Course Descriptions


Graduate Courses
Listed alphabetically by course prefix

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Classification of Courses

3000-4999 Junior- and senior-level courses designed primarily for advanced undergraduate students. Selected 4000-4999 courses may serve the needs of the individual graduate students if approved for inclusion in an individual program of graduate study by a supervisory committee approved by the dean of the college.
5000-5999 Beginning graduate-level courses; may be taken by seniors with college permission.
6000-6999 Courses open only to graduate students. (Seniors, within nine hours of graduation that have a minimum 3.0 GPA and do not register for more than twelve hours may request college permission to take a 6000-level class.)
7000-7999 Doctoral-level courses.

Florida's Statewide Course Numbering System

Courses in this catalog are identified by prefixes and numbers that were assigned by Florida's Statewide Course Numbering System. This common numbering system is used by all public post-secondary institutions in Florida and by two participating nonpublic institutions. The major purpose of this system is to facilitate the transfer of courses between participating institutions.

Each participating institution controls the title, credit, and content of its own courses and recommends the first digit of the course number to indicate the level at which students normally take the course. Course prefixes and the last three digits of the course numbers are assigned by members of faculty discipline committees appointed for that purpose by the Florida Department of Education in Tallahassee. Individuals nominated to serve on these committees are selected to maintain a representative balance as to type of institution and discipline field or specialization.

The course prefix and each digit in the course number have meaning in the Statewide Course Numbering System (SCNS). The list of course prefixes and numbers, along with their generic titles, is referred to as the "SCNS taxonomy." Descriptions of the content of courses are referred to as "course equivalency profiles."

General Rule for Course Equivalencies

Equivalent courses at different institutions are identified by the same prefixes and same last three digits of the course number and are guaranteed to be transferable between participating institutions that offer the course, with few exceptions. (Exceptions are listed below.)

For example, a survey course in social problems is offered by 31 different postsecondary institutions. Each participating institution uses "SYG _010" to identify its social problems course. The level code is the first digit and represents the year in which students normally take this course at a specific institution. In the SCNS taxonomy, "SYG" means "Sociology, General," the century digit "0" represent "Entry-Level General Sociology," the decade digit "1" represents "Survey Course," and the unit digit "0" represents "Social Problems."

In science and other areas, a "C" or "L" after the course number is known as a lab indicator. The "C" represents a combined lecture and laboratory course that meets in the same place at the same time. The "L" represents a laboratory course or the laboratory part of a course, having the same prefix and course number without a lab indicator, which meets at a different time or place.

Transfer of any successfully completed course from one participating institution to another is guaranteed in cases where the course to be transferred is offered by the receiving institution and is identified by the same prefix and last three digits at both institutions. For example, SYG 1010 is offered at a community college. The same course is offered at a state university as SYG 2010. A student who has successfully completed SYG 1010 at the community college is guaranteed to receive transfer credit for SYG 2010 at the state university if the student transfers. The student cannot be required to take SYG 2010 again since SYG 1010 is equivalent to SYG 2010. Transfer credit must be awarded for successfully completed equivalent courses and used by the receiving institution to determine satisfaction of requirements by transfer students on the same basis as credit awarded to the native students. It is the prerogative of the receiving institution, however, to offer transfer credit for courses successfully completed which have not been designated as equivalent.

Example of Course Identifier

Prefix Level Code
(first digit)
Century Digit
(second digit)
Decade Digit
(third digit)
Unit Digit
(fourth digit)
Lab Code

SYG
Sociology,
General
1
Freshman
level at this
institution
0
Entry-level
General
Sociology
1
Survey
Course
0
Social
Problems
 
No laboratory
component
in this course

The Course Prefix

The course prefix is a three-letter designator for a major division of an academic discipline, subject matter area, or subcategory of knowledge. The prefix is not intended to identify the department in which a course is offered. Rather, the content of a course determines the assigned prefix used to identify the course. See the Alphabetical List of Course Prefixes.

Authority for Acceptance of Equivalent Courses

State Board of Education Rule 6A-10.024(17), Florida Administrative Code, reads:

"When a student transfers among postsecondary institutions that are fully accredited by a regional or national accrediting agency recognized by the United States Department of Education and that participate in the common course deisgnation and numbering system, the receiving institution shall award credit for courses satisfactorily completed at the previous participating institutions when the courses are judged by the appropriate common course designation and numbering system faculty task forces to be academically equivalent to courses offered at the receiving institution, including equivalency of faculty credentials, regardless of the public or nonpublic control of the previous institution. The award of credit may be limited to courses that are entered in the course numbering system. Credits so awarded shall satisfy institutional requirements on the same basis as credits awarded to native students."

Exceptions to the General Rule for Equivalency

The following courses are exceptions to the general rule for course equivalencies and may not transfer. Transferability is at the discretion of the receiving institution:
  1. Courses in the _900-_999 series (e.g., ART 2905)
  2. Internships, practica, clinical experiences, and study abroad courses
  3. Performance or studio courses in Art, Dance, Theater, and Music
  4. Skills courses in Criminal Justice
  5. Graduate courses

College preparatory, vocational preparatory courses may not be used to meet degree requirements and are not transferable.

Questions about the Statewide Course Numbering System and appeals regarding course credit transfer decisions should be directed to Dr. David R. Dees in Academic Services, AD 210, Phone (407) 823-2691 or the Florida Department of Education, Office of Postsecondary Education Coordination, 401 Turlington Building, Tallahassee, Florida 32399-0400. Special reports and technical information may be requested by calling telephone number (850) 488-6402 or Suncom 278-6402.

Special Courses

In addition to the regular courses listed in this catalog, special courses may be available. Consult an academic adviser for details. Only admitted graduate students may take special courses except the Special Topics/Seminars (5937 and 6938), which are open to eligible students with instructor permission.

In order to register for any of the special numbers below, a student must present a signed authorization form (GS-10) obtained from the Department.

  Special Grad Grad and Prof
Directed Independent Studies 5907 6908
Directed Research 5917 6918
Special Topics/Seminars 5937 6938
Internships, Practica, Clinical Practice 5944 6946
Study Abroad 5957 6958
Research Report   6909
Treatise (Thesis or Research Report)   6971
Thesis—Specialist   6973
Doctoral Research   7919
Doctoral Special Topics/Seminars   7939
Doctoral Dissertation   7980

These courses may be assigned variable credit. Some may be repeated upon approval.

Abbreviations in Course Descriptions

PR Denotes a PREREQUISITE course which must be taken and passed prior to enrollment in the listed course.
CR Denotes a COREQUISITE course which must be taken concurrently with or prior to the listed course.
C.I. Denotes that registration is contingent upon the CONSENT OF THE INSTRUCTOR.

Hours Code

Each course listed is followed by a code which shows hours of credit and contact hours.

Example
ECI 5215C ECS-CEE 3(2,3)

ECI 5215C is offered by the College of Engineering and Computer Science (ECS) in the Civil and Environmental Engineering (CEE) Department, carries 3 hours of credit, but requires 5 contact hours which consist of 2 hours in class and 3 hours laboratory or field work.

College/Department Indicator

Following the course number for each course is an indicator denoting the college and department responsible for the course. The college designators are AS = Arts and Sciences, BA = Business Administration, ED = Education, ECS = Engineering and Computer Science, and HPA = Health and Public Affairs.

College Abbreviation Department
AS AAS African American Studies
AS ART Art
AS BIOL Biology
AS CAS Arts & Sciences
AS CHEM Chemistry
AS COMM Communication
AS ENG English
AS FILM Motion Picture Technology
AS HIST History
AS IDS Interdisciplinary
AS JUD Judaic Studies
AS LANG Foreign Languages
AS LS Liberal Studies
AS MATH Mathematics
AS MUSIC Music
AS OASIS OASIS
AS PHIL Philosophy
AS PHYS Physics
AS POLS Political Science
AS PSYCH Psychology
AS R/TV Radio/TV
AS SOC/AN Sociology & Anthropology
AS STAT Statistics
AS THEA Theatre
AS WOM Women's Studies
BA ACCT Accounting
BA BUS Business
BA ECON Economics
BA FIN Finance
BA MAN Management
BA MAR Marketing
ED EPE Exceptional & Physical Education
ED EDF Educational Foundations
ED EDS Educational Services
ED EDU Education
ED IP Instructional Programs
ECS AFROTC Air Force ROTC-Aerospace
ECS AROTC Military Science-ArmyROTC
ECS CEE Civil & Environmental
ECS EECS Electrical Engr & Computer Science
ECS ENGR Engineering
ECS ENT Engineering Technology
ECS IEMS Industrial & Management
ECS MMAE Mechanical/Materials/Aerospace
HM HOSP Hospitality Management
HPA CJLS Criminal Justice/Legal Studies
HPA COMD Communicative Disorders
HPA H&PT Health Professions & Physical Therapy
HPA HIM Health Information Management
HPA HPA Health & Public Affairs
HPA M&M Molecular & Microbiology
HPA NURS Nursing
HPA PUB Public Administration
HPA SOWK Social Work

Alphabetical List of Course Prefixes

Prefix Course
ACG Accounting General
ACO Accounting: Occupational Technical
ADE Adult Education
ADV Advertising
AFH African History
AFR Air Force ROTC
AMH American History
AML American Literature
ANG Anthropology - Graduate
ANT Anthropology
APA Applied Accounting
APB Applied Biology
ARE Art Education
ARH Art History
ART Art
ASH Asian History
AST Astronomy
AVM Aviation Management
BCH Biochemistry
BCN Building Construction
BOT Botany
BSC Introductory Biology
BTE Business Teacher Education
BUL Business Law
CAP Computer Applications
CBH Comparative Psychology and Animal Behavior
CCE Civil Construction Engineering
CCJ Criminology and Criminal Justice
CDA Computer Design/Architecture
CEG Civil Geotechnical Structures
CES Civil Engineering Structure
CET Computer Engineering Technology
CGN Civil Engineering
CGS Computer General
CHI Chinese
CHM Chemistry
CHS Chemistry - Specialized
CIS Computer and Information Systems
CJT Criminal Justice Technology
CLA Classical and Ancient Studies
CLP Clinical Psychology
COC Computer Concepts
COE Cooperative Education
COM Communications
COP Computer Programming
COT Computer Theory
CPO Comparative Politics
CRM Computer Resources/Management
CRW Creative Writing
CWR Civil Water Resources
CYP Communication Psychology
DAA Dance Activities
DAE Dance Education
DEP Development Psychology
EAB Experimental Analysis of Behavior
EAS Engineering: Aerospace
ECM Engineering: Computer Mathematics
ECO Economics
ECP Economic Problems and Policy
ECS Economic Systems and Development
EDA Education: Administration
EDE Education: Elementary
EDF Education: Foundation
EDG Education: General
EDH Education: Higher
EDM Education: Middle School
EDP Education: Psychology
EDS Education: Supervision
EEC Education: Early Childhood
EED Education: Emotional Disorders
EEL Engineering: Electrical
EES Environmental Engineering Science
EET Electrical Electronic Technology
EEX Education: Exceptional Child - Care Competencies
EGC Guidance and Counseling
EGM Engineering: Mechanical
EGN Engineering: General
EGS Engineering: Support
EIN Engineering: Industrial
ELD Education: Specific Learning Disabilities
EMA Engineering: Materials
EME Education: Technology and Media
EML Engineering: Mechanical
EMR Education: Mental Retardation
ENC English Composition
ENG English - General
ENL English Literature
ENU Engineering: Nuclear
ENV Engineering: Environmental
ENY Entomology
EPH Education: Physical and Multiple Handicapped
ESE Education: Secondary
ESI Engineering Systems - Industrial
ESL English as a Second Language
EST Electronic Specialty Technology
ETC Engineering Tech: Civil
ETG Engineering Tech: General
ETI Engineering Tech: Industrial
ETM Engineering Tech: Mechanical
EUH European History
EVI Education: Visually Impaired - Blind
EVS Environmental Science
EVT Education: Vocational Technical
EXP Experimental Psychology
FIL Film
FIN Finance
FLE Foreign Language Education
FOL Foreign and Biblical Languages
FOT Foreign and Biblical Languages in Translation
FRE French Language
FRW French Literature (Writings)
FSS Food Service Systems
GEA Geography: Regional Areas
GEB General Business
GEO Geography
GER German Language
GEW German Literature (Writings)
GLY Geology
HBR Modern Hebrew Language
HBT Hebrew Language Translation
HFT Hotel and Restaurant
HLP Health Education
HMW Modern Hebrew Literature (Writings)
HSA Health Services Administration
HSC Health Science
HUM Humanities
HUN Human Nutrition
IDH Interdisciplinary Honors
IDS Interdisciplinary Studies
INP Industrial and Applied Psychology
INR International Relations
ISM Information Systems Management
ISS Interdisciplinary Social Sciences
ITA Italian Language
ITW Italian Literature (Writings)
JOU Journalism
JPN Japanese
JST Judaic Studies
LAE Language Arts and English Education
LAH Latin American History
LAT Latin
LEI Leisure
LIN Linguistics
LIS Library Science
LIT Literature
MAA Mathematics - Analysis
MAC Mathematics - Calculus and Precalculus
MAD Mathematics - Discrete
MAE Mathematics Education
MAN Management
MAP Mathematics - Applied
MAR Marketing
MAS Mathematics: Algebraic Structures
MAT Mathematics
MCB Microbiology
MET Meteorology
MGF Mathematics: General and Finite
MHF Mathematics: History and Foundations
MIS Military Science
MLS Medical Laboratory Science
MMC Mass Media Communication
MRE Medical Records
MTG Mathematics: Topology and Geometry
MUC Music: Composition
MUE Music Education
MUG Music Conducting
MUH Music: History/Musicology
MUH Music: Music Literature
MUN Music: Music Ensembles
MUS Music
MUT Music: Theory
MVB Music: Applied - Brasses
MVK Music: Applied - Keyboard
MVO Music: Applied - Other Instruments
MVP Music: Applied - Percussion
MVS Music: Applied - Strings
MVV Music: Applied - Voice
MVW Music: Applied - Woodwinds
NGR Nursing - Graduate
NUR Nursing
NUU Nursing Universals
OCE Oceanography
OST Office Systems Technology
PAD Public Administration
PCB Process Cell Biology
PCO Psychology for Counseling
PEL Physical Education Acts (GEN) - Object Centrd., Land
PEM Physical Education Acts (GEN) - Perform Centrd., Land
PEN Physical Education Acts (GEN) - Water, Snow, Ice
PEO Physical Educ Acts(PROFNL)-Object Centrd.,Land
PEP Physical Educ Acts (PROFNL) - Perf. Centrd. Land
PEQ Physical Education Acts (PROFNL) - Water, Snow, Ice
PET Physical Education Theory
PGY Photography
PHH Philosophy, History of
PHI Philosophy
PHM Philosophy of Man and Society
PHS Physics - Specialized
PHT Physical Therapy
PHY Physics
PHZ Physics Continued
PLA Paralegal/Legal Asst./Legal Admin.
POS Political Science
POT Political Theory
PPE Psychology of Personality
PSB Psychobiology
PSC Physical Sciences
PSY Psychology
PUP Public Policy
PUR Public Relations
RAT Radiation Therapy
RED Reading Education
REE Real Estate
REL Religion
RET Respiratory Therapy
RMI Risk Management and Insurance
RTE Radiological Sciences
RTV Radio-Television
RUS Russian Language
SCE Science Education
SED Speech Education
SLS Student Life Skills
SOP Social Psychology
SOW Social Work
SPA Speech Pathology and Audiology
SPC Speech Communication
SPN Spanish Language
SPS School Psychology
SPW Spanish Literature (Writings)
SSE Social Studies Education
STA Statistics
STD Student Development
SUR Surveying
SYA Sociology Analysis
SYD Sociology of Demography and Area of Studies
SYG Sociology, General
SYO Sociology - Social Organizations
SYP Sociology - Social Processes
TAX Taxation
THE Theatre
TPA Theatre Production and Administration
TPP Theatre Performance and Performance Training
TTE Transportation and Traffic Engineering
URP Urban and Regional Planning
VIC Visual Communication
ZOO Zoology




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