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hensive manual outlines the specific details and objectives of the course. (Prerequisite: Prior approval from Criminal Justice Program Director. Students must be in the last semester of a Criminal Justice AS degree and have completed the following courses with a “C” or better before applying: CJSP1202, CJSP1204, CJSP1280, CJSP2202, CJSP2210, CJSP2220, and CJSP2230. Students may apply if they are completing no more than one of the above-mentioned classes during the same semester as the Internship. (4 Credits: 0 lecture/0 lab/4 OJT) CJSP2282 Internship, Field Experience This course is an opportunity to explore and enhance educational and career objectives through practical work experiences in a criminal justice related profession. Students will demonstrate knowledge learned while gaining applied first-hand experiences. The Internship/Field Experience is the final component of the Criminal Justice Program with a 3 credit minimum and 6 credit maximum: 50 hours of service for 1 credit. A comprehensive manual outlines the specific details and objectives of the course. (Prerequisite: Prior approval from Criminal Justice Program Director. Students must be in the last semester of a Criminal Justice AS degree and have completed the following courses with a “C” or better before applying: CJSP1202, CJSP1204, CJSP1280, CJSP2202, CJSP2210, CJSP2220, and CJSP2230. Students may apply if they are completing no more than one of the above-mentioned classes during the same semester as the Internship. (5 Credits: 0 lecture/0 lab/5 OJT) CJSP2283 Internship, Field Experience This course is an opportunity to explore and enhance educational and career objectives through practical work experiences in a criminal justice related profession. Students will demonstrate knowledge learned while gaining applied first-hand experiences. The Internship/Field Experience is the final component of the Criminal Justice Program with a 3 credit minimum and 6 credit maximum: 50 hours of service for 1 credit. A comprehensive manual outlines the specific details and objectives of the course. (Prerequisite: Prior approval from Criminal Justice Program Director. Students must be in the last semester of a Criminal Justice AS degree and have completed the following courses with a “C” or better before applying: CJSP1202, CJSP1204, CJSP1280, CJSP2202, CJSP2210, CJSP2220, and CJSP2230. Students may apply if they are completing no more than one of the above-mentioned classes during the same semester as the Internship. (6 Credits: 0 lecture/0 lab/6 OJT) COMC1714 Introduction to Visual Database Application Tools Databases store information in a structured form that enables multiple users to update rows, validate input, and generate queries and reports. This course covers database design concepts, filtering and sorting records, table relationships, referential integrity, import and export tools, visual database management tools, Windows forms, web forms, bound controls, report generation, iterative process, and source control. (Prerequisite or concurrent: COMC 1730 Introduction to Programming with .Net or instructor consent) (3 credits: 2 lecture/1 lab) COMC1723 Windows Operating System Understanding of the operating system is essential for anyone who plans to do more than the very basics when working on a computer. Students will learn the purpose and function of the operating system. The use and purpose of folders and directories will be examined. Students will learn to keep track of and find documents that have been saved on the computer. Search options, including indexing and file organization will be used. Some of the many applications that are included in the Windows Vista operating system will be examined. Networks and network models will be explored . Students will learn the hows and whys of backing up data. Plus security issues will be covered. Even a few basic hardware issues will be explored. The look and feel of Windows Vista will be explored and utilized. (Prerequisites: None) (3 Credits: 3 lecture/0 lab) COMC1730 Introduction to Programming with .Net This course introduces programming concepts using Microsoft’s .Net framework. Course includes: form layout, event-driven Windows and WebForms programming concepts, variables and data types, variable and control initialization, operators, objects and properties, control structures (if-else, for & while loops), arrays, functions, properties, parameter passing, source control, and unit testing. No previous programming experience is required. (3 credits: 2 lecture/1 lab) COMC1741 Web Design, HTML, CSS This course introduces web site design, authoring, management concepts using Microsoft Expression Web. Students will create web pages which include many common HTML formatting and navigation elements: lists, tables, links, graphics, and CSS styles. (Prerequisite: COMP2515 or instructor’s permission) (3 Credits: 3 lecture/0 lab) COMC1745 Web Design and Technologies II In this course, students will research, plan, design, implement, and evaluate web sites using a variety of technologies. Iterative design, responsive/mobile design, web server setup and administration, content management systems, cloud services, source control, continuous delivery, and social media integration will be covered. (Prerequisite: COMC1741) (3 credits: 2 lecture/1 lab) COMC1746 Web Graphics and Animation This course introduces web animation concepts including: animation technologies (animated gifs, Flash, Silverlight, HTML5 Canvas, scripting), vector graphics, transformations, storyboards, keyframes, motion paths, triggers, and user interaction. (3 credits: 2 lecture/1 lab) COMC1754 Microsoft Server Management for Web Developers This course introduces network server configuration and management concepts using Microsoft Windows Server. Course includes Windows Server Enterprise and Server Core installation procedures, user and service accounts, Active Directory, file and folder permissions, Group Policy, TCP/IP routing and subnetting, DHCP configuration, web and FTP server configuration, remote access and VPN configuration, command-line tools, and Docker containers. (3 credits: 2 lecture/1 lab) COMC2722 Database Design & Management with SQL Structured Query Language (SQL) is the standard language for defining, maintaining, and querying relational databases on all platforms from mainframes to microcomputers. This course covers relational database design and implementation using SQL. Topics include: select and sort queries, multiple table queries, subqueries, outer joins, aggregate functions, table updates, database design, entity-relationship (E-R) modeling, normalization, and database implementation, modifications & administration. (Prerequisite: none) (3 credits: 2 lecture/1 lab) Course Descriptions 119

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