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ITA 201 - Intermediate Italian 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Review of basic grammar and introduction of more advanced structures; intermediate level conversation, reading, and composition.
PREREQ: ITA 102 or four years of transcripted high school Italian. credit: 3 |
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ITA 202 - Continuing Intermediate Italian 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Continuation of Ita 201. Review of basic grammar and introduction of more advanced structures; intermediate level conversation, reading, and composition.
PREREQ: ITA 201 or four years of transcripted high school Italian. credit: 3 |
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ITA 300 - Contemporary Italy 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course surveys contemporary Italy: its political, cultural, and economic structures, with comparisons to American models and standards.
PREREQ: Upper division standing or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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ITA 301 - Advanced Italian A 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Advanced-level conversation, reading, and composition,with special emphasis on more complex grammatical structures.
Prerequisite: ITA 202 or instructor permission.
credit: 3 |
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ITA 302 - Advanced Italian B 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Continuation of Italian 301. Advanced-level conversation, reading, and composition, with special emphasis on more complex grammatical structures.
Prerequisite: ITA 301 or instructor permission.
credit: 3 |
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JLM 101 - History of American Journalism 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course introduces concepts and terminology of a Free Press from an historical perspective and invites students to investigate, analyze, and theorize about the relationship of uncensored communication to a free society. It teaches students to examine the guarantees of the First Amendment in relationship to major events in American history and in today’s society.
credit: 3 |
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JLM 209 - Introduction to Newswriting/Reporting 2013-2014 Catalog Year
An introduction to the news media with emphasis on gathering, writing and editing news stories.
PREREQ: JLM 101 OR BRC 108. credit: 3 |
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JLM 220 - Copy Editing 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Students study methods of newspaper production and practice preparing copy for publication, including editing for content, style and mechanics, headline writing, and using photographs and other display materials.
credit: 3 |
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JLM 309 - Advanced Newswriting/Reporting 2013-2014 Catalog Year
An advanced course in the journalism major that emphasizes beat reporting, feature writing, community journalism, and career preparation. Students work toward mastery in information gathering, reporting, and editing. They learn to apply ethical codes and practices in their work and to report fairly and accurately on issues of interest to diverse audiences.
PREREQ: JLM 209. credit: 3 |
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JLM 310 - Investigative Reporting 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course will introduce students to the investigative techniques used by reporters to gather, analyze, evaluate and report information. Emphasis will be on electronic data retrieval and analysis; sources of public documents and freedom of information; interviewing and methods used in science and social science research.
PREREQ: JLM 209. credit: 3 |
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JLM 312 - Sports Reporting and Writing 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Develop skills in reporting on sports games, personalities, press conferences, and issues. Learn how to research, interview, build sources, and cover the scene. Fact-check to gather material for accurate, informative and entertaining sports stories and multimedia class blog. Examine audience’s influence on sports writing for different sports media.
PREREQ: JLM 209 or instructor permission.
credit: 3 |
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JLM 319 - Practicum 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Students work as reporters on an on-line publication produced for the campus community and available on the World Wide Web. They are assigned beats to cover and work under the supervision of student editors (enrolled in Jlm 419) and with the guidance of the instructor. Reporters may work with text, audio, or video presentation of news and feature stories.
PREREQ: BRC 229 OR JLM 309, or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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JLM 325 - Writing About the Arts 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course teaches skills and techniques of the professional writer/journalist in gathering, evaluating, and transmitting information about arts and culture. Students learn appropriate terminology, attend performances and exhibits, interview artists, write for publication, and demonstrate understanding of the role of the arts in communities.
PREREQ: JLM 309 or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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JLM 409 - News Analysis and Opinion Writing 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Students learn the fundamentals of persuasive writing and apply them to editorials and columns. In addition, they use interpretive reporting techniques to analyze a complex issue facing society and produce a series of editorials about the issue for publication.
PREREQ: JLM 309 or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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JLM 419 - Journalism Senior Capstone 2013-2014 Catalog Year
The Senior Capstone in Journalism requires students to integrate and synthesize knowledge, theories, principles, and methods acquired through previous learning in General Education, Journalism, and interdisciplinary courses. The multi-focused course is comprised of a senior seminar, modified practicum, and independent research calling for critical analysis and public presentation of papers or projects.
PREREQ: Senior standing. credit: 3 |
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JLM 498 - Journalism Internship 2013-2014 Catalog Year
A program designed to give students on-the-job or field study experience with prestigious publishers or broadcast organizations or with other professional organizations in which students can develop the specific skills they will need to pursue careers in Journalism.
PREREQ: Upper division students in the major or minor. credit: 0 to 12 |
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JPN 101 - Elementary Japanese 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Preparation of students without previous knowledge of Japanese in the fundamentals of sound system, oral expression, reading, and writing. Introduction to Japanese culture.
credit: 3 |
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JPN 102 - Continuing Elementary Japanese 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Continuation of Jpn 101: Fundamentals of conversation, listening, reading, writing, composition, and culture.
PREREQ: JPN 101 or three years of transcripted high school Japanese. credit: 3 |
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JPN 201 - Intermediate Japanese 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Review of basic grammar and introduction of more complex structures. More advanced level conversation, listening, reading, writing composition.
PREREQ: JPN 102 or four years of transcripted high school Japanese. credit: 3 |
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JPN 202 - Continuing Intermediate Japanese 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course is a continuation of JPN 201. Review of basic grammar and introduction of more complex structures. More advanced level conversation, reading, writing and composition.
PREREQ: JPN 201 or four years of transcripted high school Japanese. credit: 3 |
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LIN 100 - Introduction to Linguistics 2013-2014 Catalog Year
An introduction to the scientific study of language as a universal human phenomenon. This course will combine an introduction to basic concepts in phonology, morphology and syntax with the sociocultural bases of human communication.
credit: 3 |
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LIN 200 - Phonetics, Phonology, and Morphology 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course is a focused introduction to phonetics, phonology and morphology. Phonetics is the study of the articulatory, acoustic and perceptual aspects of speech sounds. Phonology is the study of sound patterns in language. The aspects of morphology to be explored in this course are those related to phonological phenomena that occur at morpheme boundaries. This course builds on information and understanding gleaned in Linguistics 100.
PREREQ: LIN 100 or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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LIN 201 - Morphology, Syntax, and Semantics 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course is a focused introduction to the fields of morphology, syntax and semantics, which builds on information and understandings gleaned in LIN 100. Morphology is the study of word formation. Syntax is the study of sentence building. Semantics is the study of linguistic meaning. The course will equip students with the basic tools of modern linguistic analysis in these areas, and in the interfaces between these areas, as well as the understanding of what is gained from this analysis.
PREREQ: LIN 100 or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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LIN 300 - Theories of Linguistic Analysis 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course is an opportunity for students to understand the tenets and principles of theories about language. Language phenomena will be examined from various theoretical perspectives. Among these are formal linguistics, functional linguistics, and structural linguistics.
PREREQ: LIN 200 OR 201, or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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LIN 345 - Sociolinguistics 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course explores the relationships between language and society. It examines the circumstances which lead to variations in linguistic behavior within societies and its social significance. Emphasis is given to the effects of gender, age, class, and ethnic differences on verbal and written forms of expression.
PREREQ: Nine social and behavioral science hours including one of the following ANT 112, LIN 100 or SOC 100. EQUIVALENT COURSE: ANT 345
credit: 3 |
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LIN 373 - Syntactic Structures of English 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Techniques and assumptions of syntactic analysis, especially as applied to English.
PREREQ: Six hours of linguistics core courses OR ENG 271 and 273. credit: 3 |
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LIN 399 - Independent Study 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Investigations into specific areas of language study.
PREREQ: Instructor permission. credit: 1 to 3 |
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LIN 400 - Investigating Language: An Applied Capstone Course 2013-2014 Catalog Year
The capstone experience for linguistics is a senior seminar which will provide students with an opportunity to interact with a consultant who speaks an uncommonly taught language. In small groups and based on interviews with the consultant, students will analyze and describe the language’s phonology, morphology, grammar and other cognitive, psychological, pragmatic and cultural features, bringing together all of the aspects of language that students have learned about throughout their linguistics program. Multiple group projects will culminate in a public presentation on the overall analysis of the language.
PREREQ: LIN 200 and 201, or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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LIT 311 - Language and Literacy Development for All Learners 2013-2014 Catalog Year
The emphasis in this course is teaching literacy to all elementary school language learners across all content areas. This course is based on the premise that reading, writing, listening, speaking, and viewing are integral components of language processing and literacy. It uses these understandings to teach both the content and process of language acquisition and literacy development. Principles and structures of language are taught through the process of language use. That is, language skills are taught and modeled in context, then applied to the teaching of language arts in the elementary school.
Prerequisite: EDU 301
Corequisite: CED 330
credit: 3 |
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LIT 313 - Adolescence Literacy: Assessment and Intervention 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course is intended to provide adolescence education candidates with the ability to utilize the interrelationship of disciplined knowledge to further student understanding about how the world functions. Math, science, social studies, English, and foreign language education candidates will examine the common foundations, conceptual overlaps, and areas not addressed by conventional school subjects, but inherent within the broad spectrum of academia. Through a concept-driven approach, groups of interdisciplinary candidates will develop student learning activities and unit plans, which may be implemented in classroom settings. The intent is to develop reflective educators who can collaborate to use a variety of integrated teaching strategies that are inquiry-based and will address the needs and development levels of all learners.
PREREQ: LIT 396. credit: 3 |
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LIT 314 - Childhood Literacy: Assessment and Intervention 2013-2014 Catalog Year
The purpose of this course is to develop understandings about the nature and function of diagnostic and evaluative processes in literacy instruction. A primary focus of study will be on the application of information derived through diagnostic procedures and making decisions about instruction. Instructional procedures will be developed and implemented with individual students.
PREREQ: LIT 311. credit: 3 |
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LIT 396 - Teaching Literacy in the Content Areas Grades 7-12 2013-2014 Catalog Year
The purpose of this course is to introduce candidates to current approaches, materials, and methods for teaching literacy in the middle and secondary grades. This course will include an overview of the processes of reading and writing. Instructional strategies for promoting literacy within content areas will be discussed and demonstrated.
PREREQ: Admission to Adolescence Education major. credit: 3 |
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MAT 158 - Introduction to Statistics A 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Basic concepts in descriptive statistics, probability, and statistical inference including: frequency distributions, measures of location and dispersion, correlation, binomial theorem, sampling, statistical estimation and hypothesis testing.
Advisement Recommendation: NYS integrated algebra or equivalent
credit: 3 |
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MAT 208 - Mathematical Applications for Business and Management 2013-2014 Catalog Year
An introductory course emphasizing mathematics applicable to business and management. Students will develop a basic understanding of linear algebra and elementary calculus as these are used in business.
NOTE: Intended for Business majors. Not open to students who have passed MAT 210. credit: 3 |
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MAT 249 - Engineering Mathematics 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Covers mathematical methods for engineers. Topics include complex numbers and arithmetic, ordinary differential equations with application to system modeling, linear algebra with emphasis on solving linear equations, and numerical analysis with computational algorithms.
NOTE: Mathematics majors may not count both Mat 249 and Mat 348.
PREREQ: MAT 220 credit: 4 |
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MAT 303 - Introduction to Mathematical Thinking 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Development of investigation and proof skills in mathematics, together with mathematical writing, aimed at preparing students for MAT 330 and MAT 347. Includes proof techniques, mathematical induction, elementary number theory, sequences, limits, modular arithmetic and groups.
PREREQ: MAT 215 and MAT 220 credit: 3 |
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MAT 318 - Statistics in the Sciences 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Basic statistical methods for students majoring in the physical and social sciences. Topics include descriptive statistics, random variables, the normal and binomial distributions, random sampling and sampling distributions, parameter estimation, confidence intervals and significance testing. Applications in linear regression models, the analysis of variance, and categorical data analysis will be covered.
Offered: Fall, Spring
PREREQ: MAT 210 NOTE: The course prepares students for MAT 351, 352, 357, 358, and 359. This course is not an elective for any mathematics major. credit: 3 |
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MAT 350 - Introduction to Probability Theory 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This course is a calculus-based introduction to the theory of probability. It is designed for the prospective secondary school mathematics teacher. Topics include: the algebra of sets, the probability function, conditional probability, discrete and continuous random variables, simulation, sampling distributions and an introduction to game theory and Markov chains. Technology will be implemented in simulation exercises and data analysis.
Offered: Spring (Odd years)
PREREQ: MAT 215, 220, and 230, or instructor permission. NOTE: Both MAT 350 and 354 cannot be used to satisfy requirements in the same degree program. credit: 3 |
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MAT 409 - Mathematical Economics Problem Seminar 2013-2014 Catalog Year
A seminar for advanced students who wish to apply in detail particular aspects of Applied Mathematical Economics. Emphasis is on in-depth analysis of such problems as mathematical applications of macro economic theory, micro economic theory and economic dynamics. Not open for math credit for math majors
PREREQ: ECO 101 and ECO 200 and MAT 210 and either CSC 120 OR CSC 212, or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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MAT 498 - Internship in Mathematics 2013-2014 Catalog Year
A course designed for students who wish to take part in a semester long Experience-based Education placement related to the academic major. Students will work in a position in industry, business, government, or an agency setting for the purpose of applying academic learning in a work setting.
Offered: Irregular
PREREQ: Upper division standing, instructor permission, and departmental approval. NOTE: May be used to satisfy part of the capstone requirement for mathematics majors. credit: 0 to 12 |
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MAT 499 - Independent Study 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Offered: Irregular
PREREQ: Specific 300 level course(s) and instructor permission, and Mathematics Department Chair approval. NOTE: This course may be taken for credit more than once with permission of the instructor and the Mathematics Department Chair. credit: 1 to 3 |
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MAX 101 - Intermediate Algebra 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This is an intermediate algebra course. Topics covered include signed numbers, exponents, radicals, absolute value, inequalities, factoring, rational expressions, and quadratic equations.
Offered: Fall, Spring
NOTE: This course may be taken for general college credit, but credits from this course may not be used to satisfy any mathematics requirement nor to satisfy college credit requirements for graduation. credit: 0 |
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MDS 400 - Medieval and Renaissance Studies Interdisciplinary Seminar 2013-2014 Catalog Year
As a capstone to the medieval and renaissance studies minor, the seminar provides students with an opportunity to integrate the knowledge gained from several disciplines— such as art, history, literature, music, philosophy and theatre terms of several research papers and/or oral reports.
PREREQ: Twelve hours of medieval and renaissance studies courses and permission of seminar director. At least three disciplines must be represented in the twelve hours. credit: 3 |
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MET 100 - Meteorology 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Study of weather phenomena and introduction to the physical principles governing the atmosphere; instruments and observations; surface weather map interpretation.
credit: 3 |
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MET 210 - Meteorology for Science Majors I 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Similar to MET 100, but recommended for science majors.
credit: 3 |
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MET 210L - Introductory Meteorology Lab 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Introduction to basic methods of analysis of meteorological data including: instrumentation and weather observation; decoding and plotting data; analysis on surface and upper-air charts; stability analysis using thermodynamic diagrams; weather maps and forecasting.
COREQ: MET 210 or MET 100 with consent of instructor. credit: 1 |
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MET 211 - Meteorology Science Majors Lab 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Introduction to basic methods of analysis of meteorological data including: instrumentation and weather observation; decoding and plotting data; analysis on surface and upper-air charts; stability analysis using thermodynamic diagrams; weather maps and forecasting.
PREREQ: MET 210 concurrently or MET 100 with consent of instructor.
credit: 1 |
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MET 215 - Global Weather and Climate Catastrophes 2013-2014 Catalog Year
The meteorology and geography of weather disasters in the non-western world. An in-depth study of the cultural, economic, and political aspects of such disasters. The technology of detection and warning and strategies to minimize risk from hazardous weather and climate change.
credit: 3 |
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MET 220 - Meteorology for Science Majors II 2013-2014 Catalog Year
This noncalculus-based course will help students further their understanding of the structure and evolution of mid-latitude and tropical weather systems, the formation of clouds and thunderstorms, and introductory climatology. Students will learn the fundamentals of weather forecasting through case studies and by participation in the SUNY Oswego Daily Weather Forecasting Contest.
PREREQ: MET 210L with either one of MET 210 or 100. credit: 3 |
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MET 301 - Synoptic Meteorology I 2013-2014 Catalog Year
A study of the structure and behavior of synoptic-scale midlatitude weather systems including the fundamentals of weather analysis and forecasting and the application of the physical laws governing the atmosphere.
Prerequisites: MET 210 Lab, MET 220, CSC 212 or MET 310, MAT 240, PHY 213; Corequisite MET 302, or by permission of instructor
Credits: 3
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MET 302 - Synoptic Meteorology Laboratory I 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Participation in the SUNY Oswego Daily Weather Forecast Contest; decoding, plotting and analysis of surface and upper air observations; computation of thermodynamic, kinematic and moisture variables; interpretation of satellite and radar imagery; interpretation and evaluation of model predictions and other weather guidance.
Corequisite: MET 301
Credits: 1
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MET 305 - Climatology 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Elements of climate and factors producing climates; standard classifications of climate regions; world patterns and variations. Introduction to climatological statistics.
PREREQ: MET 100 or 210 or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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MET 310 - Computer Applications in Meteorology 2013-2014 Catalog Year
Introduction to the analysis of meteorological data using computers. Use of objective analysis to compute products used in weather forecasting. Formulation of the operational weather prediction models.
PREREQ: MAT 210 and MET 210 or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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MET 315 - Weather Disasters 2013-2014 Catalog Year
The meteorology of weather disasters including tornado outbreaks, floods, droughts, hurricanes, heat waves, blizzards, and hazards to aviation. An in-depth study of the social and economic impact of such disasters and the technology of detection and warning.
PREREQ: Upper division standing or instructor permission. credit: 3 |
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