Courses
& Descriptions
All courses run for the full ten-week term of
March 29-June 11, 2010 unless otherwise noted in the following descriptions.
Undergrad
Athens Campus Courses
| $283 per hour Ohio resident |
$578 per hour nonresident |
Grad
Athens Campus Courses
| $387 per hour Ohio resident |
$718
per hour nonresident |
Undergrad
Regional Campus Courses
| $139 per hour Ohio resident with less than 96 hours |
$153 per hour Ohio resident more than 96 hours |
| $270 per hour nonresident less than 96 hours |
$297 per hour nonresident more than 96 hours |
This tuition estimator will help determine what your tuition fee will be for registration of multiple classes scheduled at multiple campuses.
The following courses were offered Spring quarter 2009. Please check back in October for Spring quarter 2010 quarter.
RN to BSN students please check with the School of Nursing for questions and assistance.
*** - Newly scheduled courses
*** Principles of Microeconomics (2S) Instructor: Dr. Doug Adie -- Athens Campus
| ECON 103 |
Call #55062 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad. Basic theory and economic analysis of prices, markets, production, wages, interest, rent, and profits. Analysis of how the capitalistic system determines what, how, and for whom to produce.
*** Principles of Macroeconomics (2S) Instructor: Dr. Doug Adie -- Athens Campus
| ECON 104 |
Call #55063 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad. Basic theory of national income analysis. Causes of unemployment and inflation. Monetary and fiscal policies of the federal government.
*** Marketing Principles Instructor: Dr. Ashok Gupta --
Athens Campus
| MKT 202 |
Call
#55050 |
(4 credits) |
$1132
Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312
Nonresident |
Undergrad or Grad. Prerequisite: Sophomore. This course provides a broad understanding of marketing activities, decisions, and terms with an emphasis on the practices and problems of marketing managers and the analysis of the marketing environment.
*** Fundamentals of Philosophy (2H) Instructor: Dr. H. Gene Blocker -- Athens Campus
| PHIL 101 |
Call
#55059 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad.
Survey of selected basic problems, concepts, and methods in philosophy.
*** Introduction to Ethics (2H) Instructor: Dr. H. Gene Blocker --
Athens Campus
| PHIL 130 |
Call
#55060 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad. Discussion of classic and/or modern philosophical views of human values, ideals, and morality. Provides introductory survey of some main problems, concepts, and results of ethics including selected philosophers of past and present.
*** Philosophy of Art Instructor: Dr. H. Gene Blocker -- Athens Campus
| PHIL 232 |
Call
#55061 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad.
Conceptual analysis of common assumptions, attitudes, theories, and ideas about arts, their criticism, and appreciation.
*** General Psychology (2S) Instructor: Dr. Dan Lassiter -- Athens
Campus
| PSY 101 |
Call
#55051 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad.
Prerequisite: tier math placement level I or MATH 101 or MATH 102.
Intro to research methodology and descriptive and inferential statistics,
emphasizing the development of practical reasoning skills necessary
for the comprehension and critical evaluation of statistical information
typically encountered in everyday life.
*** Elementary Statistical Reasoning (1M) Instructor: Dr. Craig McCarthy -- Athens
Campus
| PSY 120 |
Call
#55052/55053 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad.
Prerequisite: (MATH 101 or 102 or placement level 1 or higher) & (Not PSY 121 or 221 or MATH 250 or 251 or QBA 201). Introduction to research methodology and descriptive and inferential statistics, emphasizing the development of practical reasoning skills necessary for the comprehension and critical evaluation of statistical information typically encountered in everyday life. No credit for both 120 and any of the following: MATH 250, MATH 250B, MATH 251, PSY 121. No credit if already credit for PSY 221 or QBA 201; no credit toward psychology major.
*** Statistics for Behavioral Science (1M) Instructor: Dr. James Bruning --
Athens Campus
| PSY 221 |
Call
#55054/55055 |
(5 credits) |
$1415 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2890 Nonresident |
Undergrad. Prerequisite: No credit for both 221 and any of the following: MATH 251, PSY 121, QBA 201, COMS 301, ECON 381. Introduction to descriptive and inferential statistics with emphasis on inferential statistics.
*** Child and Adolescent Psychology Instructor: Dr. Susan Tice-Alicke -- Athens Campus
| PSY 273 |
Call #55056 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad. Prerequisite: PSY 101 & (NOT EDEL 200 OR HCCF 160). Basic principles of human development from the prenatal period through adolescence. Theory and literature on physical, cognitive, and socioemotional development. No credit awarded if HCCF 160 or EDEL 200 has been taken. Will not count toward requirements for Education majors.
*** Educational Psychology Instructor: Dr. Susan Tice-Alicke -- Athens Campus
| PSY 275 |
Call #55057 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad. Prerequisite: PSY 101 & (NOT EDCI 275). Applications of psychological theories and models to educational settings (emphasis on schools). Major topics include goals of education; cognitive, social, and affective development in children; cognitive and behavioral models of learning; motivation; individual differences; effects of social class, ethnicity, gender, and cultural deprivation on learning and development; tests and evaluation. Emphasis is on the role of teachers and parents as facilitators of learning and development. No credit awarded if EDCI 275 has been taken.
*** Social Psychology of Justice Instructor: Dr. Dan Lassiter -- Athens Campus
| PSY 337 |
Call #55058 |
(4 credits) |
$1132 Ohio resident |
|
|
|
$2312 Nonresident |
Undergrad. Prerequisite: 9 HRS PSY INCL 101. Theory and research on the interface of psychology and the legal system (with an emphasis on social psychology). Specific topics include dilemmas faced by psychologists in the legal system; legality vs. morality; the socialization, training, and ethics of lawyers and police; perception memory and error in eyewitness testimony; hypnosis; lie detection and confessions; rights of victims and accused; rape and rapists; arrest and trial; jury selection; jury dynamics and deliberations; insanity and the prediction of dangerousness; sentencing; death penalty; rights of special groups; theories of crime.
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