This course surveys the principles and techniques of current and evolving business communication as a process in a variety of business situations. The course emphasizes planning, organizing, composing, and revising business documents using appropriate utilization of a variety of technological platforms, business related internet writing contexts, and web resources. Also, this course will incorporate a variety of internet-based communication tools relevant to doing business in today's world. This course is designed for students who already have college-level writing skills.
- Prerequisite: BUS 31 or
- Prerequisite: ENGL 1
- A3 - Critical Thinking
Principles of argumentative discourse applied to contemporary issues are studied in this course. An analysis of the relationship between evidence and the process of reasoning is included.
- Skills Advisory: Eligibility for English 1
- 1C: Oral Communication
- A1 - Oral Communication
- A3 - Critical Thinking
This course helps students to develop their critical thinking and writing skills beyond the level achieved in English 1. The course emphasizes the application of logical reasoning, analysis, and strategies of argumentation in critical thinking and writing, using literature (both fiction and non-fiction) and literary criticism as subject matter.
- Prerequisite: ENGL 1
- 1B: Critical Thinking-English Composition
- 3B: Humanities
- A3 - Critical Thinking
- C2 - Humanities
- Area III: Humanities
This advanced writing course is intended especially for English majors and other students desiring to develop rhetorical skills beyond those practiced in English 1. It stresses critical analysis and argument, and focuses on style in effectively communicating with various audiences.
- Prerequisite: ENGL 1
- A3 - Critical Thinking
- E - Lifelong Understanding and Self-Development
- Area III: Humanities
This course presents an overview of historians’ methods of research, critical analysis, and written argumentation and introduces historiography and historical theory. Students will apply these methods through a variety of written assignments, including a properly-documented academic research paper. This course’s research component will further students’ information competency skills.
- Prerequisite: ENGL 1
- 1B: Critical Thinking-English Composition
- 4F: History
- A3 - Critical Thinking
- D6 - History
- Area II-B: Social Science (Group B)
- Area III: Humanities
- Area IV-B: Language and Rationality (Group B) Option 1
A course in general logic emphasizing its applications to practical situations. The course covers both inductive and deductive techniques.
- Skills Advisory: Eligibility for English 1
- A3 - Critical Thinking
- Area III: Humanities
This is a beginning course in modern logic covering symbolic notation and translations, and decision procedures for validity and invalidity of arguments in sentential logic and predicate logic.
- A3 - Critical Thinking