realization: Students apply mechanical synthesis, analysis, and manufacturing
processes to the design of products, using case studies of existing products to
develop the relationships between design, manufacturing, and product
performance. They apply synthesis methods to the design of a new product.
ME 4127: Engineering
Design Processes: This course introduces methods for concurrent design,
manufacturing, and assembly that will be utilized later in their Senior
Capstone Design or Enterprise project experience. Course topics will include
thinking styles, teamwork, creative problem solving, brainstorming, Pugh method,
technical report preparation, economic decision making, quality, analytical and
experimental design optimization, DFA, DFM, GD&T, codes and fasteners,
robust engineering, engineering ethics, patents and IP, and innovation in the
workplace. A one semester 'paper only' design project is utilized to enhance
the learning outcomes.
ME 4128: Statics: Force
systems in two and three dimensions. It includes composition and resolution of
forces and force systems, principles of equilibrium applied to various bodies,
simple structures, friction, and moments of inertia. Vector algebra used where
appropriate. Prerequisite of MA2160 with a grade of C or better is required.
ME 4130: Intermediate
Mechanics of Materials: Basic concepts of three-dimensional stress
and strain; inelastic behavior of axial members, circular shafts and symmetric
beams; deflections of indeterminate beams. Unsymmetrical bending, shear flow
and shear center for open sections. Energy methods for structures made up of
one-dimensional elements and introduction to theories of failures for
anisotropic materials.
ME 4131: Fundamentals of
Experimental Stress Analysis: Transmits basic understanding of
purposes and uses of experimental stress analysis and makes students familiar
with methods used in the field to give experience in either design or analysis
of strain- gauged transducer.
ME 4132: Failure of
Materials in Mechanics: Identifies the modes of mechanical failure
that are essential to prediction and prevention of mechanical failure. It discusses
theories of failure in detail and treats the topic of fatigue failure
extensively and brittle fracture, impact and buckling failures at some length.
ME 4133: Engineering
Biomechanics: Engineering mechanics applied to the human body in health and
disease or injury, which includes mechanics of human biological materials and engineering
design in mayo-skeletal system. Also studies on mechanics of posture
(occupational biomechanics) and locomotion (sports biomechanics) using
mathematical models of the human body.
ME 4134: Principles of
Energy Conversion: Introduces basic background, terminology, and fundamentals of
energy conversion. It discusses current and emerging technologies for
production of thermal, mechanical, and electrical energy. Topics include fossil
and nuclear fuels, thermodynamic power cycles, solar energy, wind energy, and
energy storage.
ME 4135: Computational
Fluids Engineering: Introduces computational methods used to solve fluid mechanics,
and thermal transfer problems. It discusses theoretical and practical aspects.
Modern computer-based tools are used to reinforce principles and introduce
advanced topics in fluid mechanics, and thermal transport.
ME 4136: Internal
Combustion Engines: Teaches the operation and design of various types of internal
combustion engines through the application of applied thermodynamics, cycle
analysis, and combustion, mixtures of gases, fluid dynamics, and heat transfer.
ME 4137: Compressible
Flow/Gas Dynamics: Fundamentals of one-dimensional gas dynamics, including flow in
nozzles and diffusers, normal shocks, frictional flows, and flows with heat
transfer or energy release; introduction to oblique shocks.
ME 4138: Mechanical
Vibrations: Dynamic behavior of single degree-of-freedom systems; Free and
forced vibration with an emphasis on harmonic motion; Vibration considerations
in design; vibration isolation, balancing, and transmissibility; Free and
forced vibration of multiple degree-of-freedom systems. Laplace transforms
solutions for periodic and transient inputs and introduction to system
modeling.
ME 4140: Quality
Engineering: Introduction to the concepts and methods of quality and
productivity improvement. Topics include principles of Shewhart, Deming,
Taguchi; meaning of quality; control charts for variables, individuals, and
attributes; process capability analysis; variation of assemblies; and
computer-based workshops.
ME 4141: Heating
Ventilation Refrigeration and Air Conditioning: Elements
of heat transfer for buildings. Thermodynamic properties of moist air, human
comfort and the environment, solar energy fundamentals and applications, water
vapor transmission in building structures, heating and cooling load
calculations.
ME 4142: Fuel Cell
Technology: In this course, after fuel cell technology basics and operating
principles, fuel cell performance will be briefly described from energy and
thermodynamic viewpoints. Major types of fuel cells will be discussed: Polymer
Electrolyte Membrane Fuel Cell (PEMFC), Direct Methanol Fuel Cells (DMFC),
Alkaline Fuel Cells (AFC), Phosphoric Acid Fuel Cell (PAFC), Molten Carbonate
Fuel Cell (MCFC) and Solid Oxide Fuel Cell (SOFC). The balance of the fuel cell
power plant, thermal system design and analysis will be discussed that affect
the power generation. Finally, the components needed, issues related, and
pertinent analysis will be covered to delivering electric power generated from
the fuel cell.
ME 4143: Propulsion
Systems for Hybrid Electric Vehicles: Hybrid electric vehicle analysis
will be developed and applied to examine the operation, integration, and design
of powertrain components. Model based simulation and design is applied to
determine vehicle performance measures in comparison to vehicle technical
specifications. Power flows, losses, energy usage, and drive quality are
examined over drive-cycles via application of these tools.
ME 4144: Computer-Aided
Design Methods: Students apply fundamental and advanced solid modeling techniques
to construct solid models of mechanical systems, simulate the motion of the
system, and document the design. Students use shared data to function in a
concurrent design environment and identify major functional features of
commercial CAD software.
ME 4145: Mechanism
Synthesis/Dynamic Modeling: Students apply kinematic
synthesis techniques in design and analysis of mechanical systems. They develop
synthesis software to link to dynamic analysis packages such as ADAMS, I-DEAS,
etc. They investigate influences of process variation on system output and
learn methods to minimize the variation influences.
ME 4146: Introduction to
the Finite Element Method: Introduces the use of the finite element
method in stress analysis and heat transfer. Emphasizes the modeling
assumptions associated with different elements and uses the computer to solve
many different types of stress analysis problems, including thermal stress
analysis and introductory nonlinear analysis.
ME 4147: Vehicle Dynamics:
This course will develop the models and techniques needed to
predict the performance of a road vehicle during drive off, braking, ride, and
steering maneuvers. Topics to be covered include: acceleration and braking
performance, drive train performance including an introduction to hybrid
electric power train architecture, vehicle handling, suspension modeling, tire models,
and steering control. Mat-lab will be used as a computational tool for
implementation of the models.
ME 4148: Advanced
Machining Processes: Covers mechanics of 2-D and 3-D cutting and their extension to
commonly used conventional processes such as turning, boring, milling, and
drilling. Topics include force modeling, surface generation, heat transfer,
tool life and dynamics.
ME 4149: Metal Forming
Processes: Course presents theory and practice involved in manufacturing and
measuring of precision components. Topics include precision machining
processes, precision machine/mechanism design, and dimensional metrology. Also
discusses current manufacturing challenges in the bearings, optics, and
microelectronics industries.
ME 4150: Precision
Manufacturing and Metrology: Presents theory and practice
involved in the manufacturing and measuring of precision components. Topics
include precision machining processes, precision machine/mechanism design, and
dimensional metrology And addresses current manufacturing challenges in the
bearings, optics, and microelectronics industries.
ME 4151: Production
Planning: Provides current issues, such as just-in-time production and
reengineering, while covering fundamental production planning topics as
scheduling, job design, and inventory; and forecasting. Provides the
fundamental essence of the firm--how its services and products are created and
how they are delivered to customers.
ME 5120: Continuum
Mechanics/Elasticity: Covers development of Cartesian tensors and
indicial notation applied to vector analysis; analysis of stress, principal
stresses, invariants, strain tensors, material derivatives, and continuity
equations; basic conservation laws and constitutive relationships; the theory
of elasticity, including 2-D problems in plane stress/strain, stress functions,
and 3-D problems with polar symmetry.
ME 5121: Nanoscale Science
and Technology: The course covers fundamentals of Nanoscience (synthesis,
properties, characterization) and recent technological advances in renewable
energy, biotechnology, and Nano-devices. This course is appropriate for
students with backgrounds in mechanical engineering, materials science,
chemistry, chemical engineering, civil engineering, and physics.
ME 5122: Advanced
Mechanics of Metals: A critical study of the basic concepts of stress, strain, and
constitutive laws of solids, the physical significance of principle stresses,
stress deviator and octahedral stress. It Covers failure theories;
two-dimensional elasticity theory; mechanics of sub-micron structures; torsion
of prismatic bars, thick pressure vessels; special topics in beam theory;
elements of elastic stability.
ME 5123: Experimental
Stress Analysis: Review of elastic stress-strain relationships. Covers theory and
use of resistive strain gages, strain gage circuits, rosette analysis, and
static and dynamic strain measurement; discusses other current strain measuring
techniques; introduces photo elasticity, Moiré, and other optical techniques.
ME 5124: Finite Element
and Variation Methods in Engineering: Presents fundamental concepts of
variation methods including Rayleigh-Ritz technique. It introduces foundations
of finite element modeling through direct method, variation method, and
weighted residual method. Reviews elements commonly used in static structural
analysis and heat transfer problems. Advanced topics such as nonlinearity and
time-dependent problems may also be discussed.
ME 5125: Principles of
Energy Conversion: Introduces background, terminology, and fundamentals of energy conversion
and storage; Discusses current and emerging technologies for production of
thermal, mechanical, and electrical energy; In-depth analysis of major
thermodynamic power cycles. Topics include fossil and nuclear fuels,
thermodynamic power cycles, solar energy, wind energy, and energy storage.
ME 5126: Precision
Manufacturing and Metrology: Presents theory and practice
involved in the manufacturing and measuring of precision components. Topics
include precision machining processes, precision machine/mechanism design, and
dimensional metrology; Addresses current manufacturing challenges in the
bearings, optics, and microelectronics industries.
ME 5127: Intermediate
Dynamics: Intermediate study of several topics in engineering dynamics,
including three-dimensional kinematics and kinetics, generalized coordinates,
Lagrange's equation, and Hamilton's principle and uses computer-aided dynamic
simulation tools for analyzing dynamic systems.
ME 5130: Mechanics of
Composite Materials: Introduces engineering properties and advantages of fibrous
composites, the governing equations of mechanics of anisotropic, laminated
materials. Develops micromechanics methods for predicting the elastic
properties of the composite and classical lamination theory, including hydro-thermal
effects, and applies them to stress and failure analysis of composite
structures.
ME 5131: Advanced
Thermodynamics: A study of the principles of thermodynamics, including fundamental
concepts and introduction of the analytical treatments of the first, second and
combined first and second laws of thermodynamics. Topics include irreversibility,
availability, thermodynamic relations, mixtures, chemical reactions, and
chemical equilibrium.
ME 5132: Advanced Fluid
Mechanics: Develops control volume forms of balance laws governing fluid
motion and applies to problems involving rockets, pumps, sprinklers, etc.
Derives and studies differential forms of governing equations for
incompressible viscous flows. Some analytical solutions are obtained and
students are exposed to rationale behind computational solution in conjunction
with CFD software demonstration. Also covers qualitative aspects of lift and
drag, loss of stability of laminar flows, turbulence, and vortex shedding.
ME 5133: Computational
Fluids Engineering: Introduces computational methods used to solve fluid mechanics and
thermal transport problems. It discusses theoretical and practical aspects.
Modern computer-based tools are used to reinforce principles and introduce advanced
topics in fluid mechanics and thermal transport.
ME 5134: Fuel Cell
Technology: Fuel cell technology basics, operating principles and performance
will be discussed from energy and thermodynamic viewpoints. Major types will be
described and emphasis will be on construction features, performance behavior
and analysis. The balance of fuel cell power plant and thermal system design
and analysis that affect power generation; as well as hydrogen infrastructure
and issues related to delivering electrical power generated from the fuel cell
will be covered.
ME 5135: Phase-Change
& Two-Phase Flows: Considers two-phase flow patterns for
air-water, condensing, and boiling flows in the context of interface conditions
(surface tension, etc.) and interfacial instabilities that lead to interfacial
waves, droplet formation, etc. The course emphasizes development of model
equations. Relevant experimental data leading to pressure drop correlations,
interfacial shear models, etc., are discussed. The model equations and empirical
correlations are used to estimate solutions of problems.
ME 5136: Design for
Reliability: Emphasizes the importance of reliability in design, covering basic
concepts of series, parallel, standby and mixed systems; Uses conditional
probability and multi-mode functions as methods for problem solution and
reliability testing.
ME 5137: Analytical
Vibroacoustics: First in a series of two courses on Vibroacoustics to provide a
unified approach to study noise and vibration and emphasizes interaction
between sound waves and structures. Presents advanced vibration concepts with
computational tools.
ME 5140: Vehicle Dynamics:
This course will introduce the models and techniques needed to
predict the performance of a road vehicle during drive off, braking, ride, and
steering maneuvers. Topics to be covered include: acceleration and braking
performance, drive train performance including an introduction to hybrid
electric power train architecture, vehicle handling, suspension modeling, tire
models, and steering control. Mat-lab will be used as a computational tool for
implementation of the models.
ME 5141: Micro
manufacturing Processes: Introduces the processes and equipment for
fabricating Microsystems and the methods for measuring component size and
system performance. Fabrication processes include micro scale milling,
drilling, diamond machining, and lithography. Measurement methods include
interferometer and scanning electron microscopy.
ME 5142: Data Based
Modeling & Control: System modeling and analysis from observed
data for computer-aided design and manufacturing, providing differential
equation models. Computer routines for modeling, forecasting with accuracy
assessment and minimum mean-squared error control; Underlying system analysis,
including stability and feedback interpretation, periodic and exponential
trends and uses illustrative applications to real-life data, including team
projects.
ME 5143: Micro and Nano
Fabrication for Energy Applications: The course will focus on the
working principles of energy devices; micro and Nanoscale energy science and
the relevant fabrication and characterization technologies. The class will also
discuss research methodology and the current trends in this research field.
ME 5144: Experimental
Design in Engineering: Review of basic statistical concepts; Models
for testing significance of one or many factors; Reducing experimental effort
by incomplete blocks, and Latin squares. Factorial and fractional factorial
designs; Response surface analysis for optimal response.
ME 5145: Dynamic
Measurement/Signal Analysis: Assessment of measurement system
requirements: transducers, conditioners, and displays of dynamic measure-ands.
Time-, frequency-, probabilistic-, and correlative-domain approaches to dynamic
signal analysis: sampled data, discrete Fourier transforms, digital filtering,
estimation errors, system identification, calibration, recording and introduction
to wavelet analysis. All concepts reinforced in laboratory and simulation
exercises.
ME 5146: Advanced Space
Mechanics: This course presents the vector-based solution of the two-body
problem and the solution for Kepler's equations. The course will also cover
basic orbit determination techniques, impulsive orbit transfer maneuvers,
interplanetary trajectories, ground tracks, and rendezvous problems
ME 5147: Distributed
Embedded Control Systems: This course will develop an understanding for
the design and application of embedded control systems. Topics to be covered
include: embedded system architecture, model-based embedded system design,
real-time control, communication protocols, signal processing, and human
machine interface. Embedded applications in advanced hybrid electric vehicles
will also be introduced.
ME 5148: Engineering
Fracture Mechanics: Development of the stress and deformation fields present near the
tips of cracks. It uses elasticity solutions, plasticity corrections, and
numerical methods in modeling these fields. Introduces fracture criteria and
explains the various parameters used to develop these criteria.
ME 6130: Advanced Heat
Transfer: Advanced topics on conduction, convection, radiation, and heat
exchangers are covered. Emphasis is on problem formulation, exact solutions,
some coverage of empirical results, and computational techniques.
ME 6131: Linear Systems
Theory and Design: Overview of linear algebra, modern control; state-based design of
linear systems, observe-ability, controllability, pole placement, observer
design, stability theory of linear time-varying systems, Lyapunov stability,
optimal control, linear quadratic regulator, Kalman filter,
ME 6132: Dynamic Behavior
of Materials: Covers the dynamic stress-strain aspects of material behavior,
discusses elastic waves in bounded media, describes the Hopkinson bar, an
experimental tool for the determination of the dynamic strength of materials,
and includes impacts of bars and response of high strain rate.
ME 6133: Nonlinear Systems
Analysis & Control: Studies nonlinear systems from perspective of
analysis/control system design; Explores fundamental properties for nonlinear
differential equations in addition to describing functions, phase plane
analysis, stability/instability theorems. Develops and applies control system
design approaches for nonlinear systems, including feedback linearization and
sliding mode control.
ME 6134: Advanced Dynamics:
Systematic study of principles of mechanics from a modern
perspective. Includes rates of change of position and orientation; angular
velocity and acceleration; linear velocity and acceleration; generalized
coordinates and velocities; properties of distributed mass; generalized active
and inertia forces for holonomic and non-holonomic systems; potential energy,
kinetic energy, and virtual work.
ME 6140: Advanced Power train
Instrumentation and Experimental Methods: Students will be exposed
to unique instrumentation used in modern power train research and development.
Through hands-on experimentation students will learn techniques for
installation, usage, and calibration. Students will also be exposed to data
quality checks and techniques to mitigate experimental variation.
ME 6141: Advanced
Combustion: The objective is to understand basic combustion processes through
detailed chemical reaction step analysis; Introduces both analytical and modern
experimental methods; Emphasizes gas liquid fuel combustion, flame propagation,
and critical phenomena of ignition and extinction.
ME 6142: Advanced
Machining Processes: Covers mechanics of 2-D and 3-D cutting and their extension to
commonly used processes such as turning, boring, milling, and drilling. Topics
include force modeling, surface generation, heat transfer, tool life and
dynamics.
ME 6143: Advanced Metal
Forming: Introduces fundamentals of plasticity theory and applies to the
analysis of deformation processes. Processes considered are forging, extrusion,
wire drawing, bending, deep drawing, and stretch forming; Emphasizes sheet metal
formability.
ME 6144: Experimental
Methods Viper-Acoustics: Covers operating data measurement and
analysis, including multisource ODS. Includes signature analysis and order
tracking; modal theory, modal scaling. FRF estimators; multiple input
excitation techniques; parameter estimation methods; sound measurements and
acoustic intensity; sound quality; field data acquisition, DAT; binaural
recording and playback with equalization.
ME 6145: Introduction to
Robotics and Mechatronics: Cross-discipline system integration of
sensors, actuators, and microprocessors to achieve high-level design
requirements, including robotic systems. A variety of sensor and actuation
types are introduced, from both a practical and a mathematical perspective.
Embedded microprocessor applications are developed using the C programming
language. A final project is required including analysis, design, and
experimental demonstration.
ME 6146: Advanced
Continuum Mechanics: Presents fundamental concepts in hyperelasticity, damage mechanics,
linear viscoelasticity, quasi-linear viscoelasticity, poroelasticity, continuum
jump conditions, plasticity, and viscoplasticity. These theories are applied to
describe the mechanical behavior of a wide range of engineering materials and
biomaterials such as polymers, metals, soil, collagen, muscle tissue, bone
tissue, and cartilage.
ME 6147: Design
Optimization: Covers mathematical optimization methods useful for engineering
design optimization; it includes classical methods as well as new techniques; Emphasizes
practical applications and the selection of optimization methods for the
solution of specific problems in design.
ME 6148: Advanced
Acoustics: Advanced concepts in acoustics with emphasis on modeling of sound
sources, sound interaction with solid structures, transmission and radiation of
sound. Discusses numerical acoustics, statistical energy analysis, and sound
quality concepts; Provides beneficial background in basic vibrations and noise
control.
ME 6149: Advanced
Vibrations: Free and forced vibration of continuous systems with applications
to strings, shafts, beams, plates and membranes. Problems formulated using
Hamilton's principle and Lagrange's equations. Approximate methods of solution
include the Rayleigh-Ritz method and Galerkin's method.
Return to Top
12.03.09
- Structural Engineering:
STE 6140: Statics and
Strength of Materials for Construction: An accessible and visually
oriented introduction to structural theory, with illustrations and examples of
building frameworks and components to enable students to visually connect
theoretical concepts with the experiential nature of real buildings and
materials.
STE 6141: Masonry
Structural Design: Emphasizes the strength design of masonry and includes
allowable-stress provisions. Innovations such as autoclaved aerated concrete
masonry (AAC) are also discussed. Real-world case studies featuring a low-rise
building with reinforced concrete masonry and a four-story building with clay
masonry illustrate the techniques presented in this comprehensive resource.
Covers basic structural behavior and design of low-rise, bearing wall
buildings, materials used in masonry construction, code basis for structural
design of masonry buildings, including seismic design, introduction of MSJC
treatment of structural design, strength design of reinforced and unreinforced
masonry elements, allowable-stress design of reinforced and unreinforced
masonry elements, comparison of design by the allowable-stress approach versus
the strength approach, lateral load analysis of shear wall structure, design
and detailing of floor and roof diaphragms
STE 6142: Structural
Analysis with the Finite Element Method: Presents the basis of the
FEM for structural analysis and a detailed description of the finite element
formulation for axially loaded bars, plane elasticity problems, symmetric
solids and general three dimensional solids, describes the background theory
for each structural model considered, details of the finite element formulation
and guidelines for the application to structural engineering problems.
STE 6143: Beam Structures:
Classical and Advanced Theories: Unified approach to beam theory
that includes practically all classical and advanced models for beams and which
has become established and recognized globally as the most important
contribution to the field in the last quarter of a century.
STE 6144: Earthquake
Hazard and Seismic Risk Reduction: Provides an overview of the
achievements and experiences of different countries in disaster reduction that
covers Disaster Reduction, Earthquake Hazards, and Earthquake Engineering.
STE 6145: Advanced
Reinforced Concrete Structures: Discusses reinforced concrete
members and provides techniques for sizing the cross section, calculating the
required amount of reinforcement, and detailing the reinforcement. Design
procedures and flowcharts guide you through code requirements, and worked-out
examples demonstrate the proper application of the design provisions. Includes
Mechanics of reinforced concrete, Material properties of concrete and reinforcing
steel, Considerations for analysis and design of reinforced concrete
structures, Requirements for strength and serviceability, Principles of the
strength design method, Design and detailing requirements for beams, one-way
slabs, two-way slabs, columns, walls, and foundations
STE 6146: Advanced Steel
and Composite Structures: Covers a range of special topics, including
performance-based design and human tolerance for the wind-induced dynamic
motions of tall buildings and presents preliminary analysis techniques,
graphical approaches for determining wind and seismic loads, and graphical aids
for estimating unit-quantity of structural steel. The final chapter deals with
the art of connection design.
STE 6147: Analysis of
Plates and Shells: Covers Introduction to structural analysis by the finite element
method, finite elements for axially loaded rods, advanced 1D rod elements and
requirements for the numerical solution, 2D solids, Linear triangular and
rectangular elements, 2D solids, higher order elements, shape functions and
isoparametric formulation, ax-symmetric solids, three dimensional solids,
bending of slender beam, thick/slender beams, Timoshenko theory, thin plates.
Kirchhoff’s theory, thick/thin plates, analysis of shells using flat elements,
analysis of arbitrary shape shells using degenerate solid elements,
three-dimensional rods and shell stiffness, prismatic structures, miscellaneous:
inclined supports, displacements, constrains, nodal condensation error
estimation, pre and post-processing and Mesh generation and visualization of
computer results.
STE 6148: Plastic-Hinge
Methods For Framed Structures: Provides a rather complete
procedure of the automatic plastic-hinge analysis: The one/two/three-linear
behaviors of the material are considered Both fixed and repeated loading are
authorized. The P-delta effects are also taken into account. The beam-to-column
joints could be rigid or semi-rigid. The compact or slender cross-sections are
examined. The analysis is carried out using alternatively direct or
step-by-step methods. Both analysis and optimization aspects are envisaged in
such a way that re-analyze of optimal structure is possible for eventual
verification.
STE 6149: Earthquake
Resistant Buildings: Provides a general introduction to the design of buildings which
must be resistant to the effect of earthquakes, preventive building structure,
examines building structures and vertical components, and examines analyses the
disastrous influence of vertical components.
Return to Top
12.03.10
- Telecommunication:
TLM 6140: Network Flaws,
Theory and Application: Lets students turn back-time as analyzing a
network. Provides knowledge and training on how to use open source software to
build a flow-based network awareness system and how to use network analysis and
auditing to address problems and improve network reliability. It also provides
knowledge and training on to use a flow analysis system; collect flow records;
view, filter, and report flows; present flow records graphically; and use flow
records to proactively improve your network. Emphasizes on how to Identify
network, server, router, and firewall problems before they become critical,
Find defective software, Quickly find virus-spewing machines, even if they're
on a different continent, Determine whether your problem stems from the network
or a server and Automatically graph the most useful data.
TLM 6141: Fundamentals of
DSL Technology: Covers All DSL varieties: U.S. and international varieties
include ANSI and ITU standards as well as legacy and proprietary DSL varieties,
such as CAP, Cisco DSL-related equipment that supports all the DSL varieties
and configurations in both Cisco IOS(r) Software and the graphical user
interface Cisco DSL Manager (CDM) software, All six architectures that implement
DSL using TCP/IP, with in-depth discussion of the four most commonly-used
architectures, New standards and deregulation issues, including the ITU SHDSL
standard and the evolving VDSL technology, International regulatory and
infrastructure issues, with measurements expressed for both U.S. and
international audiences and Common challenges and their solutions when
deploying or migrating using DSL, including voice-over-IP (VoIP) and multimedia
traffic; and Using MPLS to move DSL-generated traffic through networks.
TLM 6142: Microwaves and
RF Engineering: Explores a large spectrum of topics within microwave and radio
frequency (RF) engineering, encompassing electromagnetic theory, microwave
circuits and components. It provides thorough descriptions of the most common
microwave test instruments and advises on semiconductor device modeling.
TLM 6143: Antenna Theory
and Design: Principles and development techniques for examining and designing
antenna systems with emphasis on basic topics and applications, and much
material that are not rely heavily on mathematics. Early sessions cover
fundamentals, and further chapters detail commonly used antenna elements,
synthesis of arrays, and evaluation techniques, including summaries, exercises
designed to be solved using computing packages, and reference appendices of
frequencies and formulas, plus short descriptions of computing packages
available on a Web site.
TLM 6144: Advanced Topics
in Signal Processing: Addresses many of the contemporary problems
faced when processing hyper-spectral image data with focus thematic mapping and
classification, spectral un-mixing, morphology and compression and the state of
kernel based methods in image analysis. Focuses on advances in signal
processing and exploitation techniques for optical remote sensing with a
collection of state-of-the art algorithms for hyper-spectral and multispectral
imaging technologies. Includes a collection of images and graphics, processing
technologies and parallel implementations with up-to-date references at the end
of each chapter
TLM 6145: Underwater
Acoustics: Focuses on the acoustic environment, antenna structures, electric
acoustic interface, and provides knowledge required to design, as well as the
development and implementation of chain processes for active sonar from the
conditioning input to output processing. The course includes a comprehensive
range of all problems encountered in underwater acoustics for a sonar
application, from physical phenomena governing the environment and the
corresponding constraints, through to the technical definition of transducers
and antennas, and the types of signal processing involved. In one section,
measures in underwater acoustics are also proposed.
TLM 6146: LTE, WiMAX and
WLAN Network Design: Provides a practical guide to LTE and WiMAX technologies
introducing various tools and concepts used within. In addition, topics such as
traffic modeling of IP-centric networks, RF propagation, fading, mobility, and
indoor coverage are explored; new techniques which increase throughput such as
MIMO and AAS technology are highlighted; and simulation, network design and
performance analysis are also examined. Finally, in the latter part of the book
Korowajczuk gives a step-by-step guide to network design, providing readers with
the capability to build reliable and robust data networks.
TLM 6147: Satellite
Communications Systems: Covers the entire field of satellite
communications engineering from orbital mechanics to satellite design and
launch, configuration and installation of earth stations, including the
implementation of communications links and the set-up of the satellite network
and provides a comprehensive treatment of satellite communications systems
engineering and discusses the technological applications, demonstrates how
system components interact and details the relationship between the system and
its environment and discuses the systems aspects such as techniques enabling
equipment and system dimensioning and state of the art technology for satellite
platforms, payloads and earth stations.
TLM 6148: Telecommunications
Network Design and Management: Represent the state-of-the-art of
applying operations research techniques and solutions across a broad spectrum
of telecommunications problems and implementation issues. Deal with the design
of wireless networks, including UMTS and Ad-Hoc networks. Deal with the optimal
design of telecommunications networks, Techniques used for network design range
from genetic algorithms to combinatorial optimization heuristics, traffic flow
in telecommunications networks, focusing on optimizing traffic load
distribution and the scheduling of switches under multi-media streams and heavy
traffic, telecommunications network management, examining bandwidth
provisioning, admission control, queue management, dynamic routing, and
feedback regulation in order to ensure that the network performance is
optimized and the construction of topologies and allocation of bandwidth to
ensure quality-of-service.
TLM 6149: Systems
Engineering in Wireless Communications: Focus on the area of radio
resource management in third generation wireless communication systems from a
systems engineering perspective. Provide an introduction into cellular radio
systems as well as a review of radio resource management issues. A detailed
discussion of power control, handover, admission control, smart antennas, joint
optimization of different radio resources, and cognitive radio networks is
offered. Emphasis is on the dynamical issues arising from mobile nodes in the
network. Well-known control techniques, such as least squares estimation, PID
control, Kalman filers, adaptive control, and fuzzy logic are used throughout
the course.
Return to Top
12.04 -
Education:
12.04.01 - Educational
Leadership:
ED 5120: Philosophy of
Education: In this course Learners examine the philosophical foundations of
education and explore the underlying principles of education and the nature of
knowledge, how classical, modern and post modern theories impact the current
education models. Learners investigate the philosophical underpinnings of
American education in order to improve educational practice, policy, and
participation. In a broader context, ED 5003 as a fundamental course is
designed to present issues and perspectives aligned to the study and practice
of education. Learners critically question and examine assumptions about the
role of government in education, the constitution of classroom instruction, and
the function of social identities in education. In this context, much of the
discussion and debate centers on the nature of knowledge, of reality, of value
and of the individual. Learners create and critique their personal and
professional philosophy of education.
ED 5121: School Law: Students
will investigate the impact of school law on the rights of students and
educators as guaranteed by the Constitution and its amendments. This
investigation will include state and federal statutory and regulatory
provisions as well as tort and contract liability as they influence education.
ED 5122: Instructional
Supervision and Leadership: The purpose of this course is to
examine the theoretical framework and practical applications of instructional
leadership within the economic, social, political, and educational context of
schooling. This course proposes a concept of supervision and leadership
designed to help educational leaders build a repertoire of approaches and
strategies that will enhance professional growth while showing the importance
of sensitivity to individual needs. Emphasis is placed upon the learner gaining
a clear understanding of the interrelatedness among supervision and leadership,
instruction, and assessment.
ED 5123: Policy Studies
for Educational Leaders: Focuses on the background of education
policy, what is policy and where it comes from, power and education policy, the
economy and demographics, the political system and political culture, values
and ideology. Also covers The Major Education Policy Actors, Setting the Stage
and Getting on It: Issue Definition and Agenda Setting, Getting the Words and
the Money: Policy Formulation and Policy Adoption, Looking at Policies: Policy
Instruments and Cost Effectiveness, Policy Implementation: Getting People to
Carry Out a Policy, Policy Evaluation: Determining If the Policy Works and
Education Policy in the United States Retrospective and Prospective.
ED 5124: Improving Schools
Through Action Research: prepares educators to conduct their own
action research projects. The third edition provides the information needed to
complete each step of the action research cycle. Chapter activities include a
research paper component that helps readers create a research paper as they
complete the activities. Additional activities have been added in this edition
to help educators navigate through each step of the action research
process—from choosing a topic and generating research questions through data
analysis and reporting results and conclusions. Other features of the book
include detailed strategies for (1) reviewing and synthesizing the literature
and writing a literature review, (2) collecting, triangulating, and analyzing
quantitative and qualitative data (including how to graphically display
results), (3) drawing conclusions from results, and (4) writing in APA (6th
edition) style. Numerous Internet resources—including links to action research
networks, professional organizations, and journals—are provided. Throughout the
text, the book incorporates numerous pedagogical devices such as Exercises and
Cases to help readers practically explore topics. Examples are provided
throughout the book to document the ways teachers, principals, counselors,
administrators, and support staff can improve their practice through action
research
ED 5130: School Leadership
and Administration: ISLLC Standard, Leadership, Decision Making, Authority, Power, and
Influence, Communication, Conflict Management, Organizational Culture, School
Improvement, Introduction to Clinical Materials and Learning Experiences,
Beginning Challenges, Student Problems, Administrator-Staff Relationships, School-Community
Relations, Role and Organizational Problems, Social Justice Issues and Problems
of Change
ED 5131: School Finance: This
course will provide students with an understanding of and practical experience
with the major concepts and tools in school finance. The course will cover the
three distinct components of education finance: 1) evaluating revenue sources,
including school aid; 2) developing and defending budgets; and 3) managing the
finances and business operations of a school district. The objective is to
provide students with an understanding of the general principles of education
finance that can be applied in any setting.
ED 5132: Leadership: Theory
and Practice: Being a Leader, Recognizing Your Traits, Recognizing Your
Philosophy and Style of Leadership, Attending to Tasks and Relationships,
Developing Leadership Skills, Creating a Vision, Setting the Tone, Listening to
Out-Group Members, Overcoming Obstacles and Addressing Ethics in Leadership.
ED 5133: Education and
Social Change: Focuses on the evolving relationship between education and social
change. This course considers the impact of social forces such as
industrialization, urbanization, immigration, and cultural conflict on the
development of schools and other educational institutions. It also examines the
various ways that schools have contributed to social change, particularly in
enhancing the status and accomplishments of certain social groups and not
others. Detailed accounts of the experiences of women and minority groups in American
history consider how their lives have been affected by education.
ED 5134: Policy Studies
for Educational Leaders: Focuses on the background of education
policy, what is policy and where it comes from, power and education policy, the
economy and demographics, the political system and political culture, values
and ideology. Also covers The Major Education Policy Actors, Setting the Stage
and Getting on It: Issue Definition and Agenda Setting, Getting the Words and
the Money: Policy Formulation and Policy Adoption, Looking at Policies: Policy
Instruments and Cost Effectiveness, Policy Implementation: Getting People to
Carry Out a Policy, Policy Evaluation: Determining If the Policy Works and
Education Policy in the United States Retrospective and Prospective.
ED 5140: Improving Schools
Through Action Research: prepares educators to conduct their own
action research projects. The third edition provides the information needed to
complete each step of the action research cycle. Chapter activities include a
research paper component that helps readers create a research paper as they
complete the activities. Additional activities have been added in this edition
to help educators navigate through each step of the action research
process—from choosing a topic and generating research questions through data
analysis and reporting results and conclusions. Other features of the book
include detailed strategies for (1) reviewing and synthesizing the literature
and writing a literature review, (2) collecting, triangulating, and analyzing
quantitative and qualitative data (including how to graphically display
results), (3) drawing conclusions from results, and (4) writing in APA (6th
edition) style. Numerous Internet resources—including links to action research
networks, professional organizations, and journals—are provided. Throughout the
text, the book incorporates numerous pedagogical devices such as Exercises and
Cases to help readers practically explore topics. Examples are provided
throughout the book to document the ways teachers, principals, counselors,
administrators, and support staff can improve their practice through action
research
ED 5141: School Safety: This
course is designed to provide learners with set of standards that educators can
use to evaluate their schools and then develop practical and systematic plans
for ensuring orderly and caring learning environments. The course also
addresses several theoretical perspectives through which learners can come to
understand school safety. Attention is given to the distinction between
preventing violence and promoting safety.
ED 5142: Instructional
Supervision and Leadership: The purpose of this course is to
examine the theoretical framework and practical applications of instructional
leadership within the economic, social, political, and educational context of
schooling. This course proposes a concept of supervision and leadership
designed to help educational leaders build a repertoire of approaches and
strategies that will enhance professional growth while showing the importance
of sensitivity to individual needs. Emphasis is placed upon the learner gaining
a clear understanding of the interrelatedness among supervision and leadership,
instruction, and assessment.
ED 5143: The School
Counseling and School Social Work Treatment: Covers disruptive
classroom behaviors, reinforcing student success, bullying, peer conflict, and
school violence. School and mental health professionals are provided with all
the elements necessary to quickly and easily develop formal treatment plans
that satisfy the demands of HMOs, managed care companies, third-party payers,
and state and federal review agencies.
ED 5144: Measurement and
Assessment in Teaching: The Measurement and Assessment Process,
Educational Testing and Assessment, Context, Issues, and Trends, The Role of
Measurement and Assessment in Teaching, Instructional Goals and Objectives: Foundation
for Assessment, Validity, Reliability and Other Desired Characteristics,
Classroom Tests and Assessments, Planning Classroom Tests and Assessments,
Constructing Objective Test Items: Simple Forms, Constructing Objective Test
Items: Multiple Choice Forms, Measuring Complex Achievement: The Interpretive
Exercise, Measuring Complex Achievement: Essay Questions, Measuring Complex
Achievement: Performance-Based Assessments, Portfolios, Assessment Procedures:
Observational Techniques, Peer Appraisal, and Self-Report, Assembling,
Administering, and Appraising Classroom Tests and Assessments, Grading and
Reporting, Selecting and Using Published Tests, Achievement Tests, Aptitude
Tests, Test Selection, Administration, and Use, Interpreting Test Scores and
Norms.
ED 5145: School Based
Leadership: Focuses on community participation (parents, etc.),
decentralization and teacher empowerment to improve school performance.
ED 5146: School and
Community Relations: Lends students a field-tested, step-by-step guide to establishing
strong community communication in a variety of school environments, and Focuses
on both the “haws” and the “whys” of each approach and stratagem.
ED 6011: Human Resource
Management And Development: Examines methods that
organizations use to meet organizational goals through influencing worker
attitudes, behaviors, and performance. Topics include recruitment, selection,
training, performance appraisal, and compensation.
ED 6020: Applied
Statistics: Provides instruction on the calculation, use, and interpretation
of descriptive and inferential statistics. Emphasis is placed on the
application and interpretation of statistical tests in conducting research at
the graduate level. This course introduces inferential statistics and its
application to research design. Current SPSS software will be utilized. Both
parametric and non-parametric approaches to the analysis of data will be
discussed.
ED 6026: Cognition,
Emotion and Motivation: A comprehensive overview of the theory of
human cognition and cognitive psychology. Issues to be presented and researched
will include, but are not limited to, attention, imagery and memory, consciousness,
schemata, cognitive maps, decision making and problem solving.
ED 6130: School Leadership
and Administration: ISLLC Standard, Leadership, Decision Making, Authority, Power, and
Influence, Communication, Conflict Management, Organizational Culture, School
Improvement, Introduction to Clinical Materials and Learning Experiences,
Beginning Challenges, Student Problems, Administrator-Staff Relationships,
School-Community Relations, Role and Organizational Problems, Social Justice
Issues and Problems of Change
ED 6131: School Finance: This
course will provide students with an understanding of and practical experience
with the major concepts and tools in school finance. The course will cover the
three distinct components of education finance: 1) evaluating revenue sources,
including school aid; 2) developing and defending budgets; and 3) managing the
finances and business operations of a school district. The objective is to
provide students with an understanding of the general principles of education
finance that can be applied in any setting.
ED 6132: School Safety: This
course is designed to provide learners with set of standards that educators can
use to evaluate their schools and then develop practical and systematic plans
for ensuring orderly and caring learning environments. The course also
addresses several theoretical perspectives through which learners can come to
understand school safety. Attention is given to the distinction between
preventing violence and promoting safety.
ED 6133: Leadership: Theory
and Practice: Being a Leader, Recognizing Your Traits, Recognizing Your
Philosophy and Style of Leadership, Attending to Tasks and Relationships,
Developing Leadership Skills, Creating a Vision, Setting the Tone, Listening to
Out-Group Members, Overcoming Obstacles and Addressing Ethics in Leadership.
ED 6134: Organizational
Development: Survey of methodological approaches to planned change, including
organizational diagnosis, data collection, interventions, feedback, and
evaluation. Specific types of interventions covered include strategic planning,
organizational design, culture change, team building, survey feedback, goal
setting, and career development.
ED 6140: Improving Schools
Through Action Research: prepares educators to conduct their own
action research projects. The third edition provides the information needed to
complete each step of the action research cycle. Chapter activities include a
research paper component that helps readers create a research paper as they
complete the activities. Additional activities have been added in this edition
to help educators navigate through each step of the action research
process—from choosing a topic and generating research questions through data
analysis and reporting results and conclusions. Other features of the book
include detailed strategies for (1) reviewing and synthesizing the literature
and writing a literature review, (2) collecting, triangulating, and analyzing
quantitative and qualitative data (including how to graphically display results),
(3) drawing conclusions from results, and (4) writing in APA (6th edition)
style. Numerous Internet resources—including links to action research networks,
professional organizations, and journals—are provided. Throughout the text, the
book incorporates numerous pedagogical devices such as Exercises and Cases to
help readers practically explore topics. Examples are provided throughout the
book to document the ways teachers, principals, counselors, administrators, and
support staff can improve their practice through action research
ED 6141: Instructional
Supervision and Leadership: The purpose of this course is to
examine the theoretical framework and practical applications of instructional
leadership within the economic, social, political, and educational context of
schooling. This course proposes a concept of supervision and leadership
designed to help educational leaders build a repertoire of approaches and
strategies that will enhance professional growth while showing the importance
of sensitivity to individual needs. Emphasis is placed upon the learner gaining
a clear understanding of the interrelatedness among supervision and leadership,
instruction, and assessment.
ED 6142: Education and
Social Change: Focuses on the evolving relationship between education and social
change. It considers the impact of social forces such as industrialization,
urbanization, immigration, and cultural conflict on the development of schools
and other educational institutions. It also examines the various ways that
schools have contributed to social change, particularly in enhancing the status
and accomplishments of certain social groups and not others. Detailed accounts
of the experiences of women and minority groups in American history consider
how their lives have been affected by education.
ED 6143: The School
Counseling and School Social Work Treatment: Covers disruptive
classroom behaviors, reinforcing student success, bullying, peer conflict, and
school violence. School and mental health professionals are provided with all
the elements necessary to quickly and easily develop formal treatment plans
that satisfy the demands of HMOs, managed care companies, third-party payers,
and state and federal review agencies.
ED 6144: Measurement and
Assessment in Teaching: The Measurement and Assessment Process,
Educational Testing and Assessment, Context, Issues, and Trends, The Role of
Measurement and Assessment in Teaching, Instructional Goals and Objectives: Foundation
for Assessment, Validity, Reliability and Other Desired Characteristics,
Classroom Tests and Assessments, Planning Classroom Tests and Assessments,
Constructing Objective Test Items: Simple Forms, Constructing Objective Test
Items: Multiple Choice Forms, Measuring Complex Achievement: The Interpretive
Exercise, Measuring Complex Achievement: Essay Questions, Measuring Complex
Achievement: Performance-Based Assessments, Portfolios, Assessment Procedures:
Observational Techniques, Peer Appraisal, and Self-Report, Assembling,
Administering, and Appraising Classroom Tests and Assessments, Grading and
Reporting, Selecting and Using Published Tests, Achievement Tests, Aptitude
Tests, Test Selection, Administration, and Use, Interpreting Test Scores and
Norms.
ED 6145: Policy Studies
for Educational Leaders: Focuses on the background of education
policy, what is policy and where it comes from, power and education policy, the
economy and demographics, the political system and political culture, values
and ideology. Also covers The Major Education Policy Actors, Setting the Stage
and Getting on It: Issue Definition and Agenda Setting, Getting the Words and
the Money: Policy Formulation and Policy Adoption, Looking at Policies: Policy
Instruments and Cost Effectiveness, Policy Implementation: Getting People to
Carry Out a Policy, Policy Evaluation: Determining If the Policy Works and
Education Policy in the United States Retrospective and Prospective.
ED 6146: School Based
Leadership: Focuses on community participation (parents, etc.),
decentralization and teacher empowerment to improve school performance.
ED 6147: School and
Community Relations: Lends students a field-tested, step-by-step guide to establishing
strong community communication in a variety of school environments, and Focuses
on both the “how” and the “whys” of each approach and stratagem.
ED 6148: Supervision of
Curriculum: This is a course in curriculum management. Learners will examine
the processes and procedures of supervising curriculum change, follow-through,
and evaluation with special attention given to curriculum review committees,
in-service training, articulation, and diversified programs for students.
ED 6149: Innovation and
Change: To be an effective leader demands an understanding of the basic
principles and practices underlying innovation and change processes in
organizations. Learners will explore various change theories, and best
practices for successful implementation in their workplace. Issues of
visioning, coalition building, creating and promoting change agenda, and the
Learners examine building capacity for change. Opportunity to investigate one’s
personal reaction and response to change is highlighted.
Return to Top
12.04.02
- Educational Leadership of Special Need Students:
ESE 5140: Introduction to
Special Education: Examines bureaucracy at the federal, state, and local levels with
particular focus on the government's working, public policies, and making
choices for the benefit of society.
ESE 5141: Characteristics
of Learning Disabled Students: This course is an introduction to
non-categorical and mainstream programming and to the advantages and
disadvantages of this approach. Emphasis is on legislation and litigation
related to mildly handicapped students, on assessment and placement of these
students, on the role of the special education teacher, and on meeting the
educational and socio-emotional needs of these students.
ESE 5142: Strategies for
Teaching Learners with Special Needs: offers the most comprehensive
look at how to teach students with mild/high incidence disabilities. Balancing
elementary and secondary teaching strategies, the text focuses on effective
instructional practices, devotes an entire part to general curriculum content
areas, and concludes with exceptional coverage of critical skills and
transitions.
ESE 5143: Learning
Disabilities and Related Mild Disabilities: Includes a
cross-categorical emphasis that makes it suitable for a broad number of
courses, including those aimed at teaching students with mild disabilities and
which are part of many states' certification requirements. The book describes
the characteristics of learning disabilities as well as various mild
disabilities, and offers teaching strategies for general education teachers,
special education teachers, school psychologists, and other related
professionals.
ESE 5144: Management of
Students with Behavioral Problems: Positive Applications for
Teachers outlines both school-wide and individual strategies for positive
behavior supports — while also focusing on how educators can develop unique
behavior management strategies for individual students. This comprehensive text
emphasizes functional techniques, real-world classrooms, and practical
information — all while covering the legal aspects of behavioral management,
assessment strategies, strategies for special populations and diverse
populations, age-related behavioral concerns, and the three-tier
response-to-intervention approach.
ESE 5145: Teaching
Students with Language Disabilities: Examines language development and
disorders in school-age children, analyzes language difficulties associated
with specific disabilities, and presents assessment techniques and
instructional strategies used in today's classrooms.
ESE 5146: Transition
Planning for Students with Disabilities: Understanding the varied
transition needs of students with disabilities—and the potential options and
career paths in transition education—pre- and in-service teachers and
professionals get the support they need to develop and implement transition
activities and programs. The course organizes transition topics around four
essential elements of transition and a backward planning process with a focus
and readability for the student new to transition.
ESE 6140: Introduction to
Special Education: Examines bureaucracy at the federal, state, and local levels with
particular focus on the government's working, public policies, and making
choices for the benefit of society.
ESE 6141: Assessment of
Student Achievement: develops high-quality assessments to use in classrooms and
presents a balanced, concise, and practical guide for testing and performance
assessment that is rooted in effective classroom instruction and learning
through an approach that gives equal emphasis to testing and performance
assessment—each used when it is most appropriate—as integral steps that improve
student learning and ultimately build student success.
ESE 6142: Characteristics
of Learning Disabled Students: This course is an introduction to
non-categorical and mainstream programming and to the advantages and
disadvantages of this approach. Emphasis is on legislation and litigation
related to mildly handicapped students, on assessment and placement of these
students, on the role of the special education teacher, and on meeting the
educational and socio-emotional needs of these students.
ESE 6143: Transition
Planning for Students with Disabilities: Understanding the varied
transition needs of students with disabilities—and the potential options and
career paths in transition education—pre- and in-service teachers and
professionals get the support they need to develop and implement transition
activities and programs. The course organizes transition topics around four
essential elements of transition and a backward planning process with a focus
and readability for the student new to transition.
ESE 6144: Strategies for
Teaching Learners with Special Needs: offers the most comprehensive
look at how to teach students with mild/high incidence disabilities. Balancing
elementary and secondary teaching strategies, the text focuses on effective
instructional practices, devotes an entire part to general curriculum content
areas, and concludes with exceptional coverage of critical skills and
transitions.
ESE 6145: Learning
Disabilities and Related Mild Disabilities: Includes a
cross-categorical emphasis that makes it suitable for a broad number of
courses, including those aimed at teaching students with mild disabilities and
which are part of many states' certification requirements. The book describes
the characteristics of learning disabilities as well as various mild
disabilities, and offers teaching strategies for general education teachers,
special education teachers, school psychologists, and other related
professionals.
ESE 6146: Management of
Students with Behavioral Problems: Positive Applications for
Teachers outlines both school-wide and individual strategies for positive
behavior supports — while also focusing on how educators can develop unique
behavior management strategies for individual students. This comprehensive text
emphasizes functional techniques, real-world classrooms, and practical
information — all while covering the legal aspects of behavioral management,
assessment strategies, strategies for special populations and diverse
populations, age-related behavioral concerns, and the three-tier
response-to-intervention approach.
ESE 6147: Teaching
Students with Language Disabilities: Examines language development and
disorders in school-age children, analyzes language difficulties associated
with specific disabilities, and presents assessment techniques and
instructional strategies used in today's classrooms.
ESE 6148: Innovation and
Change: To be an effective leader demands an understanding of the basic
principles and practices underlying innovation and change processes in
organizations. Learners will explore various change theories, and best
practices for successful implementation in the their workplace. Issues of
visioning, coalition building, creating and promoting change agenda, and the
Learners examine building capacity for change. Opportunity to investigate one’s
personal reaction and response to change is highlighted.
ESE 6149: Conflict
Resolution and Mediation: Dealing with conflict is an inevitable part
of any leader's role. Timely and relevant, this course examines conflict
management processes and skills with emphasis on interaction patterns,
interpersonal relationships, and communication skills. Learners will examine
the nature of conflict - its origins, sources, and types - as well as the
concepts and skills of proactive intervention, conflict resolution and
utilizing various conflict resolution strategies in organizational settings, it
also issues such as dealing with diversity and ethical issues in multiple
contexts, fostering creativity in problem solving and process design, and strategy
and skills for successful mediation will be examined. Theory, structure, and
practice of collaborative negotiation and mediated negotiations and application
of the skills used to prevent and resolve conflict are emphasized.
Return to Top
12.04.03
- Educational Technology Management:
ETM 5140: Educational
Application of Internet: provides K–12 examples of how Web tools such
as blogs, wikis, Face book, and Twitter allow students to learn more, create
more, and communicate better.
ETM 5141: Instructional
Design: This course explores the foundations of instructional design and
the design process as it applies in the development of educational media and
software. Research, goal analysis, objectives, instructional strategy
development, and evaluation in the design process are utilized in the planning
and development of an educational product.
ETM 5142: Educational
Technology Planning and Management: Covers Introduction to technology
and planning, Basic concepts of planning, Technology, learning, and equity
issues, Technology in educational administration, Technology in instruction,
Multimedia in education, Data communications, the Internet, and educational
applications, Distance learning, Hardware planning and evaluation, Software
selection and evaluation, Staff development, Managing facilities and Financial
planning
ETM 5143: Educational
Application of Media and Technology: Offers a clear and current look
at the range of educational technologies and how teachers can effectively use
technology to enhance learning and provides a foundation in learning theory and
instructional design that helps position educational technology within the
framework of teaching and learning. Using practical applications, examples from
the classroom, and an array of reflection activities, the course offers
students the opportunity to fully explore and apply technologies as tools to
enhance teaching and learning.
ETM 5144: Information
Technology Project Management: The Nature Of Information
Technology Projects, Conceptualizing And Initializing The IT Project, The
Project Infrastructure, The Human Side Of Project Management, Defining And
Managing Project And Product Scope, The Work Breakdown Structure And Project
Estimation, The Project Schedule And Budget, Managing Project Risk, Project
Communication, Tracking, And Reporting, IT Project Quality Management, Managing
Organizational Change, Resistance And Conflict, Project Procurement Management
And Outsourcing, Leadership And Ethics, and Project Implementation, Closure,
And Evaluation.
ETM 5145: Teaching and
Learning with Technology: Offers a clear and current look at the range
of educational technologies and how teachers can effectively use technology to
enhance learning. Provide a foundation in learning theory and instructional
design that helps position educational technology within the framework of
teaching and learning. Using practical applications, examples from the
classroom, and an array of reflection activities, the course offers students
the opportunity to fully explore and apply technologies as tools to enhance
teaching and learning.
ETM 5146: Administering
the School Library Media Center: Provides a complete instructional
overview of the workings of the library media center-from the basics of
administration, budgeting, facilities management, organization, selection of
materials, and staffing to explanations on how to promote information literacy
and the value of digital tools like blogs, wikis, and podcasting.
ETM 6140: Educational
Application of Internet: provides K–12 examples of how Web tools such
as blogs, wikis, Face book, and Twitter allow students to learn more, create
more, and communicate better.
ETM 6141: Instructional
Design: This course explores the foundations of instructional design and
the design process as it applies in the development of educational media and
software. Research, goal analysis, objectives, instructional strategy
development, and evaluation in the design process are utilized in the planning
and development of an educational product.
ETM 6142: Educational
Technology Planning and Management: Covers Introduction to technology
and planning, Basic concepts of planning, Technology, learning, and equity
issues, Technology in educational administration, Technology in instruction,
Multimedia in education, Data communications, the Internet, and educational
applications, Distance learning, Hardware planning and evaluation, Software
selection and evaluation, Staff development, Managing facilities and Financial
planning
ETM 6143: Educational
Application of Media and Technology: Offers a clear and current look
at the range of educational technologies and how teachers can effectively use
technology to enhance learning and provides a foundation in learning theory and
instructional design that helps position educational technology within the
framework of teaching and learning. Using practical applications, examples from
the classroom, and an array of reflection activities, the course offers
students the opportunity to fully explore and apply technologies as tools to
enhance teaching and learning.
ETM 6144: Information
Technology Project Management: The Nature Of Information
Technology Projects, Conceptualizing And Initializing The IT Project, The
Project Infrastructure, The Human Side Of Project Management, Defining And
Managing Project And Product Scope, The Work Breakdown Structure And Project
Estimation, The Project Schedule And Budget, Managing Project Risk, Project
Communication, Tracking, And Reporting, IT Project Quality Management, Managing
Organizational Change, Resistance And Conflict, Project Procurement Management
And Outsourcing, Leadership And Ethics, and Project Implementation, Closure,
And Evaluation.
ETM 6145: Teaching and
Learning with Technology: Offers a clear and current look at the range
of educational technologies and how teachers can effectively use technology to
enhance learning. Provide a foundation in learning theory and instructional
design that helps position educational technology within the framework of
teaching and learning. Using practical applications, examples from the
classroom, and an array of reflection activities, the course offers students
the opportunity to fully explore and apply technologies as tools to enhance
teaching and learning.
ETM 6146: Administering
the School Library Media Center: Provides a complete instructional
overview of the workings of the library media center-from the basics of
administration, budgeting, facilities management, organization, selection of
materials, and staffing to explanations on how to promote information literacy
and the value of digital tools like blogs, wikis, and podcasting.
ETM 6147: Educational
Leadership and Planning for Technology: provides educators with both the
theoretical and the practical considerations for planning and implementing
technology in today’s schools, with an emphasis on the total application of
technology including both administrative and instructional uses. Designed for
pre-service and in-service educators such as administrators, teachers,
technology coordinators, and media specialists, this fifth edition text builds
a strong foundation from which educators may provide informed leadership and
become agents for realizing the powerful potential of technology in their
schools.
ETM 6148: Multimedia
Communications and Networking: Starts with a review of the
fundamental concepts, requirements, and constraints in networks and
telecommunications, and describes channel disturbances that can hinder system
performance—including noise, attenuation, distortion, and interferences—and
provides transmission techniques for mitigating these limitations. Analyzing
both cable and wireless transmission mediums with description of the network
protocol architecture concept and includes coverage of twisted pairs, coaxial
and optical fiber cables, wireless propagation, satellite communications, and
terrestrial microwave systems.
ETM 6149: Distance
Education: Theory and Process: Explores current distance
learning practices and applications utilized in education and corporate
training. Participants will research, evaluate and apply methods and techniques
in developing a program of study designed for distance delivery. Students will
consider the impact and relevance of distance education and its current and
future role in meeting the needs of a learning society.
Return to Top
12.04.04
- Instructional Leadership:
IL 5140: Creation and
Transfer of Knowledge: Covers the characteristics of the
institutions regulating the production and diffusion of knowledge, Commutation
of knowledge is a key determinant of economic growth, but only recently
knowledge has moved to the core of economic analysis. Recent literature also
gives profound insights into events like scientific progress, artistic and
craft development which have been rarely addressed as socio-economic
institutions, being the domain of sociologists and historians rather than
economists.
IL 5141: Instructional
Leader as Advocate and Decision Maker: In this course, Learners examine
the role of instructional leader as that of advocate and decision maker. The
importance of this particular role is grounded in the realization that the
instructional leader articulates the vision that reflects the mission, core
values, beliefs, and purpose of the educational enterprise. Additionally, the
instructional leader’s role as advocate is to support the development and
maintenance of high standards of performance and achievement. As decision maker
and standard-bearer for the enterprise, the instructional leader models the way
and leads by example.
IL 5142: School and
Community Relations: Lends students a field-tested, step-by-step guide to establishing
strong community communication in a variety of school environments, and Focuses
on both the “how” and the “whys” of each approach and stratagem.
IL 5143: Instructional
Supervision and Leadership: The purpose of this course is to
examine the theoretical framework and practical applications of instructional
leadership within the economic, social, political, and educational context of
schooling. This course proposes a concept of supervision and leadership
designed to help educational leaders build a repertoire of approaches and
strategies that will enhance professional growth while showing the importance
of sensitivity to individual needs. Emphasis is placed upon the learner gaining
a clear understanding of the interrelatedness among supervision and leadership,
instruction, and assessment.
IL 5144: Measurement and
Assessment in Teaching: The Measurement and Assessment Process,
Educational Testing and Assessment, Context, Issues, and Trends, The Role of
Measurement and Assessment in Teaching, Instructional Goals and Objectives: Foundation
for Assessment, Validity, Reliability and Other Desired Characteristics,
Classroom Tests and Assessments, Planning Classroom Tests and Assessments,
Constructing Objective Test Items: Simple Forms, Constructing Objective Test
Items: Multiple Choice Forms, Measuring Complex Achievement: The Interpretive
Exercise, Measuring Complex Achievement: Essay Questions, Measuring Complex
Achievement: Performance-Based Assessments, Portfolios, Assessment Procedures:
Observational Techniques, Peer Appraisal, and Self-Report, Assembling,
Administering, and Appraising Classroom Tests and Assessments, Grading and
Reporting, Selecting and Using Published Tests, Achievement Tests, Aptitude
Tests, Test Selection, Administration, and Use, Interpreting Test Scores and
Norms.
IL 5145: Supervision of
Curriculum: This is a course in curriculum management. Learners will examine
the processes and procedures of supervising curriculum change, follow-through,
and evaluation with special attention given to curriculum review committees,
in-service training, articulation, and diversified programs for students.
IL 5146: Instructional
Design: This course explores the foundations of instructional design and
the design process as it applies in the development of educational media and
software. Research, goal analysis, objectives, instructional strategy
development, and evaluation in the design process are utilized in the planning
and development of an educational product.
IL 6140: Developing
Instructional Strategies and Curriculum: Focuses on Strategic
planning and academic prioritizing, Institutional and program improvement,
Institutional and program accreditation, Institutional and program assessments
and Academic resource effectiveness.
IL 6141: Teaching and
Learning Foundations: Provide a clear, concise introduction to the
major pedagogical and psychological theories and their implications for the
design of new learning environments for schools, universities, or corporations.
Describe the most important contemporary theories that form the foundation of
the conception and design of student-centered learning environments and new
applications of educational technologies.
IL 6142: Multiple
Intelligences: Brilliant conception of individual competence has changed the face
of education in the twenty-three years since the publication of the classic
reference Frames of Mind. Since then thousands of educators, parents, and
researchers have explored the practical implications and applications of
Multiple Intelligences theory--the powerful-notion that there are separate
human capacities, ranging from musical intelligence to the intelligence
involved in self-understanding.
IL 6143: Educational
Leadership And Student Achievement: Examines theoretical models of
the possible effects of principal leadership and peer teacher influence on
teachers' instructional practice and student learning. Data collected for this
study come from a randomized delayed-treatment evaluation of school principal
professional development in a mid-sized urban U.S. school district. Beyond
investigation of the effectiveness of the professional development program, the
teacher survey data and data on student ELA and mathematics achievement from
this study provide a rich opportunity to examine of the plausible and possible
influence of principals and teachers on teacher instruction and student learning.
For this study, one year of teacher survey and two years of student achievement
data were collected and linked. Scale development of the survey data was
performed with special attention to the reliability and validity of measures.
IL 6144: Foundations of
Distance Education: Covers the various technologies that can be used for the delivery
of distance education and provides the basics needed to become a knowledgeable
distance educator or manager of distance education systems including the theory
and research that inform distance learning, practical skills and knowledge
needed to function immediately in a distance learning environment, and
managerial and administrative issues that arise in distance learning
environments.
IL 6145: Introduction to
Special Education: Examines bureaucracy at the federal, state, and local levels with
particular focus on the government's working, public policies, and making
choices for the benefit of society.
IL 6146: Creation and
Transfer of Knowledge: Covers the characteristics of the
institutions regulating the production and diffusion of knowledge, Cumulating
of knowledge is a key determinant of economic growth, but only recently
knowledge has moved to the core of economic analysis. Recent literature also
gives profound insights into events like scientific progress, artistic and
craft development which have been rarely addressed as socio-economic
institutions, being the domain of sociologists and historians rather than
economists.
IL 6147: Instructional
Leader as Advocate and Decision Maker: In this course, Learners examine
the role of instructional leader as that of advocate and decision maker. The
importance of this particular role is grounded in the realization that the
instructional leader articulates the vision that reflects the mission, core
values, beliefs, and purpose of the educational enterprise. Additionally, the
instructional leader’s role as advocate is to support the development and
maintenance of high standards of performance and achievement. As decision maker
and standard-bearer for the enterprise, the instructional leader models the way
and leads by example.
IL 6148: School and
Community Relations: Lends students a field-tested, step-by-step guide to establishing
strong community communication in a variety of school environments, and Focuses
on both the “how” and the “whys” of each approach and stratagem.
IL 6149: Instructional
Design: This course explores the foundations of instructional design and
the design process as it applies in the development of educational media and
software. Research, goal analysis, objectives, instructional strategy
development, and evaluation in the design process are utilized in the planning
and development of an educational product.
Return to Top
12.04.05
- Higher Education Leadership:
LHE 5140: Higher Education
Policy: Analyzes how issues of affordability, access, and accountability
influence the way in which state governments approach, monitor, and set public
higher education policy. The contributors examine the latest research on
pressing challenges, explore how states are coping with these challenges, and
consider what the future holds for public postsecondary education in the United
States.
LHE 5141: For Profit
Colleges and Universities: Analysis of for-profit colleges and
universities, reviewing their history, business strategies, and management
practices; setting them in the context of marketplace conditions, the framework
of public policy and government regulations; and viewing them in the light of
the public good. Variously explore FPCU’s governance, how they develop courses
and programs, and the way they define faculty work; present findings from
in-depth interviews with part-time and full-time faculty to understand how
external forces and the imperative of profit generation affect faculty roles
and responsibilities of faculty; analyze policy considerations that affect
FPCUs, including federal regulation and oversight, accountability and
assessment, and the legal and regulatory issues FPCUs face internationally; and
finally address the notion of academic freedom and the distribution of public
monies to FPCUs.
LHE 5142: Budget and
Financial Management in Higher Education: This course examines
financial management and budgeting practices internal to institutions of higher
education. The course provides Learners with a working knowledge of budget
development, financial management, and fiduciary control in colleges and
universities
LHE 5143: Organization and
Governance in Higher Education: Because of the complex nature of
the postsecondary institution, this course creates eight subject area lenses.
Each lens allows the reader to engage the specific paradigms and phenomena
related to that aspect of higher education. The areas are arranged in the
following order: classic organization theory, traditional administrative and
governance models, campus climate and culture, leadership analysis, management
principles, institutional change and assessment, perspectives on race and
gender, and critical approaches to organizational governance.
LHE 5144: Academic
Leadership for Higher Education: Provides a compassionate
understanding of the stresses of leadership in higher education and offers
insights to those who do not fully appreciate why higher education is so hard
to 'manage' and validation for those entirely familiar with this world.
LHE 5145: Foundations of
Distance Education: Covers the various technologies that can be used for the delivery
of distance education and provides the basics needed to become a knowledgeable
distance educator or manager of distance education systems including the theory
and research that inform distance learning, practical skills and knowledge
needed to function immediately in a distance learning environment, and
managerial and administrative issues that arise in distance learning
environments.
LHE 5146: Community
College Leadership and Administration: Emphasis is placed on
deconstructing outdated practices and constructing new approaches to how
contemporary community college leadership is viewed, practiced, and envisioned
to develop new models focused on facilitating leadership innovativeness.
LHE 6140: Adult Education:
Covers Exploring the world of learning theory; Theories of
learning; A theory of adult learning, Theories of teaching, process model for
learning; Advancements in Adult Learning; Adult learning within human resource
development; New perspectives on The future and Practice in Adult Learning;
LHE 6141: Higher Education
Policy: Analyzes how issues of affordability, access, and accountability
influence the way in which state governments approach, monitor, and set public
higher education policy. The contributors examine the latest research on
pressing challenges, explore how states are coping with these challenges, and
consider what the future holds for public postsecondary education in the United
States.
LHE 6142: Academic
Transformation: Balances cognitive theory and research with realistic and proven
skills that students can deftly apply, utilizing a narrative tone, eye-catching
design, and plentiful real-life examples, this course bestows students with
life lessons covering the subjects of motivation, procrastination, time
management, stress management, and behavior redirection — all while giving a
solid understanding of why certain strategies lead to goal achievement.
LHE 6143: For Profit
Colleges and Universities: Analysis of for-profit colleges and
universities, reviewing their history, business strategies, and management
practices; setting them in the context of marketplace conditions, the framework
of public policy and government regulations; and viewing them in the light of
the public good. Variously explore FPCU’s governance, how they develop courses
and programs, and the way they define faculty work; present findings from
in-depth interviews with part-time and full-time faculty to understand how
external forces and the imperative of profit generation affect faculty roles
and responsibilities of faculty; analyze policy considerations that affect
FPCUs, including federal regulation and oversight, accountability and assessment,
and the legal and regulatory issues FPCUs face internationally; and finally
address the notion of academic freedom and the distribution of public monies to
FPCUs.
LHE 6144: Budget and
Financial Management in Higher Education: This course examines
financial management and budgeting practices internal to institutions of higher
education. The course provides Learners with a working knowledge of budget
development, financial management, and fiduciary control in colleges and
universities
LHE 6145: Organization and
Governance in Higher Education: Because of the complex nature of
the postsecondary institution, this course creates eight subject area lenses.
Each lens allows the reader to engage the specific paradigms and phenomena
related to that aspect of higher education. The areas are arranged in the
following order: classic organization theory, traditional administrative and
governance models, campus climate and culture, leadership analysis, management
principles, institutional change and assessment, perspectives on race and
gender, and critical approaches to organizational governance.
LHE 6146: Transnational
Higher Education: Coves the extent and form of offshore activity, the pedagogical
and cultural controversies that have plagued transnational education, the
challenges it presents to governments, educators and HE managers, how
governments are developing forms of regulation to integrate cross-border
programs and branch-campuses into their strategic planning for the sector, the
new opportunities for students and institutions.
LHE 6147: Academic
Leadership for Higher Education: Provides a compassionate
understanding of the stresses of leadership in higher education and offers
insights to those who do not fully appreciate why higher education is so hard to
'manage' and validation for those entirely familiar with this world.
LHE 6148: Foundations of
Distance Education: Covers the various technologies that can be used for the delivery
of distance education and provides the basics needed to become a knowledgeable
distance educator or manager of distance education systems including the theory
and research that inform distance learning, practical skills and knowledge
needed to function immediately in a distance learning environment, and
managerial and administrative issues that arise in distance learning
environments.
LHE 6149: Community
College Leadership and Administration: Emphasis is placed on
deconstructing outdated practices and constructing new approaches to how
contemporary community college leadership is viewed, practiced, and envisioned
to develop new models focused on facilitating leadership innovativeness.
Return to Top
12.04.06
- Organizational Leadership
OL 5140: Building
Organizational Capacity: There are numerous definitions and usages for
the phrase, "capacity building" in the education and leadership
literature. For the purpose of this course, the term, "building
organizational capacity," will be used to describe a parallel
"universe," where both the Learner's capacity AND the organization's
capacity must be developed to achieve the organization's mission and goals.
When demand exceeds personal capacity, it is impossible to tap into personal
talents and skills to help the organization. Personal and professional
performance, health, and potential success are all compromised. The critical
element for high performance at work and effectiveness in life requires
sufficient capacity. A Learner interested in building organizational capacity
must also understand how to build their own capacity for achieving these
organizational goals. Learners will analyze (audit) their own organization to
assess internal and external capacity - looking at all the individual parts of
the organization (tangible and intangible) to understand their individual and
collective impact on achieving maximum effectiveness and productivity.
Simultaneously, Learners will also critically evaluate their own role in their
organization as it relates to building capacity.
OL 5141: Quality
Management for Organizational Excellence: Covers the theories and
principles of total quality in the real world, current and comprehensive, it
covers every aspect of total quality -- including several that receive little
or no attention in other total quality books, and makes an understanding in
order to compete in the global arena, businesses must achieve consistent peak
performance, continual improvement, and maximum competitiveness with coverage
of Lean and Lean Six Sigma. Key topics covered include global competitiveness;
strategic management; ethics and corporate social responsibility; partnering
and strategic alliances; quality culture; customer satisfaction and retention;
employee empowerment; leadership; teamwork; communication; education and
training; overcoming negativity; the ISO 9000 quality management system; tools
and techniques; and implementing total quality management.
OL 5142: Organizational
Culture and Leadership: Transforms the abstract concept of culture
into a tool that can be used to better shape the dynamics of organization and
change. This updated edition focuses on today's business realities. Edgar
Schein draws on a wide range of contemporary research to redefine culture and
demonstrate the crucial role leaders play in successfully applying the
principles of culture to achieve their organizational goals.
OL 5143: Law and Ethics in
Educational Leadership: Detailed study of The Importance of Ethical
and Legal Decision Making, Legal Bodies Governing Education, Education,
Religion, and Community Values, Student Privacy and First Amendment Rights, Due
Process and Safe Schools, Student Search, Equal Protection, Children with
Disabilities, Tort Liability, Teacher Employment, Supervision, and Collective
Bargaining, Teacher Constitutional Law, Computers and the Internet Law, Ethics,
and Educational Leadership: Making the Connection
OL 5144: Theory and
Practice of Organizational Leadership: Leadership theory spans academic
disciplines and draws as much from artistry of relationships as it does from
writings and reflections of leadership as an applied science. Students of
leadership gain as much from the experiences of others, as they do from studies
of attributes of successful leaders and organizations. This course will examine
contemporary leadership theory and its applications in current organizational
settings. This course is designed to incorporate the Learner's experiences and
observations regarding leadership from their personal and professional
experiences and current work setting.
OL 5145: Executive
Coaching: Executive coaching is vital for developing talent in organizations
today. Despite the recognized promise that executive coaching holds as a
powerful means for leadership development, gaps remain in what we know about
the science and practice of coaching. This volume provides a comprehensive resource
for those addressing the most critical issues impacting the future of
leadership coaching as an organizational development initiative.
OL 5146: Organizational
Development: Survey of methodological approaches to planned change, including
organizational diagnosis, data collection, interventions, feedback, and
evaluation. Specific types of interventions covered include strategic planning,
organizational design, culture change, team building, survey feedback, goal
setting, and career development.
OL 6140: Human Resource
Management And Development: Examines methods that
organizations use to meet organizational goals through influencing worker
attitudes, behaviors, and performance. Topics include recruitment, selection,
training, performance appraisal, and compensation.
OL 6141: Organizational
Development: Survey of methodological approaches to planned change, including
organizational diagnosis, data collection, interventions, feedback, and
evaluation. Specific types of interventions covered include strategic planning,
organizational design, culture change, team building, survey feedback, goal
setting, and career development.
OL 6142: Innovation and
Change: To be an effective leader demands an understanding of the basic
principles and practices underlying innovation and change processes in
organizations. Learners will explore various change theories, and best
practices for successful implementation in their workplace. Issues of
visioning, coalition building, creating and promoting change agenda, and the
Learners examine building capacity for change. Opportunity to investigate one’s
personal reaction and response to change is highlighted.
OL 6143: Conflict
Resolution and Mediation: Dealing with conflict is an inevitable part
of any leader's role. Timely and relevant, this course examines conflict
management processes and skills with emphasis on interaction patterns,
interpersonal relationships, and communication skills. Learners will examine
the nature of conflict - its origins, sources, and types - as well as the
concepts and skills of proactive intervention, conflict resolution and
utilizing various conflict resolution strategies in organizational settings, it
also issues such as dealing with diversity and ethical issues in multiple
contexts, fostering creativity in problem solving and process design, and
strategy and skills for successful mediation will be examined. Theory,
structure, and practice of collaborative negotiation and mediated negotiations
and application of the skills used to prevent and resolve conflict are
emphasized.
OL 6144: Building
Organizational Capacity: There are numerous definitions and usages for
the phrase, "capacity building" in the education and leadership
literature. For the purpose of this course, the term, "building
organizational capacity," will be used to describe a parallel
"universe," where both the Learner's capacity AND the organization's
capacity must be developed to achieve the organization's mission and goals.
When demand exceeds personal capacity, it is impossible to tap into personal
talents and skills to help the organization. Personal and professional
performance, health, and potential success are all compromised. The critical
element for high performance at work and effectiveness in life requires
sufficient capacity. A Learner interested in building organizational capacity
must also understand how to build their own capacity for achieving these
organizational goals. Learners will analyze (audit) their own organization to
assess internal and external capacity - looking at all the individual parts of
the organization (tangible and intangible) to understand their individual and
collective impact on achieving maximum effectiveness and productivity.
Simultaneously, Learners will also critically evaluate their own role in their
organization as it relates to building capacity.
OL 6145: Quality Management
for Organizational Excellence: Covers the theories and
principles of total quality in the real world, current and comprehensive, it
covers every aspect of total quality -- including several that receive little
or no attention in other total quality books, and makes an understanding in
order to compete in the global arena, businesses must achieve consistent peak
performance, continual improvement, and maximum competitiveness with coverage
of Lean and Lean Six Sigma. Key topics covered include global competitiveness;
strategic management; ethics and corporate social responsibility; partnering
and strategic alliances; quality culture; customer satisfaction and retention;
employee empowerment; leadership; teamwork; communication; education and training;
overcoming negativity; the ISO 9000 quality management system; tools and
techniques; and implementing total quality management.
OL 6146: Organizational
Culture and Leadership: Transforms the abstract concept of culture
into a tool that can be used to better shape the dynamics of organization and
change. This updated edition focuses on today's business realities. Edgar
Schein draws on a wide range of contemporary research to redefine culture and
demonstrate the crucial role leaders play in successfully applying the
principles of culture to achieve their organizational goals.
OL 6147: Law and Ethics in
Educational Leadership: Detailed study of The Importance of Ethical
and Legal Decision Making, Legal Bodies Governing Education, Education,
Religion, and Community Values, Student Privacy and First Amendment Rights, Due
Process and Safe Schools, Student Search, Equal Protection, Children with
Disabilities, Tort Liability, Teacher Employment, Supervision, and Collective
Bargaining, Teacher Constitutional Law, Computers and the Internet Law, Ethics,
and Educational Leadership: Making the Connection
OL 6148: Theory and
Practice of Organizational Leadership: Leadership theory spans academic
disciplines and draws as much from artistry of relationships as it does from
writings and reflections of leadership as an applied science. Students of
leadership gain as much from the experiences of others, as they do from studies
of attributes of successful leaders and organizations. This course will examine
contemporary leadership theory and its applications in current organizational
settings. This course is designed to incorporate the Learner's experiences and
observations regarding leadership from their personal and professional
experiences and current work setting.
OL 6149: Executive
Leadership in Nonprofit Organizations: Covers Understanding This Big
Job, Developing as an Executive Director, Finding Balance in the Role of
Executive Director, Understanding Nonprofit Organizational Culture, Embracing
Your Organization's Values, Creating a Vision and Plan, Determining
Organizational Effectiveness, Embracing a Changing Nonprofit Environment,
Understanding Changing Life Cycle Stages in Nonprofits, Leading Organizational
Change, Nurturing a Relationship with the Board, Developing Relationships with
Individual Board Members, Establishing Productive Staff Relationships,
Following the Founder, Engaging External Stakeholders, Embracing Partnerships
and Collaboration, Ensuring Sound Financial Management, Sustaining the
Organization with Team-Based Fundraising, Planning for Healthy Transitions of
Leadership and Moving On: Making Your Own Career Transition.
Return to Top
12.04.07
- Teacher Leadership:
TL 5140: Teachers as
Servant Leaders: Provide pre-service teachers and those currently in the profession
with a renewed perspective of being not just content experts or
classroom/behavioral managers, but leaders within their own classrooms, school
buildings, and local communities. Building on servant leadership: A journey
into the nature of legitimate power and greatness by Robert Greenleaf, this
course applies the concept of servant leadership to the classroom teacher where
the focus is on services to students, parents, colleagues, the school, and
Community.
TL 5141: Teacher as a
Change Agent: Explores what parents, teachers, and employers must do to develop
the capacities of young people to become innovators in their lives nurtured
their creativity and sparked their imaginations, while teaching them to learn
from failures and persevere; Identifies a pattern-a childhood of creative play
leads to deep-seated interests, which in adolescence and adulthood blossom into
a deeper purpose for career and life goals. Play, passion, and purpose: These
are the forces that drive young innovators.
TL 5142: Teaching
Management: Describe the fundamental elements in every learning situation,
allowing students to adapt the suggestions to their particular teaching
context. It sparks reflection on what we do in the classroom, why we do it, and
how it might be done more effectively.
TL 5143: Standards and
Practice of Teacher Leadership: Plans and strategies for
exceeding state and Common Core Standards, cohesive principles and common
language that strengthen professional collaboration, classroom vignettes that
show teachers and kids at work, reading, writing, math, science, and social
studies that support unified instructional goals, special attention to
technology in the classroom, special education, ELLs, struggling readers, and
the arts.
TL 5144: Teacher
Leadership Technology: Presents research on the practical
applications of technology in learning environments, assisting both educators
and researchers in the quest to optimize and revolutionize educational
practices. Experience-based scenarios and solutions allow readers to
investigate and benefit from best practices in the design and development of
online environments for both students and professionals.
TL 5145: Teacher as a
Mentor: Demonstrate how to build effective, active teacher mentoring
programs from helping new teachers implement active classroom principles to
creating a school-wide climate for mentoring.
TL 5146: Innovation and
Change: To be an effective leader demands an understanding of the basic
principles and practices underlying innovation and change processes in
organizations. Learners will explore various change theories, and best
practices for successful implementation in their workplace. Issues of
visioning, coalition building, creating and promoting change agenda, and the
Learners examine building capacity for change. Opportunity to investigate one’s
personal reaction and response to change is highlighted.
TL 6140: Executive
Coaching: Executive coaching is vital for developing talent in organizations
today. Despite the recognized promise that executive coaching holds as a
powerful means for leadership development, gaps remain in what we know about
the science and practice of coaching. This volume provides a comprehensive
resource for those addressing the most critical issues impacting the future of
leadership coaching as an organizational development initiative.
TL 6141: Innovation and
Change: To be an effective leader demands an understanding of the basic
principles and practices underlying innovation and change processes in
organizations. Learners will explore various change theories, and best
practices for successful implementation in the workplace. Issues of visioning,
coalition building, creating and promoting change agenda, and the Learners
examine building capacity for change. Opportunity to investigate one’s personal
reaction and response to change is highlighted.
TL 6142: Teachers as
Servant Leaders: Provide pre-service teachers and those currently in the profession
with a renewed perspective of being not just content experts or
classroom/behavioral managers, but leaders within their own classrooms, school
buildings, and local communities. Building on servant leadership: A journey
into the nature of legitimate power and greatness by Robert Greenleaf, this
course applies the concept of servant leadership to the classroom teacher where
the focus is on services to students, parents, colleagues, the school, and
Community.
TL 6143: Teacher as a
Mentor: Demonstrate how to build effective, active teacher mentoring
programs from helping new teachers implement active classroom principles to
creating a school-wide climate for mentoring.
TL 6144: Teacher as a
Change Agent: Explores what parents, teachers, and employers must do to develop
the capacities of young people to become innovators in their lives nurtured
their creativity and sparked their imaginations, while teaching them to learn
from failures and persevere. Identifies a pattern—a childhood of creative play
leads to deep-seated interests, which in adolescence and adulthood blossom into
a deeper purpose for career and life goals. Play, passion, and purpose: These
are the forces that drive young innovators.
TL 6145: Teaching
Management: Describe the fundamental elements in every learning situation,
allowing students to adapt the suggestions to their particular teaching
context. It sparks reflection on what we do in the classroom, why we do it, and
how it might be done more effectively.
TL 6146: Standards and
Practice of Teacher Leadership: Plans and strategies for
exceeding state and Common Core Standards, cohesive principles and common
language that strengthen professional collaboration, classroom vignettes that
show teachers and kids at work, reading, writing, math, science, and social
studies that support unified instructional goals, special attention to
technology in the classroom, special education, ELLs, struggling readers, and
the arts.
TL 6147: Teacher
Leadership Technology: Presents research on the practical
applications of technology in learning environments, assisting both educators
and researchers in the quest to optimize and revolutionize educational
practices. Experience-based scenarios and solutions allow readers to
investigate and benefit from best practices in the design and development of
online environments for both students and professionals.
TL 6148: Teacher's Role in
Implementing Cooperative Learning: Provides a comprehensive overview
of the challenges and issues with clear guidelines on how teachers can embed
cooperative learning into their classroom curricula to obtain the benefits
widely attributed to this pedagogical practice with an overview of the major
research and theoretical perspectives that underpin the development of
cooperative learning pedagogy and outlines how specific small group experiences
can promote thinking and learning; discusses the key role teachers play in
promoting student discourse; and, demonstrates how interaction style among
students and teachers is crucial in facilitating discussion and learning.
TL 6149: Educational
Leadership and Planning for Technology: provides educators with both the
theoretical and the practical considerations for planning and implementing
technology in today’s schools, with an emphasis on the total application of
technology including both administrative and instructional uses. Designed for
pre-service and in-service educators such as administrators, teachers,
technology coordinators, and media specialists, this fifth edition text builds
a strong foundation from which educators may provide informed leadership and
become agents for realizing the powerful potential of technology in their
schools.
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12.05 -
Psychology and Behavioral Science:
12.05.01
- Health Psychology and Behavioral Medicine:
HBM 5120: Research Methods
for the Behavioral Sciences: Principles and methods for
evaluating, planning, and carrying out psychological research, Non-experimental,
quasi-experimental, experimental designs for research in experimental and
applied areas of psychology.
HBM 5121: Psychopharmacology:
Provides an overview of contemporary, theoretical, clinical and
research issues in psychopathology and abnormal behavior. Emphasis will be on
experimental and conceptual analysis of mental disorders as described in the
DSM-IV.
HBM 5122: Group Therapy: Focuses
on the basic issues and key concepts of group processes and the application of
these concepts in a variety of group settings.
HBM 5123: Trance-work: Practice
of Clinical Hypnosis: Offers a practical framework of ways to
structure suggestions, pattern communications and induce trance. The most
recent innovations and research in the field will be presented and a variety of
approaches are synthesized into a comprehensive approach to the practice of
clinical hypnosis.
HBM 5124: Posttraumatic
Stress Disorder: Presents the latest scientific information and clinical challenges
regarding posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) as well as acute reactions to
stressful events and explicitly addresses diagnostic, including differential
diagnostic, and assessment issues.
HBM 5140: Psychology of
Chronic Illness: Provides a better understanding of manifestations of common
chronic illnesses, disabilities, the impact that chronic illness and disability
on all aspects of clients’ lives in order to help them build and strengthen
personal resources to achieve optimal functioning and full inclusion and
participation in all aspects of their life. Discussions include symptoms,
diagnoses, treatments, and prognoses.
HBM 5141: Behavioral
Medicine I: Behavior is a primary determinant of death and disease. Emerging
Research considers theories of how psychological factors, behavior, and
physiological processes can interact to produce both positive and negative
health and emotional states. The following topics are included: issues,
assessment techniques, psycho-neuro-immunology, environmental toxicology,
nutrient deficiencies, and personality factors (e.g. addictive personality).
HBM 5142: Behavioral
Medicine II: A number of non-pharmacological interventions available today that
can contribute to a person's state of behavioral, emotional, and physical
health. Interventions can include those of ecological classification such as
nutritional state, food and chemical sensitivities, and natural phenomena, as
well as those addressing behavioral issues such as reinforcement history,
personality traits, and physiological responsiveness. Also included will be
topics on behavioral interventions, EEG/biofeedback, neurolinguistic
programming, workplace wellness, cessation programs, and issues of compliance.
HBM 5143: Essentials of
Pain Management: A concise, evidence-based course contains essential pain
management, both acute and chronic pain management principles and techniques
are discussed, while numerous case vignettes help reinforce basic concepts and
improve clinical decision making. Throughout, a multidisciplinary approach to
pain is stressed. Behavioral and physical therapies, plus ethical
considerations, are also discussed in this indispensable guide for anyone
involved in the management of pain.
HBM 5144: Psychopharmacology:
Provides an overview of contemporary, theoretical, clinical and
research issues in psychopathology and abnormal behavior. Emphasis will be on
experimental and conceptual analysis of mental disorders as described in the
DSM-IV.
HBM 5145: Positive
Psychology: Focuses on the positive psychology principles of positive
subjective experience, positive traits, and positive institutions. It is an
emerging shift within the field of psychology. The emphasis includes a
scientific investigation of the latest research of positive psychology focusing
on positive human strengths such as optimism, gratitude, hope, and justice. The
course offers an opportunity for theoretical exploration and practical
application.
HBM 5146: Physiological
Psychology: Study of the relations between psychological manipulations and
resulting physiological responses to promote understanding of mind/body
interaction; examine psycho-physiological measurement methods, research, and
the application of psychophysiology.
HBM 5147: Health Care
Grants: Introduces the methods and means of acquiring a public or private
sector health care grant.
HBM 5148: Essentials Of
Managed Health Care: Prepares learner to assume roles in the management dimension of
HMO's/PPO's in the private-for-profit/not-for-profit and publicly-sponsored
HMO's.
HBM 5149: Comparative
Health Care Systems: The comparison of major health care systems, their measurement and
effects are studied. The focus is on the health care systems in Canada, United
States, Japan, Russia, Cuba, China, England, and Sweden.
HBM 5150: Assessment And
Planning In Health Programs: Analyzes the strengths,
weaknesses, and future potential for survival of health care corporations
preparing for the new millennium. Strategic planning is the ongoing corporate
process which allows such organizations to wisely grasp the opportunities of
the future.
HBM 5151: Health
Psychology/Behavioral Medicine Practicum: Provides the opportunity
for learners to experience the direct application of theory and techniques of
psychology in supervised professional settings.
HBM 6140: Advances in
Psychology Research: Presents original research results on the leading edge of
psychology, in an attempt to present substantial results across a broad
spectrum and reviews research on the empirical status of cognitive models in
social anxiety; critical variables in cognitive-behavioral therapy for
pediatric and adult obsessive-compulsive disorders; the impact of overseas
working on family members; and treatment trial and long-term follow-up
evaluation among co-morbid youth major depression and a cannabis use disorder.
HBM 6141: Psychology of
Chronic Illness: Provides a better understanding of manifestations of common
chronic illnesses, disabilities, the impact that chronic illness and disability
on all aspects of clients’ lives in order to help them build and strengthen
personal resources to achieve optimal functioning and full inclusion and
participation in all aspects of their life. Discussions include symptoms,
diagnoses, treatments, and prognoses.
HBM 6142: Behavioral
Medicine I: Behavior is a primary determinant of death and disease. Emerging
Research considers theories of how psychological factors, behavior, and
physiological processes can interact to produce both positive and negative
health and emotional states. The following topics are included: issues,
assessment techniques, psycho-neuro-immunology, environmental toxicology,
nutrient deficiencies, and personality factors (e.g. addictive personality).
HBM 6143: Behavioral
Medicine II: A number of non-pharmacological interventions available today that
can contribute to a person's state of behavioral, emotional, and physical
health. Interventions can include those of ecological classification such as
nutritional state, food and chemical sensitivities, and natural phenomena, as
well as those addressing behavioral issues such as reinforcement history,
personality traits, and physiological responsiveness. Also included will be
topics on behavioral interventions, EEG/biofeedback, neurolinguistic
programming, workplace wellness, cessation programs, and issues of compliance.
HBM 6144: Pain Management:
Chronic pain can render an otherwise productive life unbearable.
This course will study the etiology of pain and its control through both
pharmacological agents and non-pharmacological interventions.
HBM 6145: Psychopharmacology:
Provides an overview of contemporary, theoretical, clinical and
research issues in psychopathology and abnormal behavior. Emphasis will be on
experimental and conceptual analysis of mental disorders as described in the
DSM-IV.
HBM 6146: Physiological
Psychology: Study of the relations between psychological manipulations and
resulting physiological responses to promote understanding of mind/body
interaction; examine psycho-physiological measurement methods, research, and
the application of psychophysiology.
HBM 6147: Counseling
Theory and Practice: Provides a step-by-step approach to developing an effective
consulting practice in mental health, training, and organizational settings.
HBM 6148: Health Psychology/Behavioral
Medicine Practicum: Provides the opportunity for learners to experience the direct
application of theory and techniques of psychology in supervised professional
settings.
HBM 6149: Applied Health
Psychology/Behavioral Medicine Project: Allows the graduate learner to
study the practical application of Health Psychology/Behavioral Medicine
Psychology principles and practices and to document the results of this course
study in a formal project report. (1-5 credits) Note: Proposed topic of
independent study must be pre-approved by Learner’s faculty mentor and academic
advisor.
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12.05.02
- Industrial/Organizational Psychology:
IOP 5008: Survey Research:
This course provides an in-depth understanding of the survey
research process as it is used in psychological, educational and social science
research. This includes development of research questions and hypotheses,
sampling, questionnaire design, survey administration, data processing and
analysis.
IOP 5140: Organizational
Behavior and Management: Behavioral theories of the organization are
inherent in the operation of all organizations. Behavior of individuals and
groups in organizations serve to determine the organizational climate and
health. This course examines the nature of the behavior of organizations.
IOP 5141: Work Motivation
and Attitudes: Analysis and application of motivational theories and principles
to individuals and groups in the workplace. Evaluation of the theory and
application of various programs and techniques tried previously, including job
enrichment, participative management, improved supervision, compensation
systems, goal setting, and management by objectives, reinforcement, and
leadership development and influence techniques.
IOP 5142: Organizational
Development: Survey of methodological approaches to planned change, including
organizational diagnosis, data collection, interventions, feedback, and
evaluation. Specific types of interventions covered include strategic planning,
organizational design, culture change, team building, survey feedback, goal
setting, and career development.
IOP 5143: Conflict and
Negotiation: The goals of this course are: to review the history of
negotiation research in psychology, to identify the major findings and
conclusions, and to apply them directly to negotiation situations that will be
conducted. There is a heavy focus on participation in this class, and students
should be prepared to develop their practical negotiation skills through
engaging in negotiation exercises both inside and outside of class.
IOP 5144: Psychology of
Decision Making: Exploration of the psychological processes that underlie people's
judgments and decision making. First identifies some general rules that capture
the way people make decisions. Then explores how people make decisions in
numerous domains, including consumer, social, clinical, managerial, and
organizational decision making. Looks at both rational and irrational patterns
in the way people select options. It discusses the impact of the media on our choices.
Also examines how different ways of presenting options and different
decision-making strategies can influence decision outcomes. In general,
emphasizes the applied implications of the various perspectives on decision
making.
IOP 5145: Executive Coaching
and Development: Executive Coaching is an advanced elective on theories, methods,
and techniques of coaching executives for leadership development and management
effectiveness. The organization benefits from the leadership development gained
from coaching executives in terms of: accelerated delivery of strategic
objectives; developing greater organizational resilience in response to change;
and improving quality of work life. Coaching is a tailored learning program for
behavioral change and optimized performance. Coaching differs from other types
of training programs because of the individualized relationship established
between the client and coach over an extended time frame. The course examines
coaching engagement processes, how assessment is used, feedback mechanisms, and
techniques for counseling for enhanced performance. Although the focus of the
course will be on individual coaching, applications to team development will be
included. The course includes lectures, guest lectures, and a mentoring
assignment in which coaching skills can be practiced. Learning coaching skills
is useful for management and leadership roles more generally.
IOP 5146: Industrial
Organizational Psychology: The psychology of work and organizations; Introduction
to the use and application of psychology in the workplace. Focus is on the
development of employees and organizational structure, and social behavior
including the management of work groups and organizations.
IOP 5147: Industrial /
Organizational Psychology Practicum: Provides the opportunity for
learners to experience the direct application of theory and techniques of
psychology in supervised professional settings.
IOP 6140: Psychological
Tests and Measurements: Introduces the Learner to psychological test
construction, administration and interpretation as well as current research in
the area. Commonly used tests to assess cognition and personality will be
studied.
IOP 6141: Organizational
Industrial Psychology: Introduces organizations as psycho-social
systems with values, norms and behavioral dynamics.
IOP 6142: Survey Research:
This course provides an in-depth understanding of the survey
research process as it is used in psychological, educational and social science
research. This includes development of research questions and hypotheses,
sampling, questionnaire design, survey administration, data processing and
analysis.
IOP 6143: Organizational
Behavior and Management: Behavioral theories of the organization are
inherent in the operation of all organizations. Behavior of individuals and
groups in organizations serve to determine the organizational climate and
health. This course examines the nature of the behavior of organizations.
IOP 6144: Family Therapy: Concepts
and Methods: In the field of mental health today, there is a rising demand for
the utilization of effective short-term therapy. This course offers an overview
of brief therapy roots and demonstrates techniques common to all brief therapy
models.
IOP 6145: Applied
Statistics: Provides instruction on the calculation, use, and interpretation
of descriptive and inferential statistics. Emphasis is placed on the
application and interpretation of statistical tests in conducting research at
the graduate level. This course introduces inferential statistics and its
application to research design. Current SPSS software will be utilized. Both
parametric and non-parametric approaches to the analysis of data will be
discussed.
IOP 6146: Organizational
Industrial Psychology: Introduces organizations as psycho-social systems
with values, norms and behavioral dynamics.
IOP 6147: Multivariate
Statistics: The central theme of the course is the general linear model, and
statistical methods include multivariate hypothesis testing, principal
components analysis, factor analysis, discriminate analysis, canonical
correlation analysis, and multivariate analysis of variance and covariance. The
course covers theoretical, computational, and interpretive issues of
multivariate techniques using computer solutions.
IOP 6148: Applied I/O
Psychology Project: Requires the Learner to conduct a research study in the area of
Industrial/Organizational Psychology and to document the results in a formal
research project report. Note: Individual topic areas are to be submitted and
approved by the Learner's advisor and faculty mentor.
IOP 6149: Industrial /
Organizational Psychology Practicum: Provides the opportunity for
learners to experience the direct application of theory and techniques of
psychology in supervised professional settings.
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12.05.03
- Marriage and Family Therapy
MFT 5140: Human
Communication: Develops an understanding of the process of communication and
interviewing skills required of the helping professional.
MFT 5141: Positive
Psychology: Focuses on the positive psychology principles of positive
subjective experience, positive traits, and positive institutions. It is an
emerging shift within the field of psychology. The emphasis includes a
scientific investigation of the latest research of positive psychology focusing
on positive human strengths such as optimism, gratitude, hope, and justice. The
course offers an opportunity for theoretical exploration and practical
application.
MFT 5142: Brief Marriage
and Family Therapy: Brief Marriage and Family Therapy - In the field of mental health
today, there is a rising demand for the utilization of effective short-term
therapy. This course offers an overview of brief therapy roots and demonstrates
techniques common to all brief therapy models.
MFT 5143: Advanced
Techniques for Counseling and Psychotherapy: A comprehensive, in-depth
exploration of the origins, contemporary developments, and applications to
practice related to each major counseling theory that is complete with useful
learning aids, instructions for ongoing assessment, and valuable case
studies—all designed to facilitate comprehension and lead to effective, ethical
practice.
MFT 5144: Couples Therapy:
Exploration of the sociology and intervention theories of marital
and related interventions for dealing with a variety of couples, marital and
divorce issues, e.g. dual career, multicultural/multinational, domestic
violence, chemical dependency, human sexuality, remarriage, etc. Course
includes assessment and intervention of spouse and partner abuse.
MFT 5145: Therapy with
Children and Adolescents: Provides an overview of issues and
therapeutic methods relevant to the treatment of children and adolescents.
Issues distinguishing working with youth as opposed to adults are examined,
along with relevant legal and ethical concerns, assessment strategies, major
theoretical approaches to treating children and adolescents, and treatment
strategies for common forms of childhood psychopathology. Emphasis is placed on
using therapeutic methods with established efficacy and on incorporating parents,
family, and other contextual factors into treatment.
MFT 5146: Counseling
Theories and Strategies: Covers an overview, survey and applications
of the major psychological theories of therapy and points of view in current
use.
MFT 5147: Family Systems
Theories: Examines couple and family relationship systems, focuses on
communication, structural, emotional and behavioral patterns, and assessment of
normal and dysfunctional patterns.
MFT 5148: Family Therapy: Concepts
and Methods: In the field of mental health today, there is a rising demand for
the utilization of effective short-term therapy. This course offers an overview
of brief therapy roots and demonstrates techniques common to all brief therapy
models.
MFT 5149: Psychological
Tests and Measurements: Introduces the Learner to psychological test
construction, administration and interpretation as well as current research in
the area. Commonly used tests to assess cognition and personality will be
studied.
MFT 5150: Practicum I: Supervised
clinical experience in marriage and family therapy; includes development of
assessment and outcome evaluation skills.
MFT 5151: Practicum II: Supervised
clinical experience in marriage and family therapy; includes development of
assessment and outcome evaluation skills.
MFT 6140: Brief Marriage
and Family Therapy: Brief Marriage and Family Therapy - In the field of mental health
today, there is a rising demand for the utilization of effective short-term
therapy. This course offers an overview of brief therapy roots and demonstrates
techniques common to all brief therapy models.
MFT 6141: Advanced
Techniques for Counseling and Psychotherapy: A comprehensive, in-depth
exploration of the origins, contemporary developments, and applications to
practice related to each major counseling theory that is complete with useful
learning aids, instructions for ongoing assessment, and valuable case
studies—all designed to facilitate comprehension and lead to effective, ethical
practice.
MFT 6142: Couples Therapy:
Exploration of the sociology and intervention theories of marital
and related interventions for dealing with a variety of couples, marital and
divorce issues, e.g. dual career, multicultural/multinational, domestic
violence, chemical dependency, human sexuality, remarriage, etc. Course
includes assessment and intervention of spouse and partner abuse.
MFT 6143: Therapy with
Children and Adolescents: Provides and overview of issues and
therapeutic methods relevant to the treatment of children and adolescents.
Issues distinguishing working with youth as opposed to adults are examined,
along with relevant legal and ethical concerns, assessment strategies, major
theoretical approaches to treating children and adolescents, and treatment
strategies for common forms of childhood psychopathology. Emphasis is placed on
using therapeutic methods with established efficacy and on incorporating
parents, family, and other contextual factors into treatment.
MFT 6144: Family Systems
Theories: Examines couple and family relationship systems, focuses on
communication, structural, emotional and behavioral patterns, and assessment of
normal and dysfunctional patterns.
MFT 6145: Family Therapy: Concepts
and Methods: In the field of mental health today, there is a rising demand for
the utilization of effective short-term therapy. This course offers an overview
of brief therapy roots and demonstrates techniques common to all brief therapy
models.
MFT 6146: Abnormal Child
Psychology: Provides the most authoritative, scholarly, and comprehensive
coverage of accurate balance of developmental, clinical-diagnostic, and
experimental approaches to child and adolescent psychopathology, tracing the
developmental course of each disorder and showing how biological,
psychological, and socio-cultural factors interact with a child's environment.
Coverage includes the DSM-IV-TR and dimensional approaches to classification as
well as evidence-based assessment and treatment, contemporary research, and the
latest theories related to the predominantly inattentive ADHD subtype,
early-onset and the developmental propensity model of conduct disorder, the
triple vulnerability model of anxiety, the tripartite model in children,
depression, and autism.
MFT 6147: Conducting
Psychological Testing and Assessment: Carefully working through all the
phases of assessment, including integrating, conceptualizing, test selection,
administering, scoring, and report writing, Conducting Psychological Assessment
provides clinicians with a step-by-step methodology for conducting skilled individual
assessments, from beginning to end.
MFT 6148: Practicum I: Supervised
clinical experience in marriage and family therapy; includes development of
assessment and outcome evaluation skills.
MFT 6149: Practicum II: Supervised
clinical experience in marriage and family therapy; includes development of
assessment and outcome evaluation skills.
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12.05.04
- Psychology
PSY 4006: Persuasion and
Attitude Change: Human beings develop attitudes as a result of experience.
Attitudes shape future behavior and impact perception. This course will explore
how attitudes are identified, categorized and measured, and will examine many
of the variables associated with changing established attitudes.
PSY 4008: Industrial
Organizational Psychology: The psychology of work and organizations;
Introduction to the use and application of psychology in the workplace; Focus
is on the development of employees and organizational structure, and social
behavior including the management of work groups and organizations.
PSY 4012: Social Psychology:
Survey of social, cultural, and cognitive influences on individual
and group behavior; Introduces attitude formation, social conformity, personal
perception, aggression, cooperation, and interpersonal and intergroup
relations.
PSY 4013: Judgment and
Decision Making: Using examples from medicine, politics, law, business, and daily
life, we review "descriptive" (psychological), "normative"
(rational), and "prescriptive" (decision-engineering) theory. Topics
include judgment, cognition, emotion, risk, uncertainty, optimization,
heuristics, biases, morality, and applications.
PSY 4014: Environmental
Psychology: Psychological effects of the physical environment and effects of
human action on the socio-physical environment, including an examination of global
environmental issues and ecologically-relevant behavior.
PSY 4020: Human Factors
Psychology: Advanced concepts critical to the design of human-technological
systems, such as capitalizing upon human capabilities and compensating for
human limitations. Topics may include perceptual and motor abilities, human
error and cognitive engineering.
PSY 4022: Human
Performance: An overview of cognitive task analysis and process tracing methods
used to examine human performance in complex socio-technical systems. Topics
include knowledge elicitation, concept mapping, critical decision method, and
protocol analysis.
PSY 4023: Cognitive
Psychology: A systematic survey of classical and contemporary research topics
in human information processing and learning. Topics include models of
cognition, perception/pattern recognition, attention, the nature of mental
representation and processing; the architecture of memory, imagery, concepts,
and prototypes; reasoning, decision making, problem solving, and cognitive
development.
PSY 4024: Cognitive
Neuroscience: Topics in the field of cognitive neuroscience, examining the
neural basis of cognition. Topics may include perception, attention, memory and
language.
PSY 4028: Learning and
Memory: Theories of learning and memory from traditional animal research
findings, human research, and more recent trends examining the neural basis of
learning and memory will be examined to understand changes in behavior,
including the acquisition and retention of knowledge.
PSY 4038: Psychology and
Law: Application of psychological principles to legal concerns and the
interaction of psychology and law. Topics include perception, memory, and
decision-making processes as applied to eyewitnesses, identification and
evaluation of suspects, jury trials, capital punishment, and other current
topics.
PSY 4120: Introduction to
Psychology: Introduction to the scientific study of psychological structures
and processes involved in individual and group behavior. Explores theoretical
accounts of the foundations of human behavior and examines empirical support.
Topics may include personality, disorders, therapy, development, and social
psychology, perception, learning, cognition, emotion, and states of
consciousness.
PSY 4121: Theories and
Techniques of Counseling and Psychotherapy: Major approaches used in
contemporary counseling psychology, the current status of the profession, and
ethical issues encountered will be examined to provide students with a broad
understanding of the field. This course does not train students to be
counselors.
PSY 4122: Behavior
Modification: An introduction to techniques of behavior modification through the
application of learning theories such as classical and operant conditioning.
Students will conduct a case study project designed to modify a personal
behavior.
PSY 4123: Developmental
Psychology: A survey of human development across the life span (prenatal,
infant, child, adolescent, and adult) in the areas of biological, cognitive,
social, emotional, and personality development. It provides insight into both
the universality of human development and the uniqueness of individuals.
PSY 4124: Psychology Tools
and Technology: Psychology majors examine the field of psychology and major degree
requirements resulting in an undergraduate plan of study focused on graduate
school admission or career preparation. An introduction to the technological
tools used within psychology, including hardware, software, and
instrumentation.
PSY 4125: Psychology of
Trauma: A comprehensive overview of the theoretical, clinical and research
relevance of Posttraumatic Stress and associated disorders. Diagnostic
clarification, etiology, psychotherapeutic interventions and treatment related
issues will be addressed. The relationship to other DSM-IV-TR classifications,
the legal and ethical controversies, and cultural phenomena surrounding trauma
will be an important consideration.
PSY 4126: Experimental
Methods & Statistics l: Introduction to experimental
design, general research methodology, computer analysis and interpretation of
data. It emphasizes issues and methods involved in psychological research.
Topics include experimental design and validity, choosing appropriate data
analysis techniques, statistical analysis, and APA writing style.
PSY 4127: Experimental
Methods & Statistics ll: Second course in psychological
research methodology and statistics, both experimental and non-experimental.
Students design, execute, interpret, and report psychological research.
PSY 4130: Theories of
Personality: Presents an overview of theories of personality development
involving genetic, interpersonal, and environmental forces affecting human
development, emphasizing personality theories as alternative orienting
viewpoints.
PSY 4131: Abnormal
Psychology: Helps the student build an understanding of abnormal behavior
through critical examination of historical and contemporary models used in this
field. The student learns the causes and treatment proposed by
Cognitive-Behavioral, Psychodynamic and Social-cultural Models with particular
emphasis placed on the Diagnostic and Statistical manual used by clinicians for
diagnoses.
PSY 4132: History and
Systems of Psychology: Traces major historical contributions to
current psychology from ancient to modern times; Examines significant ideas and
discoveries from philosophy, mathematics, and the natural and medical sciences
as they relate to the development of psychology; Discusses philosophical,
theoretical, and methodological controversies that surfaced as part of these
historical developments.
PSY 4133: Physiological
Psychology: Study of the relations between psychological manipulations and
resulting physiological responses to promote understanding of mind/body
interaction; examine psycho-physiological measurement methods, research, and
the application of psychophysiology.
PSY 4134: Cross-Cultural
Psychology: Introduces the student to cross cultural psychology and socio-cultural
theory as it is applied to psychology; Examines research on cultural specific
and universal behaviors; Emphasizes the benefits and challenges of diversity in
organizations and diversity skills that promote interpersonal and
organizational success.
PSY 4135: Directed
Psychology Research: Directed research in the field of Psychology through the
application of research techniques.
PSY 4136: Application of
Treatment Models: An applied review of psychological treatment models, including
their history, their strengths and weaknesses, and the fundamental concepts
that support each model. Students will be required to apply one of the models
in a direct practice format.
PSY 4140: Motivation and
Emotion: Introduction to the theoretical, physiological, cognitive, and
behavioral factors underlying the processes of motivated behaviors and
emotional states. Emphasis is placed on methods for studying motivation and
emotion and their role in human behavior.
PSY 5120: Human Behavior
and the Social Environment: Introduces and incorporates
current research on the biological, psychological, socio-cultural, and
spiritual dimensions of human behavior throughout the life-cycle and provides
an appropriate focus on contemporary perspectives that are central to the
practice of social work, such as trauma, neurobiological underpinnings of
behavior, chronic illness and disability. Course pays particular attention to
models of racial, ethnic, class, gender and gay, lesbian, bisexual and
transgender identity development; to the influences of gender, sexual orientation,
social class, race and culture on family structure and function, and to issues
pertinent to a variety of “post-modern” family forms.
PSY 5121: Cognition,
Emotion and Motivation: A comprehensive overview of the theory of
human cognition and cognitive psychology. Issues to be presented and researched
will include, but are not limited to, attention, imagery and memory,
consciousness, schemata, cognitive maps, decision making and problem solving.
PSY 5122: Human
Performance: An overview of cognitive task analyses and process tracing methods
used to examine human performance in complex socio-technical systems. Topics
include knowledge elicitation, concept mapping, critical decision method, and
protocol analysis.
PSY 5123: Judgment and
Decision Making: How can we make better decisions? Using examples from medicine,
politics, law, business, and daily life, we review "descriptive"
(psychological), "normative" (rational), and "prescriptive"
(decision-engineering) theory. Topics include judgment, cognition, emotion,
risk, uncertainty, optimization, heuristics, biases, morality, and
applications.
PSY 5124: Advanced
Statistical Analysis and Design: An overview of research ethics,
experimental design, proposal writing, and invariant statistics such as t-tests
and ANOVA.
PSY 5130: Counseling
Theories and Strategies: Covers an overview, survey and applications
of the major psychological theories of therapy and points of view in current
use.
PSY 5131: Ethics in
Counseling and Psychotherapy: Covers Professional Identity and
Ethics, Awareness and Sensitivity to Ethical Issues, Cognitions and
Reasoning/Hermeneutics, Client Autonomy and Client Rights, Dual Relationship,
Counselor Competence, Diversity and Multicultural Competence, Use of Technology
and Ethics, Supervision and Ethics, Ethical Use of Research in Counseling
Practice, Professional Codes of Ethics and the Law, Western Theories of Ethics,
Eastern Theories of Ethics, Middle Eastern Theories of Ethics and Native
American, Latino and Pan African Ethics.
PSY 5132: Psychology of
Learning: The aim of this course is to survey and interpret human learning
using major theoretical perspectives. The course includes experiential
knowledge in human learning and applications to teaching and counseling.
PSY 5133: Sensation and Perception:
Examination of basic sensory mechanisms and perceptual phenomena.
Sensory mechanisms reviewed will include vision, audition, olfaction,
gestation, vestibular system and touch.
PSY 5134: Human Factors
Psychology: Advanced concepts critical to the design of human-technological
systems, such as capitalizing upon human capabilities and compensating for
human limitations. Topics may include perceptual and motor abilities, human
error and cognitive engineering.
PSY 6130: Positive
Psychology: Focuses on the positive psychology principles of positive
subjective experience, positive traits, and positive institutions. It is an
emerging shift within the field of psychology. The emphasis includes a
scientific investigation of the latest research of positive psychology focusing
on positive human strengths such as optimism, gratitude, hope, and justice. The
course offers an opportunity for theoretical exploration and practical
application.
PSY 6131: Social
Psychology: Survey of social, cultural, and cognitive influences on individual
and group behavior; Introduces attitude formation, social conformity, personal
perception, aggression, cooperation, and interpersonal and intergroup
relations.
PSY 6132: Dynamic
Psychotherapy: Practical step-by-step introduction to the principles of dynamic
psychotherapy to teach students more about dynamic psychotherapy, the emphasis
is on the practical rather than the theoretical. The book opens with a
description of the steps involved in conducting insight-oriented psychotherapy,
then moves on to the modifications required for time-limited therapy,
supportive and management techniques, and the combination or augmentation of
psychotherapy with medications. Included are such topics as the significance of
different patient-referral sources, recommendations on how to set up the
initial appointment, and practical issues like the arrangement of office
furniture and professional fees.
PSY 6133: Personality
Theories: Presents an overview of theories of personality development
involving genetic, interpersonal, and environmental forces affecting human
development, emphasizing personality theories as alternative orienting
viewpoints.
PSY 6134: Research Methods
for the Behavioral Sciences: Principles and methods for
evaluating, planning, and carrying out psychological research,
Non-experimental, quasi-experimental, and experimental designs for research in
experimental and applied areas of psychology.
PSY 6140: Multicultural
Psychology: Combines quantitative and qualitative research with anecdotal
material to examine an array of multicultural issues and capture the richness
of diverse cultures, and focuses on such compelling topics as differences in
worldviews, communication, racial and cultural identity development, racism,
and immigration. It also covers other issues including gender, sexuality, age,
and ability.
PSY 6141: The Psychology
of Learning and Motivation: Ecological Validity and the Study
of Concepts, Social Embodiment, The Body's Contribution to Language, Using
Spatial Language, In Opposition to Inhibition, Evolution of Human Cognitive,
Architecture, Cognitive Plasticity and Aging, Index, Contents of Previous
Volumes
PSY 6142: Cognitive
Psychology: A systematic survey of classical and contemporary research topics
in human information processing and learning. Topics include models of
cognition, perception/pattern recognition, attention, the nature of mental
representation and processing; the architecture of memory, imagery, concepts,
and prototypes; reasoning, decision making, problem solving, and cognitive
development.
PSY 6143: Psychology of
Attitudes and Attitude Changes: Review and integrate some of the
most recent, cutting-edge developments in research on attitudes and attitude
change, presenting the work of eminent scholars in this field and deals with
such intriguing questions as: What role do associative processes play in the
formation of attitudes? How do attitudes function as global and local action
guides? What is the function of implicit evaluations, and vicarious experiences
in producing attitude change? Are implicit associations a useful way to measure
attitudes? What role does affect play in attitude formation and change? What
role do social interaction processes play in persuasion, and how does
persuasion work in real-life settings?
PSY 6144: Sensation and
Perception: Explains that he and his colleagues sought to convey their
enthusiasm for the field by offering chapters telling coherent, interesting
stories. The colorfully-illustrated chapters cover early philosophers' views on
perception to current research- based understanding of neurobiological,
genetic, and social factors in normal and impaired sensory perception.
PSY 6145: Psychology of
Gender: Explores perspectives on gender differences based on biological
predispositions, social environmental influences and the interaction between
them.
PSY 6146: Positive
Psychology Coaching: An Introduction to Applying Positive Psychology Coaching, using
Your Best to Make You Better, Harnessing Positivity, Making Molehills out of
Mountains: Coaching Goals and Hope for the Future, Positive Diagnosis,
Positive Assessment, Gray Hairs and Gravestones: Positive Psychology Coaching
Across the Lifespan, and The Practice of Positive Psychology Coaching.
PSY 6147: School
Psychological Consultation: shows in expert detail how this
relationship works by synthesizing mental health and behavioral models of
consultation with the most effective evidence-based practices (e.g.,
implementation support, response to intervention) informing the field today.
And provide real-world contexts for all participants in the
equation—consultants, teachers, students, staff, and the school itself—and
thoroughly review consultation processes and outcomes for a contemporary
practice-oriented approach suited to the new consultant, trainee, or
researcher.
PSY 6148: Adult
Development and Aging: Focuses on "successful aging" and
how to accomplish it and combining research and applied perspectives, it is
evenly balanced between biological, social, cognitive, and personality theory
as it relates to adulthood an aging and takes the bio-psychosocial perspective
that is gaining ascendency in psychology as a whole and applies it to the years
of adulthood and old age.
PSY 6149: Applied
Psychology Project: Allows the graduate learner to study the practical application of
Psychology principles and practices and to document the results of this course
study in a formal project report. (1-5 credits) Note: Proposed topic of
independent study must be pre-approved by Learner’s faculty mentor and academic
advisor
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12.06 – Sciences:
12.06.01
- Medical Informatics:
MI 5120: Introduction to
Medical Informatics: Course covers fundamental subjects such as medical decision
support systems, telemedicine, medical ethics and biostatistics. Topics include
consumer health informatics, international health care systems, global health
informatics, translational research informatics and homecare. Students will see
medical informatics from diverse perspectives. Scientific writing and
communication will be encouraged.
MI 5121: Essentials of
Health Information Management: Focuses on the description of
health care delivery and contents of medical records, provides skills and
professional training at the field of Health Information Technology, hands on familiarity
with health care facilities settings, with a comprehensive study of automated
health and medical information systems, and detailed study of health
information at ambulatory services, diagnostic departments and inpatient
floors. It also provides hands on training on numbering, coding, medical
abstract and records analysis and medical auditing.
MI 5122: Introduction to Medical
Sciences and Human Pathophysiology: Course provides basic concepts in
medicine and Human Pathophysiology to introduce a molecular understanding of
human metabolism and disease. Topics also include physical examination of
patient, taking medical history, laboratory medicine, disease management and
treatment, medical diagnostics, clinical workflow, and medical special/subspecialties.
MI 5123: Human Anatomy: Detailed
illustrated Study of Human Body's Systems including enfant, male an d female
bodies
MI 5124: Physiology: covers
closed study of human body systems functions, functional disorders with full
study of organs behavior and effect to other systems, functional illness and
causes of death
MI 5130: Medical
Terminology: Systematic study of medical terminology from the basis up to
professional skills understanding compound medical terms.
MI 5131: ICD 9 CM: Hands on
coverage of the international coding of diseases, procedures and causes of
death using clinically modified coding reference both manual and automated
MI 5132: Lean Six-Sigma: includes
enhancing customer satisfaction; maintaining a safe, clean, and organized
workplace; utilizing an effective logistics, scheduling, and shipping system;
deploying facilities, raw materials, and technology effectively; managing
incoming, work-in-process, and finished goods inventory levels; employing and
motivating talented people; and maintaining equipment and facilities; all while
providing a quality product or service that customers desire. A leader’s
ability to manage in a complex environment is crucial to their organization’s
success. Quality, productivity,
MI 5133: Data Mining And
Medical Knowledge Management: presents case studies on
applications of various modern data mining methods in several important areas
of medicine, covering classical data mining methods, elaborated approaches
related to mining in electroencephalogram and electrocardiogram data, and
methods related to mining in genetic data. A premier resource for those
involved in data mining and medical knowledge management, this book tackles
ethical issues related to cost-sensitive learning in medicine and produces
theoretical contributions concerning general problems of data, information and
knowledge.
MI 5134: Health Care
Politics, Policy and Services: Presents an overview of the
factors which govern and affect the development of health care policy in
America.
MI 5140: Security and
Privacy: Examines key health information security, policy, and procedures.
It investigates how to distinguish elements of a security audit and key
security policies. Analyzes the roles of people maintaining health information
security and explains elements of these roles within the organization.
MI 5141: Clinical Decision
Support and Improving Healthcare: Course addresses complex medical
decisions, evidence-based medicine, disease management and comprehensive
laboratory informatics. Topics include improving physical order entry and
healthcare, using medical literature, clinical case discussions, meaningful use
of medical data, enhancing patient and care-giver education, disease
prevention, and public health and environmental health informatics.
MI 5142: Data Warehousing
and Business intelligence: Identifies database solutions and key
elements of an enterprise data warehouse. It explains how to apply best
practices for development of data warehouses, the role of business intelligence
and data mining in supporting the strategic business decision process, and OLAP
(Online Analytical Processing) and its use in reporting and analyzing database
and data warehouse information and defines security practices for a data
warehouse environment.
MI 5143: Statistical
Methods for Intrusion Detection: An introduction to the data and
methodologies of computer intrusion detection. It focuses on statistical and
machine learning approaches to detection of attacks on computers. Topics
include network monitoring and analysis, network-based attacks such as probes
and denial of service, host-based attacks such as buffer overflows and race
conditions, and malicious code such as viruses and worms. Statistical pattern
recognition methods will be described for the detection and classification of
attacks.
MI 5144: Designing
Security Systems: Provides an overview of techniques used in the design of secure
systems with a primary focus on real-world case studies. Students will examine
attacks on deployed systems and investigate how these vulnerabilities have been
addressed. Practical advantages and shortcomings of several notions of provable
security will also be examined. Students will be expected to read, understand,
and present recent research papers.
MI 5145: Healthcare
Security Management: Addresses information security in the public health and medical
fields, with special emphasis on clinical care, research, and the role of the
academic medical center. Also focuses on disaster recovery and response,
anonymization of records, billing, and communication of public health
information to EHRs, along with physical and administrative security.
MI 5146: Health Care
Ethics: Examines the legal and ethical issues affecting health care
delivery in America including abortion, organ donation and transplantation,
termination of life support, rights of the terminally ill and consent issues,
state and federal regulation, and patient and provider relationship.
MI 6132: Tools of
Bioinformatics: Computer applications in molecular biology. Hands-on experience
with using popular computer programs for DNA, RNA and protein sequence
analysis, database management, data editing, assembly, and organization,
multiple sequence comparisons, protein structural analysis, evolutionary
relationships of genes, use of Internet for data retrieval, comparison and
analysis.
MI 6133: Biometeorology: Studies
the quantitative exchange of radiation, heat, mass and momentum between the
atmosphere, vegetation, and soils with an emphasis on forest processes. Other
topics include the physical and biological controls of water vapor exchange and
carbon dioxide exchange, models of stand-scale evaporation, transpiration,
photosynthesis and respiration.
MI 6134: Ethical, Legal
and Social Issues in Biotechnology: Covers Ethics and concepts of
dealing with Biological data and medical information including gene detailing
and controls of information handling and release.
MI 6140: Bioinformatics: Presents
mathematical models in bioinformatics and describes the biological problems
that inspire the computer science tools used to handle the enormous data sets
involved and covers the mathematical and computational methods, the practical
applications, and mathematical presentation, with emphasis on motivation
through biological problems and cross applications.
MI 6141: Fundamentals of
Healthcare Programming: Demonstrates that biomedical professionals
with fundamental programming knowledge can master any kind of data collection
and provides access to data, nomenclatures, and programming scripts and
languages that are all free and publicly available. Describes the structure of
data sources used, with instructions for downloading, Includes a clearly
written explanation of each algorithm, Offers equivalent scripts in Perl,
Python, and Ruby, for each algorithm, Shows how to write short, quickly learned
scripts, using a minimal selection of commands, Teaches basic informatics
methods for retrieving, organizing, merging, and analyzing data sources,
Provides case studies that detail the kinds of questions that biomedical
scientists can ask and answer with public data and an open source programming
language, Requiring no more than a working knowledge of Perl, Python, or Ruby,
this subject will have students writing powerful programs in just a few
minutes. Within the course, students will find descriptions of the basic
methods and implementations needed to complete many of the projects they will encounter
in their biomedical career.
MI 6142: Informatics in
Medical Imaging: This course provides a comprehensive survey of the field of
medical imaging informatics. In addition to radiology, it also addresses other
specialties such as pathology, cardiology, dermatology, and surgery, which have
adopted the use of digital images. The course discusses basic imaging
informatics protocols, picture archiving and communication systems, and the
electronic medical record. It details key instrumentation and data mining
technologies used in medical imaging informatics as well as practical
operational issues, such as procurement, maintenance, Tele-radiology, and
ethics.
MI 6143: Probabilistic
Modeling in Medical Informatics: Provides a self-contained
introduction to the methodology of Bayesian networks, demonstrates how these
methods are applied in bioinformatics and medical informatics with an
introduction, tutorials, advanced applications and case studies to the
methodology of probabilistic modeling, bioinformatics, and medical informatics.
MI 6144: Clinical
Information Systems: Covers The Evolution of Health Information Systems; Frameworks: A
Collection of Business Objects; Frameworks: A Collaboration of Objects; The
Patient Component; The Act Component; The Medical Record Component; The
Knowledge Components; The Resource Management Component; The Security Component
and Imaging Management and Integration.
MI 6145: Health
Information Technology & Management: Provides a comprehensive
understanding of the history, theory, and potential benefits of health
information management systems, this course helps students understand the
connectivity and applications that make up the health information systems of
today and of tomorrow. Focuses on the contents of patient’s medical record,
automated systems, filing systems, health data mining, digital retrieval,
international coding, and medical abstract.
MI 6146: Comparative
Health Information Management: Covers health care practice and
information management in a wide variety of settings, from free-standing and
hospital-based ambulatory clinics to veterinary offices and correctional
facilities, and the challenges associated with managing the information flow
among various sites.
MI 6147: Medical Devices
Design for Six-Sigma: Integrates concept and design methods such as
Pugh Controlled Convergence approach, QFD methodology, parameter optimization
techniques like Design of Experiment (DOE), Taguchi Robust Design method,
Failure Mode and Effects Analysis (FMEA), Design for X, Multi-Level
Hierarchical Design methodology, and Response Surface methodology, Covers
contemporary and emerging design methods, including Axiomatic Design
Principles, Theory of Inventive Problem Solving (TRIZ), and Tolerance Design,
Provides a detailed, step-by-step implementation process for each DFSS tool
included, Covers the structural, organizational, and technical deployment of
DFSS within the medical device industry, Includes a DFSS case study describing
the development of a new device and Presents a global prospective of medical
device regulations
MI 6148: Essentials of
Health Information Management: Focuses on the description of
health care delivery and contents of medical records, provides skills and
professional training at the field of Health Information Technology, hands on
familiarity with health care facilities settings, with a comprehensive study of
automated health and medical information systems, and detailed study of health
information at ambulatory services, diagnostic departments and inpatient
floors. It also provides hands on training on numbering, coding, medical
abstract and records analysis and medical auditing.
MI 6149: Knowledge
Management and Data Mining in Biomedicine: Mapping Medical
Informatics Research.- Bioinformatics Challenges.- Medical Concept
Representation.- Standards in Medical Informatics.- Information Retrieval and
Digital Library.- Genomics Information Retrieval.- Managing Information
Security and Privacy in Health Care.- Ethical and Social Challenges in Medical
Informatics.- Characterizing Biomedical Concept Relationships.- Anatomic Images
for the Public -3D Medical Informatics.- Medical Oncology .- Semantic Parsing
and Knowledge Representation in Biomedicine.- Semantic Text Parsing for Patient
Records.- Identification of Biological Relationships from Text Documents.-
Creating, Modeling and Visualizing Metabolic Networks: FC Modeler and
Path-Binder for Network Modeling and Creation.- Gene Pathway Text Mining and
Visualization.- The Genomic Data Mine.- Exploratory Genomic Data Analysis.-
Joint Learning Using Data and Text Mining.- Disease Informatics and Outbreak
Detection.
MI 6I30: Gene Expression
Data Analysis: Students will learn statistical methods and skills for analyzing
large-scale gene expression data resulting from high-throughput technologies,
become familiar with various bioinformatics tools and resources, and develop
useful working knowledge of how to analyze genetic data.
MI 6I31: Data Analysis and
Graphics Using R: This course is designed to teach the essential skills for
analyzing experimental data, and in particular, generating informative graphics
that can be used directly in reports, theses, dissertations, and manuscripts.
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12.06.02
- Nutritional Science:
NTR 5120: Food
Biochemistry and Food Processing: Essential principles of food
biochemistry, enzymology, and food processing, the course then discusses
commodity-by-commodity of biochemistry of raw materials and product processing.
Chapters in this second edition have been revised to include safety considerations
and the chemical changes induced by processing in the bimolecular of the
selected foodstuffs. This edition also includes a new section on health and
functional foods, as well as ten new chapters including those on thermally and
minimally processed foods, separation technology in food processing, and food
allergens.
NTR 5121: Advanced
Nutrition and Human Metabolism: Focuses on cells and A Microcosm
of Life, The Digestive System, Mechanism for Nourishing the Body,
MACRONUTRIENTS AND THEIR METABOLISM, Carbohydrates, Fiber, Lipids, Protein,
Integration and Regulation of Metabolism and the Impact of Exercise and Sport,
Body Composition, Energy Expenditure, and Energy Balance, THE REGULATORY
NUTRIENTS, The Water-Soluble Vitamins, The Fat-Soluble Vitamins, Major
Minerals, Water and Electrolytes, Essential Trace and Ultra-trace Minerals,
Nonessential Trace and Ultra-trace Minerals.
NTR 5122: Statistical
Methods and Variance Analysis: An introduction to the data and
methodologies of computer intrusion detection. It focuses on statistical and
machine learning approaches to detection of attacks on computers. Topics
include network monitoring and analysis, network-based attacks such as probes
and denial of service, host-based attacks such as buffer overflows and race
conditions, and malicious code such as viruses and worms. Statistical pattern
recognition methods will be described for the detection and classification of
attacks.
NTR 5123: Experimental
Design: Review of basic statistical concepts, models for testing
significance of one or many factors, reducing experimental effort by incomplete
blocks, and Latin squares. Factorial and fractional factorial designs and response
surface analysis for optimal response.
NTR 5124: Group Therapy: Focuses
on the basic issues and key concepts of group processes and the application of
these concepts in a variety of group settings.
NTR 5130: Biostatistics: Covers
Introduction to Biostatistics, Descriptive Statistics, Some Basic Probability
Concepts, Probability Distributions, Some Important Sampling Distributions,
Estimation, Hypothesis Testing, Analysis of Variance, Simple Linear Regression
and Correlation, Multiple Regression and Correlation, Regression Analysis: Some
Additional Techniques, The Chi-Square Distribution and the Analysis of
Frequencies, Nonparametric and Distribution-Free Statistics, and Survival
Analysis
NTR 5131: Food Intake: Regulation,
Assessing and Controlling: Presents current research in the regulation
and control of food intake. Topics discussed include understanding food intake
regulation in chicks; indigenous fermented foods and beverages produced in
Latin America; regulation of food intake and its relation to age and body
composition and food-borne carcinogens.
NTR 5132: Nutritional
Education Theories and Practice: Provides a simple,
straightforward model for designing effective nutrition education that
addresses the personal and environmental influences that affect food choice and
assists individuals in adopting healthy behaviors. Using a six-step process,
this course integrates theory, research, and practice and provides advice on
designing, implementing, and evaluating theory-based nutrition education.
NTR 5133: Metabolic
Disorders: Focuses on the disorders of carbohydrate metabolism and the
diseases of lipids metabolism, highlights the diseases of protein metabolism
including different forms of disorders, discusses the diseases associated with
nucleic acids metabolism, provides useful information on molecular genetics and
various instrumental techniques used in a clinical diagnostic laboratory and
presents An overview of respective macromolecules metabolism.
NTR 5134: Nutrition
Research Methods: Aims to fill a critical gap in dietetics, nutrition and health
education literature by providing a comprehensive guide to conducting research
and understanding the research of others, teaches how researchers identified
problems; how they framed those problems; and how they reported, interpreted
and implemented their findings and covers an overview of the process, statistical
and measurement concepts, types of research (including experimental,
quasi-experimental, descriptive, and qualitative research), how to present
results and computer techniques for data analysis.
NTR 5140: Laboratory
Nutritional Assessment: Includes inflammatory biomarkers, biochemical
assessment of malnutrition, hydration status, nutritional anemia, and specific
information on more than 90 lab tests used for assessing nutrition-related
conditions and comprehensive list of medications that may give false lab test
results.
NTR 5141: Advanced Medical
Nutrition Therapy: A comprehensive coverage of the relevant physiology,
path-physiology, nutritional therapy and dietetic application for each
specialist dietetic area, with coverage of all major specialist areas involved
in the treatment of adults through clinical governance, including
patient-centered care, clinical decision-making and developing evidence-based
practice; in addition to focusing on advanced clinical practice describes
several clinical conditions or dietetic areas in detail.
NTR 5142: Medical
Nutrition Therapy: Building a bridge from classroom to clinical practice, this
casebook is composed of 34 realistic case studies appropriate for introductory
and advanced level courses in nutrition and diet therapy. Each case study uses
the medical record as its structure. The student "solves the case" by
using the information provided such as hospital admission data, laboratory test
results, intake/output records, and the physician's progress notes.
NTR 5143: Food and
Nutritional Toxicology: Provides a broad overview of the chemicals in
food that have the potential to produce adverse health effects including the
impact on human health of food containing environmental contaminants or natural
toxicants, food additives, the migration of chemicals from packaging materials
into foods, and the persistence of feed and food contaminants in food products.
Classes address the adverse effects of nutrient excesses, the impact of
contaminants on nutrient utilization, metabolism of food toxicants, and the
relationship of the body's biologic defense mechanisms to such toxicants. Also,
includes discussions on the risk determination process, food safety regulation,
and the current status of the regulatory processes.
NTR 5144: Nutritional
Epidemiology: Overview of Nutritional Epidemiology, Foods and Nutrients, Nature
of Variation in Diet, 24-Hour Dietary Recall and Food Record Methods, Food
Frequency Methods, Reproducibility and Validity of Food-Frequency Questionnaires,
Recall of Remote Diet, Surrogate Sources of Dietary Information, Biochemical
Indicators of Dietary Intake, Anthropometric Measures and Body Composition,
Implications of Total Energy Intake for Epidemiologic Analysis, Correction for
the Effects of Measurement Error, Issues in Analysis and Presentation of
Dietary Data, Nutrition Monitoring and Surveillance, Vitamin A and Lung Cancer,
Dietary Fat and Breast Cancer, Diet and Coronary Heart Disease, Folic Acid and
Neural Tube Defects, Future Research Directions
NTR 5145: Molecular
Biology/Genetics: Basic Chemical and Biological Principles including Cells and
Organisms, Basic Genetics, DNA, RNA, and Protein, Genes, Genomes, and DNA,
Manipulation of Nucleic Acids, The Genome, Polymerase Chain Reaction, Cloning
Genes for Analysis, and DNA Sequencing, Genomics & Systems Biology. Central
Dogma of Molecular Biology including Cell Division and DNA Replication,
Transcription of Genes, Processing of RNA, Protein Synthesis, Protein Structure
& Function, Proteomics and Global Analysis of Proteins. Regulate Gene
Expression including Regulation of Transcription in Prokaryotes, Regulation of
Transcription in Eukaryotes, Regulation at RNA Level, Analysis of Gene
Expression, Sub-cellular Life Forms, Plasmids, Viruses and Mobile DNA. Changing
the DNA Blueprint including Mutations and Repair, Recombination, Bacterial
Genetics and Molecular Evolution
NTR 5146: Behavioral Group
Therapy: Focuses on the basic issues and key concepts of group processes
and the application of these concepts in a variety of group settings.
NTR 6130: Human Nutrition
Science: Focuses on human nutrition, genetics, Nutritional status,
Nutritional epidemiology, Basic nutrients, Alcohol, Vitamins, Water,
electrolytes, minerals and trace elements, Agricultural chemicals, Eating and
digestion, the metabolism of nutrients, Specific nutritional requirements,
Dietary deficiency, and Nutrition in the etiology of diseases.
NTR 6131: General
Biochemistry: Covers an Introduction to Biochemistry, History of Biochemistry,
types of molecules, Discipline related to Biochemistry, Biochemical Reactions,
Major types of Biochemical Reactions, Types of Chemical Groups, Carbohydrates,
Lipids, Proteins, Nucleic Acids, Enzymes, Membranes, Fermentation and Fats,
Hormones and Metabolic Disorder:
NTR 6132: Human Physiology:
The Study of Body Function, Chemical Composition of the Body, Cell
Structure and Genetic Control, Enzymes and Energy, Cell Respiration and
Metabolism, Interactions Between Cells and the Extra-cellular Environment, The
Nervous System: Neurons and Synapses, The Central Nervous System, The
Autonomic Nervous System, Sensory Physiology, Endocrine Glands: Secretion and
Action of Hormones, Muscle: Mechanisms of Contraction and Neural Control,
Blood, Heart and Circulation, Cardio Output, Blood Flow, and Blood Pressure,
The Immune System, Respiratory Physiology, Physiology of the Kidneys, The
Digestive System, Regulation of Metabolism and Reproduction
NTR 6133: Foundations of
Public Health: Addresses major functions and issues surrounding public health
service institutions, particularly within the context of a general
administrative structure. A framework for developing a foundation and
understanding of administrative, environmental, regulatory, financial and
planning factors, which influence public health services, is established.
NTR 6134: Principles and
Practices of Epidemiology: Presents the basic mathematical components,
ethics, and study design options in epidemiology, as well as the primary types
and sources of error in epidemiologic studies, in addition to covering key
issues associated with solving public health problems including solid
understanding of fundamental principles, the methodologies employed by
epidemiologists and other public health professionals.
NTR 6140: Evaluation of
Nutritional Status: Represents an intense research on constituents of food essential
for normal growth and development and reveals the discovery of proteins, fats,
carbohydrates, calcium, iron, thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, vitamin-c and energy
and thus provides an opportunity in understanding the nutritional intake of the
people.
NTR 6141: Genome
Organization, Structure and Maintenance: about the role of the
structure of chromatin, the organization of the genome, and the structure of
the inter-phase nucleus in the control of gene expression in eukaryotes. The
first section analyzes the relationship between gene expression and the dynamic
chromatin structure at the nucleon-some level. Section two looks into higher
order chromatin structure in relation to transcription. The final section
covers the molecular basis of epigenetic phenomena, like X-chromosome
inactivation, starting from our knowledge of chromatin structure. Together
these topics form the molecular basis for our understanding of cell
differentiation, knowledge essential for the design of transgenic animals and
plants and for gene therapy in humans. This course provides essential tools for
work on fundamental problems in transgenic and gene therapy. A number of human
disorders may turn out to be caused by genetic or somatic errors at this level
of gene control, making this field of central importance.
NTR 6142: Genome
Expression and Regulation: Structure of a Human Rhinovirus with its
Receptor Molecule; Cascade Regulation of Vaccine and Virus Gene Expression;
Transcriptional Activation by the Adenovirus E1A Proteins; Mechanisms
Regulating Nuclear Formation of the Hepatitis B Viruses; Transcriptional
Activation by the Hepatitis B Virus X Protein; Transcription Factors of the ETS
Family; Structure and Function of the Vesicular Gastritis Virus RNA-Dependent
RNA Polymerase; RNA Synthesis and mRNA Editing in Para-viral Infections;
Translational Regulation by viral Structural Proteins; The Regulation of
Corona-virus Gene Expression and Aspects of the Molecular Biology of Poliovirus
Replication.
NTR 6143: Health Benefits
of Functional Foods: Focuses on Nutria-genetics and metabolic diseases, Nutrition
intervention strategies to improve health, Nutrition consumption timing around
exercise sessions, Nutritional therapies for mental disorders, Health benefits
of particular foods, such as eggs, milk, cereal, garlic, cinnamon, nuts,
blueberries, Mineral and protein-enriched foods
NTR 6144: Metabolic
Disorders: Focuses on the disorders of carbohydrate metabolism and the
diseases of lipids metabolism, highlights the diseases of protein metabolism
including different forms of disorders, discusses the diseases associated with
nucleic acids metabolism, provides useful information on molecular genetics and
various instrumental techniques used in a clinical diagnostic laboratory and
presents An overview of respective macromolecules metabolism.
NTR 6145: Advanced Medical
Nutrition Therapy: A comprehensive coverage of the relevant physiology,
path-physiology, nutritional therapy and dietetic application for each
specialist dietetic area, with coverage of all major specialist areas involved
in the treatment of adults through clinical governance, including
patient-centered care, clinical decision-making and developing evidence-based
practice; in addition to focusing on advanced clinical practice describes
several clinical conditions or dietetic areas in detail.
NTR 6146: Food Intake: Regulation,
Assessing and Controlling: Presents current research in the regulation
and control of food intake. Topics discussed include understanding food intake
regulation in chicks; indigenous fermented foods and beverages produced in
Latin America; regulation of food intake and its relation to age and body
composition and food-borne carcinogens.
NTR 6147: Laboratory
Nutritional Assessment: Includes inflammatory biomarkers, biochemical
assessment of malnutrition, hydration status, nutritional anemia, and specific
information on more than 90 lab tests used for assessing nutrition-related
conditions and comprehensive list of medications that may give false lab test
results.
NTR 6148: Advanced
Community Nutrition: Provides students with the knowledge, skills, tools, and
evidence-based approaches that they need to promote health and prevent
diseases, and provides pertinent statistics on the national health objectives
and discusses traditional concepts as well as current and, emerging nutrition
issues and explains nutritional concepts and presents the learner with an
application of these important topics.
NTR 6149: Advanced
Nutrition and Human Metabolism: Focuses on cells and A Microcosm
of Life, The Digestive System, Mechanism for Nourishing the Body,
MACRONUTRIENTS AND THEIR METABOLISM, Carbohydrates, Fiber, Lipids, Protein,
Integration and Regulation of Metabolism and the Impact of Exercise and Sport,
Body Composition, Energy Expenditure, and Energy Balance, THE REGULATORY
NUTRIENTS, The Water-Soluble Vitamins, The Fat-Soluble Vitamins, Major
Minerals, Water and Electrolytes, Essential Trace and Ultra-trace Minerals,
Nonessential Trace and Ultra-trace Minerals.
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12.07 - Research
Subjects and Activities:
RES 4119: Graduation Research
Project: Examines a topic chosen by the learner in order to develop and
broaden professional or personal skills and knowledge, especially in applying
skills learned in coursework to a specific business or industry.
RES 4129: Graduation
Project: Independent project assignment that requires student to apply the
gained knowledge and training to include pure intellectual product with
narrative description and presentation based on scholar criteria.
RES 5699: Thesis: An
independent research and scholar reporting on a selected topic specifically
selected from related subjects. The department schedules and coordinates a
number of seminars to assist students selecting the topics and to fine tune
their work up to reporting. Credit is granted based on the quality of final
product after evaluation of correctness, simplicity and clarity, amount of work
done, amount of references and materials used and optimality factors.
RES 6120: Statistical
Modeling and Analysis for Complex Data Problems: reviews
some of today’s more complex problems, and reflects some of the important
research directions in the field. Twenty-nine authors – largely from Montreal’s
GERAD Multi-University Research Center and who work in areas of theoretical
statistics, applied statistics, probability theory, and processes – present
survey chapters on various theoretical and applied problems of importance and
interest to researchers and students across a number of academic domains.
RES 6121: Optimal
Experimental Design: Introduces the philosophy of experimental design, provides an easy
process for constructing experimental designs, calculating necessary sample
size using R programs and teaches by example using a custom made R program
package: OPDOE introduces experimenters to the philosophy of experimentation,
experimental design, and data collection. It gives researchers and
statisticians guidance in the construction of optimum experimental designs
using R programs, including sample size calculations, hypothesis testing, and
confidence estimation. A final chapter of in-depth theoretical details is
included for interested mathematical statisticians.
RES 6122: Mathematical
Modeling: complete range of basic modeling techniques: it provides a
consistent transition from simple algebraic analysis methods to simulation
methods used for research. Such an overview of the spectrum of modeling
techniques is very helpful for the understanding of how a research problem
considered can be appropriately addressed.
RES 6123: Research Methods
and Design: Learners gain a thorough understanding of statistical tests
appropriate to their dissertation topic and design, how to interpret the
results of the tests and how to conduct follow-up analyses, as appropriate.
This course includes guidelines and "best practices" for collecting
data. Power analysis, what it is, why do it, and how to use available software
is covered. Data preparation, use of software to analyze data, and
understanding the calculated results are covered. Experience with
computer-based statistical analysis techniques is stressed. Emphasizes what is
applicable to the Learner’s proposed research questions, design,
construct/variable definitions and properties of measurements.
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grade only.
RES 6124: Dissertation
Planning, Writing, and Defending: step-by-step through the
dissertation process, with check-lists, illustrations, sample forms, and updated
coverage of ethics, technology, and the literature review.
RES 7160: Concept Paper: Ethical
issues in research are studied and the Learner evaluates the research plan
developed in modules RSH8951-RSH8953 against accepted ethical principles and
practices in the field. The material developed in the modules is integrated
into a summarizing document called the Dissertation Research Proposal. The
proposal is comprised of Chapter I (Introduction), Chapter II (Literature
Review), and Chapter III (Methodology). The Learner develops the Dissertation
Research Proposal under the supervision of the faculty mentor, with a focus on
the conceptual and methodological clarity of the research plan for the
Learner’s dissertation topic. Once acceptable to the Learner and the faculty
mentor, the draft of the Research Proposal is reviewed by the Learner’s
Dissertation Committee and the University’s Ethics Committee.
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grade only.
RES 7161: Doctoral
Comprehensive Examination: Assures that the Learner has mastered
knowledge of his or her discipline, specialization, and can demonstrate
applications of that knowledge before formal candidacy status is granted and
research in support of the dissertation is initiated. Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory
grade only.
RES 7162: Doctoral
Dissertation Research l: Continuation of RSH8954-P. The draft of the
Dissertation Research Proposal is finalized and approved by the Learner’s
Dissertation Committee and the University’s Ethics Committee. All steps
necessary to begin data collection, including any necessary pilot testing, are
completed. Candidates for the Ph.D. must maintain continuous enrolment.
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grade only.
RES 7163: Doctoral
Dissertation Research ll: Dissertation data are collected and analyzed.
Candidates for the Ph.D. must maintain continuous enrolment.
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grade only.
RES 7164: Doctoral
Dissertation Research lll: the dissertation process is completed. The
manuscript is prepared, accepted by the Learner’s Dissertation Committee, and
the oral defense is conducted. Candidates for the Ph.D. must maintain
continuous enrolment. Candidates must have satisfied all financial obligations
to the University and be enrolled at the time the oral defended is conducted.
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory grade only.
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