2000

CISC 2190 Independent Study

Independent problem research under the guidance of a faculty member. Course level ("V") m ay range between 2 and 4, or sophomore through senior level, respectively. One to four hours of credit. Prerequisite: Written consent of the supervising professor, department chairperson, and Dean prior to registration. Lab fee.

1

CISC 2290 Independent Study

Independent problem research under the guidance of a faculty member. Course level ("V") m ay range between 2 and 4, or sophomore through senior level, respectively. One to four hours of credit. Prerequisite: Written consent of the supervising professor, department chairperson, and Dean prior to registration. Lab fee.

2

CISC 2305 Introduction to Computer and Engineering Sciences

The course examines the various aspects of Computer and Engineering Sciences. Topics will include the basic concepts of structured programming, structured systems design and development alternatives, systems environments, hardware organization and architecture, telecommunications, operating systems, computer graphics design, technology training, and multimedia. Lab fee.

3

CISC 2315 Discrete Structures of Computer & Engineering Sciences

A foundational course designed to introduce students to the concepts of discrete structures for Computer Science and to prepare them for courses that will utilize the methods they have mastered. Students will have practical experience using various discrete structure techniques to solve problems in Computer Science. Topics covered will be propositional and predicate logic, inference, functions, Boolean algebra, combinational digital logic, discrete probability, finite state machines and computability. Topics also covered are sets, recursive programs, graphs, trees, and lists. Corequisite: CISC 2305 or ENGR 1320. Lab Fee.

3

CISC 2325 Telecommunications & Networks

The course covers telecommunications, network terminology, and specific standards employed to create and maintain networks both locally, nationally, and globally. Topics covered include the ISO model, World Wide Web, network topologies, protocols, and security. Prerequisite: CISC 2305. Lab Fee.

3

CISC 2330 Introduction to Object-Oriented Programming

A foundational course designed to be a first course in object–oriented programming. The emphasis is on basic structured programming techniques including program design, problem-solving and data manipulation. Students will use the “C++” programming language to facilitate learning. Prerequisite: CISC 2305 or ENGR 1320. Lab fee.

3

CISC 2390 Independent Study

Independent problem research under the guidance of a faculty member. Course level ("V") m ay range between 2 and 4, or sophomore through senior level, respectively. One to four hours of credit. Prerequisite: Written consent of the supervising professor, department chairperson, and Dean prior to registration. Lab fee.

3

CISC 2391 Special Topics

Classes are organized to explore specialized problems in an area of Computer Science. May be repeated for credit when topics vary. Course level may range between sophomore through senior level, respectively. Lab fee.

3

CISC 2490 Independent Study

Independent problem research under the guidance of a faculty member. Course level ("V") m ay range between 2 and 4, or sophomore through senior level, respectively. One to four hours of credit. Prerequisite: Written consent of the supervising professor, department chairperson, and Dean prior to registration. Lab fee.

4