|
School of
Arts and Sciences |
School of
Business Administration |
School of
Education
School
of Arts and Sciences
University West, Suite 209
3007 N Ben Wilson, Victoria, Texas 77901
Phone: 361.570.4201 Fax:
361.570.4207
Email: artssciences@uhv.edu
The School of Arts and Sciences seeks to provide high quality academic
programs that serve the educational needs and offer lifelong learning
opportunities primarily for those in the regions served by UH-Victoria
and its off-campus sites. Research and service are also important
parts of this school’s commitment to providing quality and excellence
in education.
The School of Arts and Sciences offers a variety of bachelor’s and
master’s degree programs designed to serve different student needs.
These degree programs provide the knowledge and skills students need
to enter the workforce, make career transitions, advance in their
chosen fields, or continue on to graduate school. In addition,
students who want simply to improve basic skills, explore new
interests, or enrich their understanding of the background and values
of their culture can select from numerous courses in the school to
enhance their education.
The School of Arts and Sciences strives to meet these commitments and
continuously improve its offerings by:
-
Hiring and retaining highly qualified
faculty who stay abreast in their field through research and
professional development.
-
Providing students with access to faculty
advisors who help them design programs of study to meet their
individual needs and goals.
-
Emphasizing the ethical values,
conceptual knowledge, global and multicultural understanding,
analytical skills, technical skills, and communication skills needed
in the specific fields of study.
-
Assessing and revising programs and
course offerings to ensure quality and to keep current with and
anticipate changes in workforce, educational, and social needs.
-
Offering students hands-on learning
opportunities such as internships, practica, laboratories, and class
project collaborations with local organizations.
-
Ensuring that educational opportunities
in the community are available and accessible through a variety of
efforts including distance learning, off-campus sites, and weekend
course offerings.
-
Participating in service and outreach
activities that contribute to the educational enhancement of the
students, school, university, system, the professions, and community
served by UH-Victoria.
Majors and Degrees Offered
The programs of the School of Arts and Sciences consist of the
following majors and academic concentrations within each major as
depicted in the following table.
Secondary Teacher Certificate:
Students seeking secondary teacher certification in mathematics,
computer science, English, history, or composite science should refer
to the certification requirements listed in the School of Education
section of this catalog.
|
MAJOR |
DEGREE |
CONCENTRATIONS |
|
Applied Arts and Sciences |
B.A.A.S. |
|
|
Biology |
B.S. |
|
|
Communication |
B.A. / B. S. |
|
|
Computer Science |
B.S. |
Computer Science
Information Systems |
|
Criminal Justice |
B.S. |
|
|
Humanities |
B.A. |
English
History |
|
Interdisciplinary Studies |
M.A.I.S. |
|
|
Mathematical Sciences |
B.A. / B.S. |
Mathematics
Preliminary Actuary |
|
Psychology |
B.A. / B.S. |
|
| |
M.A. |
Counseling Psychology
School Psychology |
Academic Minors
Policy: Several areas in the School of Arts and Sciences offer minors.
Students may earn a minor by satisfying the following requirements:
-
Students must complete a minimum of 15
semester hours of work in the minor field. Some minors may include
additional coursework, not to exceed 21 semester hours.
-
Students must complete any prerequisites
required by the program offering the minor.
-
At least 12 semester hours must be upper
division courses, although individual minors may require more hours at
the upper level.
-
At least nine of the 12 upper division
hours must be taken with UHV.
-
Students must earn a 2.00 minimum
cumulative grade point average on courses attempted in the minor.
-
The minor field must be different from
the major.
-
No credit hours may be used to satisfy
both major and minor requirements.
-
Students must complete all coursework
required for a minor in addition to all courses for the degree prior
to graduation.
Minors are not available for students in
the Bachelor of Applied Arts and Sciences degree or in any
undergraduate program leading to secondary school certification.
Students should inform their academic advisors or the degree plan
counselor when they begin their degree plan that they plan to complete
a minor so that appropriate coursework can be completed.
Academic Minor Requirements
BIOLOGY – 17 hrs.
-
Students must complete a minimum of 17
semester credit hours in biology in addition to biology courses taken
to satisfy core curricular requirements.
-
At least 14 of these hours must be taken
at UHV.
-
BIO 4337 Cell & Molecular Biology, or BIO
3320 Human Genetics, or BIO 4313 Molecular Genetics is required – 3
hours.
-
At least one biology laboratory course is
required – 2 hours.
COMMUNICATION—15 hrs.
-
Students must complete a minimum of 15
semester credit hours in communication in addition to any
communication courses taken to satisfy major requirements.
-
At least 12 of these hours must be taken
at UHV.
COMPUTER INFORMATION SYSTEMS—21
hrs.
-
Lower Division: 3 hours of C/C++ and 3
hours selected from Advanced C/C++, Pascal, Ada, Java, or Visual Basic
(Advanced C/C++ or Visual Basic highly recommended)—6 hours *
*Beginning in Fall 2003, students who have not yet completed their
lower division computer programming courses should take the new
courses COSC 1436 and COSC 1437 instead.
-
ISC 3317, 3331, 3333, and 3315 are
required. Students who test out of ISC 3317 will take an advanced
computer information systems course in its place.—12 hours
-
3 hours in an upper-level ISC course
excluding 4305—3 hours
COMPUTER SCIENCE—21 hrs.
-
Lower Division: 3 hours of C/C++ and 3
hours selected from Advanced C/C++, Pascal, Ada, Java, or FORTRAN
(Advanced C/C++ highly recommended)—6 hours *
*Beginning in Fall 2003, students who have not yet completed their
lower division computer programming courses should take the new
courses COSC 1436 and COSC 1437 instead.
-
ISC 3317, 3331, 3333, and 3332 are
required. Students who test out of ISC 3317 will take an advanced
computer science course in its place.—12 hours
-
3 hours in an upper-level ISC course
excluding 3325 and 4305—3 hours
CRIMINAL JUSTICE—15 hrs.
ENGLISH—15 hrs.
HISTORY—15 hrs.
MATHEMATICS—21 hrs.
-
Lower Division: Calculus I, Calculus II
are required—6 hours
-
MAS 3391, 3361, 4310, and 4311 are
required—12 hours
-
3 hours of upper-level course work in
math are required; no independent study allowed—3 hours
NONPROFIT LEADERSHIP – 15 hrs.
Students must complete the following 5 courses:
-
NPL 4337 Public Policy and Quality of
Life
-
NPL 4333 Principles of Nonprofit
Leadership and Management
-
NPL 4335 Finance, Development, and
Fund-Raising
-
COM 4314 Intercultural Communication
-
ISC 3325 Information Systems in
Organizations
PSYCHOLOGY—15 hrs.
Degree Requirements for the
Bachelor of Applied Arts and Sciences (B.A.A.S.)
Students first entering college in Fall
1999 or after should see section on “New Core Curriculum” under
“General Requirements for a Bachelor’s Degree.”
-
Satisfy Core Curriculum Requirements
for students entering college in Fall 1999 or after. See “General
Requirements for a Bachelor’s Degree.” (It may be necessary for
students in this program to obtain additional English, history, or
government courses from community colleges in order to meet UH-Victoria’s
requirement.)
-
General Requirements:
• Lower Division - 24-44 vocational/technical courses; 3 semester
hours of speech and
satisfy computer literacy/proficiency requirement.
• Upper Division - 16 semester hours; ENG 3430 Professional Writing;
COM 3325 Advanced
Professional Speaking; COM 4314 Intercultural Communication; HUM 4322
Ethics;
NPL 4333 Principles of Nonprofit Leadership and Management.
-
Concentration/Specialization – 15-21
semester hours chosen from one of the following alternatives:
a. General Business: 15 semester hours of business courses from at
least 3 of the following areas: Accounting (ACC), Finance (FIN),
International Business (IBS), Management (MGT), Marketing (MKT). No
more than 9 hours may be taken in any one area. All 15 semester hours
must be designated as upper division courses. At least 9 hours must be
taken from the University of Houston-Victoria.
b. Psychology: PSY 4311 Abnormal Psychology; PSY 4320 Principles of
Learning;
PSY 4314 History and Systems; and 9 semester hours of upper division
courses by advisement.
c. Communication: COM 3316 Organizational Communication, and 15
semester hours of upper division communication courses by advisement.
d. Computer Information Systems: 21 semester hours of upper division
computer science courses by advisement.
e. Legal Assistance and Administration: CJS 3316 Ethics of Social
Control, or MGT 3312 Legal Environment of Business, and 15 semester
hours from one of the following groups of courses. Students must take
at least 3 semester hours from each group.
• Group 1- Management Courses - MGT 4311 Human Resources Management;
MGT 4312 Staffing; MGT 4313 Compensation; MGT 4315 Contemporary Issues
in
Management; MGT 4300 Selected Topics in Management (by advisement).
• Group 2 - Criminal Justice - CJS 3321 American Court Systems; CJS
4310 Computers in
Criminal Justice; CJS 4312 Alternatives to
Incarceration; CJS 4313 Juvenile Justice
System; CJS 4318 Victimology;
CJS 4321 Policing in a Democratic Society.
f. Biology: 17 semester hours of upper division biology courses by
advisement, with at least 2 semester hours of laboratory coursework.
Biology concentrators should take General Biology, and Anatomy and
Physiology or General Chemistry as their lower division natural
science courses in the core curriculum.
g. Marketing: MKT 3311 Principles of Marketing, 12 semester hours of
upper division marketing courses by advisement. At least 9 hours must
be taken from the University of Houston-Victoria.
-
Additional electives to complete minimum
degree requirements of 122 semester hours and 54 upper division
semester hours.
Note: The total of lower and upper
division coursework in accounting, economics, finance, international
business, management, marketing, quantitative management science or
any other business discipline (e.g., business law) credited on the
degree plan may not exceed 24 semester hours (i.e., 20% of the minimum
BAAS degree requirements of 122 semester hours). In addition, a
student may not take more than 15 upper division hours in all business
disciplines.
These requirements are summarized in the
following table:
|
Applied Arts and
Sciences Major |
| I.
CORE CURRICULUM REQUIREMENTS (42 total core hours required). |
| II. MAJOR PROGRAM
REQUIREMENTS |
LD |
LD/UD |
UD |
TOTAL |
|
A. General |
|
ENG 3430 Professional Writing |
|
|
4 |
4 |
|
Computer Literacy / Proficiency |
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
SPCH |
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
COM 3325 Advanced Professional Speaking |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
COM 4314 Intercultural Communication |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
HUM 4322 Ethics |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
NPL 4333 Principles of NPL and Management |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
B. Concentration / Specialization |
|
1. Specialization (Vocational-Technical) |
24-44 |
|
|
24-44 |
|
2. Concentration |
15-21 |
|
|
15-21 |
| III. ELECTIVES
|
|
0-22 |
|
0-22 |
|
*TOTAL
|
|
|
|
122 |
*Total must be minimum of 122 semester hours with minimum of 54 s.h.
at upper division levels.
Degree Requirements for the
Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) and Bachelor of Science (B.S.)
(B.A. and B.S.)
The following requirements apply to all candidates for the Bachelor of
Arts or the Bachelor of Science. The Bachelor of Arts option is
available to those who choose majors in Communication, Humanities,
Mathematical Sciences, or Psychology. The Bachelor of Science option
is available to those who choose majors in Biology, Communication,
Computer Science, Criminal Justice, Mathematical Sciences or
Psychology.
-
Satisfy all university requirements for a
bachelor’s degree as found in the “UNIVERSITY DEGREE REQUIREMENTS”
section of this catalog.
-
Satisfy Core Curriculum Requirements for
students entering college in Fall 1999 or after.
-
Satisfy the requirements for either the
Bachelor of Arts or the Bachelor of Science, as follows:
a. Bachelor of Arts
(1) Lower or Upper Division: Foreign Language/ Linguistics: 6 semester
hours at the sophomore level in one foreign language or 3 semester
hours at the sophomore level and 3 semester hours in linguistics.
Students submitting an acceptable score on a standard foreign language
proficiency test approved by the School of Arts and Sciences may
substitute 6 semester hours of electives.
b. Bachelor of Science
(1) Lower Division: Natural Sciences: 11 semester hours in natural
sciences, at least 8 semester hours of which must be in laboratory
courses. Natural sciences include biology, biophysical sciences,
chemistry, geology, and physics.
-
Satisfy course requirements for the
major: At least 24 semester hours in one major of which at least 18
semester hours must be advanced.
Requirements for Specific Majors
Biology (B.S.)
Students first entering college in Fall 1999 or after should see
section on “New Core Curriculum” under “General Requirements for a
Bachelors Degree.”
-
Satisfy Core Curriculum Requirements for
students entering college in Fall 1999 or after. See “General
Requirements for a Bachelor’s Degree.”
-
Satisfy the requirements for the Bachelor
of Science.
-
General requirements:
• Lower Division - 3 semester hours of speech and
satisfy computer literacy/proficiency requirement; BIOL 1406 and BIOL
1407 General Biology for Science Majors; BIOL 2420 Elementary
Microbiology; CHEM 1407 Introductory Biochemistry; CHEM 1411 and CHEM
1412 General Inorganic Chemistry; PHYS 1401 General Physics; and MATH
2312 Precalculus.
• Upper Division - ENG 3430 Professional Writing;
MAS 3391 Probability and Statistics.
-
Concentration -
• Lower Division - CHEM 2323 Organic Chemistry I
• Lower Division or Upper Division - CHEM 2325
Organic Chemistry II, or BIO 4310 Biochemistry and BIO 4210 Laboratory
for Biochemistry.
• Upper Division - BIO 4313 Molecular Genetics;
BIO 4320 Embryology, or BIO 3330 Histology and BIO 3230 Laboratory for
Immunohistochemistry; BIO 4333 General Physiology, or BIO 3323
Comparative Anatomy; BIO 3326 Plant Biology and BIO 3226 Lab for Plant
Biotechnology, or BIO 4390 Phytochemicals and Human Health; BIO 4337
Cell & Molecular Biology and BIO 4237 Lab for Cell & Molecular
Genetics, or BIO 4335 Ecology and BIO 4235 Lab for Ecology; BIO 3340
Animal Behavior, or BIO 3342 Social Biology; BIO 4103 Biology Seminar
or BIO 4102 Independent Research in Biology.
-
Students must take a minimum of 4
semester hours of upper division laboratory: 2 s.h. must be BIO 4237
or BIO 4210.
-
Free electives - Enough electives to
fulfill the 122 semester hour requirement and the 54 semester hours of
upper division courses.
These requirements are summarized in the
following table:
Biology Major
|
I. CORE CURRICULUM REQUIREMENTS
(42 total core hours required). |
|
II. MAJOR PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS
|
LD |
LD/UD |
UD |
TOTAL |
|
A. General |
|
ENG 3430
Professional Writing |
|
|
4 |
4 |
|
Computer
Literacy/Proficiency |
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
SPCH
|
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
BIOL 1406
Biology for Science Majors |
4 |
|
|
4 |
|
BIOL 1407
Biology for Science Majors |
4 |
|
|
4 |
|
BIOL 2420
Elementary Microbiology |
4 |
|
|
4 |
|
CHEM 1411
General Inorganic Chemistry |
4 |
|
|
4 |
|
CHEM 1412
General Inorganic Chemistry |
4 |
|
|
4 |
|
PHYS 1401
General Physics |
4 |
|
|
4 |
|
CHEM 1407
Introductory Biochemistry |
4 |
|
|
4 |
|
MATH 2312
Precalculus |
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
MAS 3391
Probability and Statistics |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
B. Concentration |
|
CHEM 2323
Organic Chemistry I |
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
CHEM 2325
Organic Chemistry II
Or
BIO 4310 Biochemistry
and BIO 4210 Lab for Biochemistry |
|
3-5 |
|
3-5 |
|
BIO 4313
Molecular Genetics |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
BIO 4320
Embryology
Or BIO 3330 Histology
and BIO 3230 Lab for Immunohistochemistry |
|
|
3-5 |
3-5 |
|
BIO 4333
General Physiology
Or BIO 3323 Comparative Anatomy |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
BIO 3326
Plant Biology
And BIO 3226 Lab for Plant Biotechnology*
Or BIO 4390 Phytochemicals & Human Health |
|
|
3-5 |
3-5 |
|
BIO 4337
Cell & Molecular Biology
And BIO 4237 Lab for Cell & Molecular Genetics*
Or BIO 4335 Ecology
and BIO 4235 Lab for Ecology* |
|
|
5 |
5 |
|
BIO 3340
Animal Behavior
Or BIO 3342 Social Biology |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
BIO 4103
Biology Seminar
Or BIO4102 Independent Research in Biology
|
|
|
1 |
1 |
|
III. FREE ELECTIVES –
Additional hours to satisfy the 122 minimum requirement
of hours on the degree plan and the 54 hour minimum of upper
division hours. |
|
** TOTAL |
|
|
|
122 |
* Students must complete a minimum of 4
semester hours of upper division laboratory, two of which
must be BIO
4237 or BIO 4210.
** Total must be minimum of 122 s.h. with minimum of 54 s.h. at upper
division level.
Premedical and Predental Program
The Bachelor of Science degree in Biology and courses taught at the
University of Houston-Victoria fulfill the admissions requirements for
most medical and dental schools in the United States and its
protectorates.
Premedical and predental students are advised that most medical
schools require the following courses; however, students are
responsible for determining the specific requirements of those medical
schools selected for application. A majority of this course work needs
to be completed at the lower division.
|
General Chemistry |
One year with laboratory |
|
Organic Chemistry |
One year with laboratory |
|
General Physics |
One year with laboratory |
|
Calculus |
One-half year |
|
Biology |
Two years, one with laboratory |
Furthermore, students need to take the Medical College Admissions Test
(MCAT) or the Dental School Admissions Test (DAT) to fulfill admission
requirements of most medical and dental schools. These tests are
usually taken at the end of the junior year of college. To prepare for
these exams, students will also need to take upper division biology
courses such as Genetics, Biochemistry, Cell Biology, Human Physiology
and Anatomy. These courses, although not always specified by
professional schools, are recommended by the Pre-Professional
(Premedical, Predental) Advisor at UHV.
Most professional colleges require the completion of a bachelor’s
degree and a high GPA to obtain admission. Some schools will admit
exceptionally well-qualified students with high grades and MCAT/DAT
scores before they complete a bachelor’s degree.
UHV has an established Pre-medical/Predental advisory board to support
and provide advice to applicants. Letters of recommendation from the
Pre-Professional (Premedical, Predental) Advisor/board can be provided
only for students who have fulfilled the above requirements and
completed at least 3 upper division courses at UHV including the core
courses for a BS in Biology. The recommendations will require above
average grades and close interaction with the Pre-Professional
(Premedical, Predental) Advisor, and board.
Communication (B.A. or B.S.)
Students first entering college in Fall 1999 or after should see
section on “New Core Curriculum” under “General Requirements for a
Bachelor’s Degree.”
1. Satisfy Core Curriculum Requirements
for students entering college in Fall 1999 or after. See “General
Requirements for a Bachelor’s Degree.”
2. Satisfy the requirements for the Bachelor of Arts or the Bachelor
of Science degree.
3. General requirements:
• Lower Division or Upper Division
- 3 semester hours of speech and satisfy computer literacy/proficiency
requirement.
• Upper Division – ENG 3430 Professional Writing; PSY 4318
Research Methods for the Social Sciences or MKT 4311 Buyer Behavior;
PSY 3315 Statistics for the Social Sciences; ENG 3312 Grammar and
Rhetoric; 9 semester hours of HUM, HIS, or ENG courses.
4. Concentration/Specialization: 24 semester hours, including COM 4314
Intercultural Communication; COM 3316 Organizational Communication;
and 18 semester hours, which can include up to 3 semester hours of
lower division communication or speech classes.
5. Free electives - Enough electives to fulfill the 122 semester hour
requirement and the 54 semester hours of upper division courses.
These requirements are summarized in the following table:
Communication Major
|
I. CORE CURRICULUM REQUIREMENTS (42 total
core hours required.) |
|
II. MAJOR PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS |
LD |
LD/UD |
UD |
TOTAL |
|
A. General |
|
ENG 3430 Professional Writing |
|
|
4 |
4 |
|
Computer Literacy / Proficiency |
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
SPCH |
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
ENG 3312 Grammar and Rhetoric |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
PSY 4318 Research Methods for the Social Sciences
Or MKT 4311 Buyer
Behavior |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
PSY 3315 Statistics for Social Sciences |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
Natural Science with Lab (for B.S. option) |
4 |
|
|
4 |
|
Foreign Language (for B.A. option) (6 s.h. in same
foreign language or 3 s.h.
in soph. Level foreign
language and 3 s.h.in
linguistics.) |
|
6 |
|
6 |
|
Nine s.h. UD HUM/HIS/ENG |
|
|
9 |
9 |
|
B. Concentration
/ Specialization (24 s.h.) |
|
COM 4314 Intercultural Communication |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
COM 3316 Organizational Communication |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
COM elective (LD/UD) |
|
3 |
|
3 |
|
COM electives (UD) |
|
|
15 |
15 |
|
III. FREE ELECTIVES – Additional hours to
satisfy the minimum of 122 credit hours on the degree plan and
any other minimums such as 54 upper division hours.)
|
|
|
|
*TOTAL |
|
|
|
*122 |
*Total must be minimum of 122 s.h.
with minimum of 54 s.h. at upper division level.
Computer Science (B.S.)
Students first entering college in
Fall 1999 or after should see section on “New Core Curriculum” under
“General Requirements for a Bachelor’s Degree.”
The Computer Science program offers a
choice of two concentrations:
(a) Computer
Science, (b) Information Systems.
1.
Satisfy Core Curriculum Requirements for students entering college in
Fall 1999 or after. See
“General
Requirements for a Bachelor’s Degree.”
2.
Satisfy the requirements for the Bachelor of Science.
3.
General Requirements:
· Lower
Division - 3 semester hours of speech; natural sciences with lab (for
a total of 11 semester hours of natural sciences).
· Upper
Division – ENG 3430 Professional Writing; ISC 3317 Object Oriented
Programming and Design*; ISC 3331 Data Structures and Algorithms I;
ISC 3333 Data Structures and Algorithms II; ISC 4320 Software
Engineering; ISC 4336 Database Systems; ISC 4337 Operating Systems;
ISC 4350 Information Security, Privacy and Ethics; MAS 3362 Discrete
Structures; MAS 3391 Probability and Statistics. (*Students who test
out of ISC 3317 will take an advanced course in computer science or
information systems.)
4.
Concentration
a. Computer
Science
· General
requirements: Lower Division -- 6 semester hours of calculus, 3
semesters of C/C++ programming and 3 semester hours from Fortran, Ada,
Pascal, Java, or Advanced C/C++ (Advanced C/C++ recommended); *
*Beginning
in Fall 2003, students who have not yet completed their lower division
computer programming courses should take the new courses COSC 1436 and
COSC 1437 instead.
· Concentration
requirements: Upper Division—ISC 3332 Computer Organization and
Architecture; ISC 4331 Structure of Programming Languages; ISC 4339
Telecommunication and Networks; 9 semester hours computer science or
mathematics courses by advisement (excluding ISC 3325, and 4305).
b. Information
Systems
· General
Requirements: Lower Division—MATH 1324 Finite Math; MATH 1325
Business Calculus; 9 semester hours from Pascal, C/C++, Java, Visual
Basic, and COBOL with at least 3 semester hours from C/C++ (6 hours of
C/C++ preferred) **
**Beginning
in Fall 2003, students who have not yet completed their lower division
computer programming courses should take the new courses COSC 1436;
COSC 1437; and one of the courses COSC 2436 / ITSE 1331 / ITSE
1431.
· Concentration
requirements:
Lower
Division – ACCT 2301 or 2401 Accounting Theory I; or ACCT 2302 or 2402
Accounting
Theory II.
Upper
Division – ISC 3315 Application Design Using GUI and Database; ISC
3325 Information
Systems in
Organizations; ISC 4321 Software Project Management; ISC 4339
Telecommunication
and Networks; MGT 3311 Principles of Management; MKT 3311 Principles
of Marketing; 6
upper division semester hours by advisement in computer
science/information systems (excluding ISC 4305).
5.
Free electives - Enough electives to fulfill the 122 semester hour
requirement and the 54 semester hours of upper division courses.
6. Students
must earn a grade of C or better in any course, including lower
division ones, that is a prerequisite to any upper division computer
science or math course they take in the program. In particular,
students may not transfer any course in computer science or math with
a grade of D or F.
These requirements are summarized in
the following table:
Computer Science Major
|
I. CORE CURRICULUM REQUIREMENTS (42
total core hours required.) |
|
II. MAJOR PROGRAM REQUIREMENTS |
LD |
LD/UD |
UD |
TOTAL |
|
A. General |
|
ENG 3430 Professional Writing |
|
|
4 |
4 |
|
SPCH |
3 |
|
|
3 |
|
Natural Science with lab |
4 |
|
|
4 |
|
ISC 3317 Object Oriented Programming and Design |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
ISC 3331 Data Structures and Algorithms I |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
ISC 3333 Data Structures and Algorithms II |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
ISC 4320 Software Engineering |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
ISC 4336 Database Systems |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
ISC 4337 Operating Systems |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
ISC 4350 Information Security, Privacy and Ethics |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
MAS 3362 Discrete Structures |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
MAS 3391 Probability and Statistics |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
B. Concentration |
|
1. Computer Science Concentration |
|
a. Lower Division |
|
|
|
|
|
Calculus |
6 |
|
|
6 |
|
Programming Language: (3-6 s.h. of C/C++; 0-3 s.h. of
Pascal, FORTRAN, Java, or Ada; 6
s.h. of C/C++ is
preferred) *** |
6 |
|
|
6 |
|
b. Upper Division |
|
|
|
|
|
ISC 3332 Computer Organization and Architecture |
|
|
3 |
3 |
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ISC 4331 Structure of Programming Languages |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
ISC 4339 Telecommunication and Networks |
|
|
3 |
3 |
|
Electives (UD) |
| |