Jul 01, 2024  
2013-2014 UMass Dartmouth Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2013-2014 UMass Dartmouth Undergraduate Catalog [Archived Catalog]

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  • MUS 316 - Teaching Children Music, Grades K-9

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    A study of children’s musical experiences in learning rhythm, in singing, in reading music, in developing listening skills, and in classroom instrumental activities coupled with pre-practicum observation in local schools. Also open to UMass Dartmouth students concentrating in Education.
  
  • MUS 317 - Teaching Music in Secondary Schools

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    The methods and materials of the complete music programs in Middle and High schools with required observation for pre-practicum
  
  • MUS 318 - Jazz Arranging and Composition

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 314
    Composition and arranging in idiomatic jazz styles, including New Orleans, swing, bebop, modal and experimental traditions.
  
  • MUS 322 - Electronic Music II

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223 or permission of instructor
    A survey of the historical development of electronic music in techno, hip-hop, and rock genres will be combined with technical instruction in the studio to recreate “old-school” sounds as well as make new beats that push the boundaries of the contemporary scene. Building upon the technical knowledge of the prerequisite courses, students will continue to develop their fluency in Max/MSP, ProTools, Peak and Ircam software, as well as be introduced to Reason.
  
  • MUS 323 - Scoring For Video

    3 credits
    3 hours lecture, 3 hours studio
    Prerequisites: MUS 223 or permission of instructor
    Exploration of the aesthetic and technical issues relating to the synchronization of sound and video. Audio is dealt with not only through music but also through sound design (the establishment of environment through the medium of sound). Course work focuses primarily on assignments and studio projects.
  
  • MUS 324 - Synthesizer Programming Techniques

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223 or permission of instructor
    Exploration of sound design. Advanced programming techniques on analog and digital synthesizers, sound design, and the use of editor/librarian programs are explored. In addition to readings, quizzes and lectures, there will be a minimum of three hours studio work per week.
  
  • MUS 325 - Recording Techniques

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223 or permission of instructor
    Developing facility in using various digital recording media. The course provides detailed exploration of relevant equipment, recording and microphone techniques, audio post production with Pro Tools, and audio CD production. In addition to readings, quizzes and lectures, there will be a minimum of three hours group recording or individual studio time per week.
  
  • MUS 335 - Applied Composition Study

    1 credits C
    Advanced individual studies in music composition. Private Lesson
  
  • MUS 336 - Applied Composition Study

    1 credits C
    Advanced individual studies in music composition. Private Lesson
  
  • MUS 340 - Principles of Conducting

    2 credits
    An in-depth study of conducting techniques appropriate for choral and instrumental ensembles, combined with the study and development of score reading techniques and analytical techniques needed by the serious interpreter of music.
  
  • MUS 342 - African-American Music History I

    3 credits C
    Prerequisites: MUS 107 or equivalent
    A survey of African-American music from its African origins to 1940. The course introduces the student to the vast and rich expanses of black musical culture from a stylistic, cultural, and socio-historical perspective, with a focus on jazz. AAS 242
  
  • MUS 343 - African-American Music History II

    3 credits C
    Prerequisites: MUS 342
    A survey of African-American music from 1940 to the present. The course introduces the student to the vast and rich expanses of black musical culture from a stylistic, cultural, and socio-historical perspective, with a focus on jazz.
  
  • MUS 349 - Applied Vocal Studies V

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Weekly private lessons. Vocal pedagogy will be included at each level. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 350 - Applied Vocal Studies VI

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Weekly private lessons. Vocal pedagogy will be included at each level. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 351 - Applied Instrumental Studies V

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Weekly private lessons. Piano pedagogy will be included at each level. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 352 - Applied Instrumental Studies VI

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Weekly private lessons. Piano pedagogy will be included at each level. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 361 - Small Instrumental Ensemble

    1 credits
    Small performing organizations devoted to the music repertoire of all stylistic periods.
  
  • MUS 364 - Small Vocal Ensemble

    1 credits C
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Performance of madrigals and other works for small chorus from a variety of musical styles. Concurrent participation in MUS 155 is encouraged.
  
  • MUS 370 - Music and Culture of the African Diaspora

    3 credits D, G
    Prerequisites: A course on the history, sociology, writings, and art of non-western cultures and/or permission of instructor
    A study of the culture and instrumental music, song, and dance of African people from various areas of the African continent, the Caribbean, and South, Central, and North America. In addition to readings, quizzes, and lectures, students’ work includes an ensemble performance to offer a firsthand experience of African music, dance, and culture. Cross-listed as AAS 370
  
  • MUS 371 - Topics in World Music Performance

    3 credits D, G
    Prerequisites: Course on history, sociology, writings, and art of non-western cultures and/or permission of instructor
    Investigation of the musical traditions of Asia, Africa, the Middle East, Oceania, and the Americas with a focus on the development of playing skills in indigenous genres, as well as an understanding of their function as an expression of cultures. Cross-listed as AAS 371
  
  • MUS 372 - Music in World Cultures

    3 credits G
    Prerequisites: Course on history, sociology, writings, and art of non-western cultures and/or permission of instructor
    The indigenous musics of Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Oceania, Europe, and the Americas, with an emphasis on the cultural and historical context of music making. Cross-listed as AAS 372
  
  • MUS 394 - Seminar in Advanced Topics in Electro Acoustic Music

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223 and permission of instructor
    Rotating topics covered in this class will include: advanced synthesis techniques, digital signal processing, electronic instrument building and performance, interactive sound installations, and interactive video. Continuing development of fluency in Max/MSP programming language from MUS 223. A feature of the class will be working with physical controllers (proximity sensors, infrared sensors, flex sensors, pressure sensors) that will work with Max/MSP, which will be used in the final project. May be repeated with change of content.
  
  • MUS 395 - Seminar in Music History

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 203, 204
    Seminar on selected topics in music history. May be repeated with change of content.
  
  • MUS 396 - Directed Study in Music

    1 to 6 credits
    Conditions and hours to be arranged
    Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor, department chairperson, and college dean
    Study under the supervision of a faculty member in an area covered in a regular course not currently being offered.
  
  • MUS 397 - Seminar in Music Theory

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 172
    Seminar on selected topics in music theory. May be repeated with change of content.
  
  • MUS 398 - Seminar in World Music: Topics in World Music Performance

    3 credits D, G
    Area studies of the musical traditions of Africa, Asia, West Asia/the Middle East, Oceania, Europe, and the Americas, with an emphasis on selected topics for understanding the theoretical, historical and cultural background for dance and music making. Topics will include: belief systems and life ways; social organization; musical analysis; material culture; representations of music; music as culture-specific; gender issues; contrasts among cultures and aesthetics; the role of the drum; methods for learning, reaching, and performance; and ethical issues in the study and use of world music. Class discussion, reading, listening, viewing, and research will be our focus.
  
  • MUS 405 - Topics in Music Therapy

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 305, 307
    Discussion of relevant topics in music therapy, with focused reading assignments and examination of topics for class presentations and dialogue. This seminar is the capstone experience for the Music Therapy Minor.
  
  • MUS 414 - Practicum in Music Education

    3 credits
    Practicum
    A fifteen-week full-time classroom experience in approved public schools of Massachusetts under the direction of the university music faculty and cooperating classroom teachers.
    Students must meet the requirements for admission having completed all Music courses with a minimum grade of B- and have the permission of the Director of Teacher Education in the Music Department and the Chairperson of the Music Department. In addition, students will need three letters of recommendation, one of which must be from the Director of the Music Education program, and at least one other from a member of the Music faculty. Students will need to have passed the Massachusetts Teacher Education Licensure exams in Comprehension and Literacy as well as the content area, Music.
  
  • MUS 435 - Composition I

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 272 and permission of instructor
    Advanced individual studies in music composition. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 436 - Composition II

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 272 and permission of instructor
    Advanced individual studies in music composition. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 441 - Synthesizer Performance I

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223, two semesters of 300-level electronic studio courses and permission of instructor
    Advanced individual studies in Music Technology specializing in Synthesizer Performance. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 442 - Synthesizer Performance II

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223, two semesters of 300-level electronic studio courses and permission of instructor
    Advanced individual studies in Music Technology specializing in Synthesizer Performance. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 443 - Electronic Composition I

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223, two semesters of 300-level electronic studio courses and permission of instructor
    Advanced individual studies in Music Technology specializing in Electronic Composition. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 444 - Electronic Composition II

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223, two semesters of 300-level electronic studio courses and permission of instructor
    Advanced individual studies in Music Technology specializing in Electronic Composition. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 445 - Sound Production I

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223, two semester of 300-level electronic studio courses and permission of instructor
    Advanced individual studies in Music Technology specializing in Sound Production. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 446 - Sound Production II

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: MUS 223, two semester of 300-level electronic studio courses and permission of instructor
    Advanced individual studies in Music Technology specializing in Sound Production. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 447 - Applied Composition V

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
  
  • MUS 448 - Music Theater Performance II

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Performance in a musical theater production. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 449 - Applied Vocal Studies VII

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Weekly private lessons. Vocal pedagogy will be included at each level. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 450 - Applied Vocal Studies VIII

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Weekly private lessons. Vocal pedagogy will be included at each level. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 451 - Applied Instrumental Studies VII

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Weekly private lessons. Piano pedagogy will be included at each level. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 452 - Applied Instrumental Studies VIII

    1 credits
    Prerequisites: Permission of instructor
    Weekly private lessons. Piano pedagogy will be included at each level. Individual Applied Music Fee
  
  • MUS 470 - International Music and Song of Africa

    3 credits D, G
    Prerequisites: For non-majors: Permission of isntructor
    A study of the instrumental music and song of African peoples. In addition to readings, lectures, papers, and presentations, students’ work includes the development of playing skills and ensemble performance experience in African music.
  
  • MUS 471 - African Dance and Song

    3 credits D, G
    Prerequisites: For non-majors: Permission of instructor
    A study of African dance and song. In addition to readings, lectures, papers, and presentations, students’ work includes the development of movement skills and ensemble performance experience in African dance.
  
  • MUS 472 - Music in World Cultures

    3 credits D, G
    Prerequisites: For non-majors: Permission of instructor
    A survey of selected indigenous music cultures of Africa, Asia, West Asia, Oceania, Europe, and the Americas, with an emphasis on the historical and cultural contexts of music making.
       
  
  • MUS 473 - Music in World Cultures

    3 credits D, G
    Prerequisites: For non-majors: Permission of instructor
    A survey that continues the study of indigenous world music cultures not covered in Music 472, with an emphasis on the historical and cultural contexts of music making.
  
  • MUS 485 - Music Capstone

    1-2 credits
    Prerequisites: Senior standing
    Under supervision of the appropriate applied faculty member and major advisor. The first semester and part of the second are to be spent in preparation for a capstone project which may take the form of a recital or formal presentation of the culminating work of the undergraduate experience.


  
  • MUS 486 - Music Capstone

    2 credits
    Prerequisites: Senior standing
    Under supervision of the appropriate applied faculty member and major advisor. The first semester and part of the second are to be spent in preparation for a capstone project which may take the form of a recital or formal presentation of the culminating work of the undergraduate experience. Course previously named Senior Recital l and ll.
  
  • MUS 491 - Performance Workshop

    0 credits
    Increases the performance abilities and awareness of all music majors. It will include attendance at recitals, performance classes and workshops and will deal with traditional music as well as music from diverse cultures. It will give students the opportunity to perform or have their own compositions performed, including vocal, instrumental and electronic media. It will also deal with stage deportment, structuring of recital programs, and other matters relating to musical performance.
  
  • MUS 492 - Performance Workshop

    0 credits
    Increases the performance abilities and awareness of all music majors. It will include attendance at recitals, performance classes and workshops and will deal with traditional music as well as music from diverse cultures. It will give students the opportunity to perform or have their own compositions performed, including vocal, instrumental and electronic media. It will also deal with stage deportment, structuring of recital programs, and other matters relating to musical performance.
  
  • MUS 493 - Advanced Study in Composition

    3 credits
    Intensive composition studies on an individual basis under the direction of a member of the Music faculty.
  
  • MUS 495 - Independent Study in Music

    1 to 6 credits
    Conditions and hours to be arranged
    Prerequisites: Upper-division standing; permission of instructor, department chairperson, and college dean
    Study under the supervision of a faculty member in an area not otherwise part of the discipline’s course offerings.
  
  • MUS 496 - Directed Study in Music

    1 to 6 credits
    Conditions and hours to be arranged
    Prerequisites: Permission of the instructor, department chairperson, and college dean
    Study under the supervision of a faculty member in an area covered in a regular course not currently being offered.
  
  • NUR 105 - Human Nutrition

    3 credits I, S
    Develops the learner’s knowledge of the major nutrients and their role in human function. It provides the foundation for understanding the relationship of nutrition to health, fitness, energy, weight management, longevity, and disease prevention. Nutritional strategies to promote the health of persons will be introduced. Identification of nutritional needs at each stage in the life cycle will be explored. Skills in written communication and computer data analysis will be enhanced by a dietary self-analysis.
  
  • NUR 106 - Introduction to Professional Nursing

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: Nursing major; At least Freshman standing
    Provides an introduction to the discipline of professional nursing. Learners examine their values and beliefs in relation to the basic concepts and behaviors that define the discipline. Promoting health, guiding persons through the health care experience and shaping the health care environment are presented as key processes to maximize health for individuals, families, groups and communities. Emphasis is placed on socializing the learner as an active, developing professional within the context and dimensions of the discipline. Learners will explore their relationship to self, individuals, families and communities as well as to the profession of nursing.
  
  • NUR 196 - Directed Study

    3 credits
    Conditions and hours to be arranged
    Prerequisites: Nursing major; At least Freshman standing
    Study under the supervision of a faculty member in an area covered in a regular course not currently being offered. Conditions and hours to be arranged
  
  • NUR 214 - Scholarly Inquiry in Nursing

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 106
    Based on the ANA Standards for undergraduate education (1989), introduces the baccalaureate nursing student to the process of scholarly inquiry. The course focuses on preparing students to be consumers and users of research. Specific connections between theory, components of the research process, and their application to evidence-based practice are explored using research exemplars. Strengths and weaknesses of various quantitative and qualitative research designs are discussed, as is their appropriateness for investigating various practice-based problems.
  
  • NUR 230 - Pathophysiology and Pharmacology for Nursing Practice I

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: BIO 221, 223
    First course in a two-semester sequence that provides the knowledge foundation for understanding alterations and adaptations in physiological processes in humans. The content builds the learner’s knowledge from the physical sciences. The content selected for study is essential to critical thinking, clinical judgment, and therapeutic interventions in illness-related phenomena. Humans’ ability to adapt to physiological alterations are presented and discussed throughout the course. Principles of pharmacodynamics and pharmakinetics are introduced and concepts of pharmacology are integrated throughout the course.
  
  • NUR 235 - Pathophysiology and Pharmacology for Nursing Practice II

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 230, BIO 251, 261
    Corequisites: NUR 250, 251
    Second course in a two-semester sequence that provides the knowledge foundation for understanding alterations and adaptations in physiological processes in humans. The content selected for study is essential to critical thinking, clinical judgment, and therapeutic interventions in illness-related phenomena. Humans ability to adapt to physiological alterations are presented and discussed throughout the course. Principles of pharmacodynamics and pharmacokinetics are integrated throughout the course.
  
  • NUR 240 - Health Assessment Life Span

    2 credits
    Corequisites: BIO 221, 223
    Introduces the student to parameters of health for individuals representing various ages and stages across the life span. Communication skills are stressed in developing the nurse/client relationship. Emphasis is on the systematic assessment of healthy individuals as a first step in the nursing process.
  
  • NUR 242 - Holistic Health Assessment

    4 credits
    (3 hours class/ 3 hours nursing lab)
    Designed to assist the beginning-nursing student to conduct a comprehensive holistic health assessment of persons across the life span. Assessment is considered foundational to the nurse’s goal of maximizing health. The emphasis in this course is on individual health rather than disease/illness. Students will be introduced to broad definitions and indicators of health. Using a variety of methods, students will apply caring behaviors and interviewing principles to conduct a comprehensive health history and perform a physical examination to determine health status, in both the nursing skill laboratory and community settings.
  
  • NUR 250 - Knowledge Foundations in Nursing

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 106, NUR 230
    Corequisites: NUR 235, NUR 251
    Provides the learner with the knowledge and skills to engage in professional nursing practice that promotes the health of adults with common health problems.  Nursing care needs of adults are discussed using a functional health pattern framework.  Emphasis is placed on identifying and defining characteristics of common health problems and care plans to address the nursing needs of individuals.  Nursing process skills are developed as a framework for professional nursing care.  Professional role development related to accountability, ethics, and development of therapeutic alliances is facilitated through discussion and active learning.
  
  • NUR 251 - Knowledge Foundations in Nursing/Experiential

    3 credits
    9 clinical hours/week
    Corequisites: NUR 250
    Experiential course provides the learner with opportunities to apply knowledge and skills in professional nursing care of adults with common health problems.  Examples of common health problems to be explored include diabetes mellitus, alterations in respiratory functioning, cardiac decompensation, among others.  Clinical skills help clients to promote activities of daily living.  Students will have an opportunity for selected technical skill development. Field Experience
    9 clinical hrs/week
  
  • NUR 260 - Nursing Care of Older Adults

    2 credits
    Prerequisites: Nursing Majors Only
    Theoretical knowledge and skills consistent with the ANA Standards of Gerontological Nursing that guide the care of older adults and their families. The outcomes of nursing care are to preserve the health, functional ability and quality of life for older adults. This course focuses on preventing the cascade of functional decline in older adults and promoting health. Normal aging changes and risk factors are studied to determine nursing interventions that improve quality of life. Common health problems of older adults and end-of-life care serve as exemplars in planning nursing care. Long-term care system regulatory processes, public policy, and legal and ethical issues are noted as they impact the health and care of older adults.
  
  • NUR 290 - Nursing Optimal Level Function

    three credits
    This theory/clinical laboratory course focuses on the application of the nursing process in support of the individual adult client with selected alterations affecting optimal level of function (nursing diagnoses). Emphasis is on the acquisition of basic skills for use in appropriate intervention with selected nursing diagnoses.


  
  • NUR 291 - Nursing Optimal Level Function Clinic

    three credits
    This theory/clinical laboratory course focuses on application of the nursing process in support of the individual adult client with selected alterations affecting optimal level of function (nursing diagnoses). Emphasis is on the acquisition of basic skills for use in appropriate intervention with selected nursing diagnoses.
  
  • NUR 296 - Directed Study

    variable credits
    Conditions and hours to be arranged
    Prerequisites: Nursing major; At least Freshman standing
    Study under the supervision of a faculty member in an area covered in a regular course not currently being offered.
  
  • NUR 298 - Experience Program

    variable credits
    Conditions and hours to be arranged
    Prerequisites: At least Sophomore standing, GPA 2.0 or greater. Permission of the instructor, department chair, and college dean.
    University-wide program for individualized work experience at an elective level supervised for academic credit by a faculty member in an appropriate academic field. For specific procedures and regulations, see the section of catalogue on Other Learning Experiences. Graded CR/NC.
  
  • NUR 301 - Transition to Baccalaureate Nursing Education

    3 credits
    This course bridges the RN student to higher education, technology and professional nursing: maximizing the health of persons by guiding, promoting health, and shaping the health environment. The course content is built on an assumed foundation of basic nursing preparation and clinical experience of the RN. Professional concepts are introduced to broaden career development. Preparation of a professional portfolio that serves as a basis for credit transfer of prior nursing education, experience and attainment of professional credentials is the primary course outcome. The course is offered as a hybrid model of education with a mix of face-to-face and online classes at the Fall River campus or on-site at various health care agencies in the region.
  
  • NUR 302 - Selected Mechanisms of Disease and Related Pharmacology

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: RN status; BIO 221, 222, or ACT-PEP
    The AACN (2008) Essentials of Baccalaureate Education for Professional Nursing Practice guided the development of this course. Disease processes in humans. Content selected for study is chosen specifically to enhance the RN student’s understanding of basic pathophysiologic concepts and is essential to understand the rationale for clinical judgment and therapeutic intervention in disease conditions. The ability of human beings to adapt to stressors is discussed throughout the course. Concepts of pharmacology and drug therapy are integrated to allow students to utilize this information in clinical practice.
  
  • NUR 303 - Disease and Pharmacology I

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: BIO 221, 223
    Corequisites: BIO 222, 224
    Introduction to disease processes in humans. Humans’ responses and adaptation to injury and disease are discussed throughout. The content selected for study provides the rationale for clinical decision making and therapeutic interventions in disease conditions. Concepts of pharmacology are integrated throughout the course.
  
  • NUR 304 - Disease and Pharmacology II

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: Nursing major; At least Freshman standing
    Introduction to disease processes in humans. Humans’ responses and adaptation to injury and disease are discussed throughout. The content selected for study provides the rationale for clinical decision making and therapeutic interventions in disease conditions. Concepts of pharmacology are integrated throughout the course.
  
  • NUR 306 - Professional Nursing

    3 credits I, E
    Prerequisites: NUR 301; can be prerequisite or co-requisite
    Professional role development for RN students, addressing nursing issues through critical analysis of the historical influences, philosophical perspectives, and socioeconomic factors which impact professional role development. Emphasis will be on theoretical knowledge influencing client outcomes in various settings. Effective, creative communication skills leading to role transformation behaviors will be encouraged through the use of group process activities.
  
  • NUR 314 - Fundamentals of Nursing Research

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: Nursing Student Only
    Introduces the student to research as it relates to nursing practice and consequent improvement in health care. Content includes research design, methods of data collection and exploration of analytical procedures for interpretation of data. Emphasis is placed upon the use of clinical nursing research findings.
  
  • NUR 320 - Nursing Hospitalized Adults

    4 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 304
    The application of the nursing process consistent with ANA Standards of Clinical Nursing Practice in support of adult clients experiencing multiple alterations in optimal level of functioning (OLF). Focus is placed on nursing interventions appropriate to clients with acute needs and multiple nursing diagnoses. Critical thinking, communication, and therapeutic nursing intervention skill development are emphasized.
  
  • NUR 322 - Holistic Health Assessment for Registered Nurses

    4 credits
    Prerequisites: Nursing Students Only
    Builds upon RN knowledge and skill to conduct a holistic health assessment of persons that respects developmental differences across the life span. Emphasis is on health and development of persons. Assessment, consistent with the ANA Scope and Standards of Practice, is foundational to the nurses’s goal of maximizing health. Students will engage in caring behaviors and critical thiking when conducting a holistic assessment.
  
  • NUR 326 - Care of Adults Experiencing Chronic Illness

    4 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 250, 251
    Corequisites: NUR 327
    An examination of nursing interventions in promoting health and guiding the health care experience for the adult, and shaping a therapeutic environment along the course of common chronic illnesses. Chronic illness is viewed as a significant biographical element that offers both challenges and opportunities to maximize health. Knowledge pertinent to chronic illness is synthesized from many disciplinary frameworks guided by the nursing perspective and core nursing values. The effect of cultural issues, socio-economic issues, and health policy on chronic illness will also be discussed.
  
  • NUR 327 - Experiential Learning: Nursing Care for Adults Experiencing Illness

    5 credits
    (15 practice hrs./week)
    Corequisites: NUR 326
    Experiential learning component addressing the nursing needs of adults experiencing acute and/or chronic illness in a hospitalsetting. Learners will apply theoretical knowledge related to illness and its manifestations. Emphasis is placed on developing professional nursing knowledge and skill that promotes the return to health, that guides the adult through the illness experience and that structures environments to support these processes.
  
  • NUR 330 - Community Health Nursing

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 326, 327
    Corequisites: NUR 331
    Prepares the nursing student to promote health and provide care for the community and aggregate, with a special emphasis upon vulnerable populations as the focus of service. The student should gain the ability to identify strategies to promote health of families, groups, and populations in the community. The course uses Healthy People 2020 objectives and leading health indicators that reflect the major national health concerns. Principles of epidemiology, demography, environmental sciences, community organization, and health care political, economic, and legal influences are integrated with nursing concepts and principles to provide the basis for community nursing practice. Community and aggregate strengths and risks are identified. Special emphasis will be placed upon implementation strategies designed to promote the health of populations, guide populations to reduce identified health risks and to shape health policy.
  
  • NUR 331 - Experiential Learning: Community Health Nursing

    3 credits
    (9 hrs practice/wk)
    Prerequisites: NUR 326, 327; Junior Nursing Standing
    Corequisites: NUR 330
    Prepares the learner to promote health and provide care for the community and aggregate, with a special emphasis upon vulnerable populations as the focus of service. Aspects studied in NUR 330 are integrated with nursing concepts and principles to provide the basis for community nursing practice. Community and aggregate strengths and risks are identified through community health nursing process. Special emphasis will be placed upon implementation strategies designed to promote the health of populations, guide populations to reduce identified health risks and to shape health policy.
  
  • NUR 332 - Concepts of Family Care

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 326, 327
    Corequisites: NUR 331
    This course introduces the student to application of nursing process to the family. Students will draw from a variety of theories and conceptual frameworks to guide the gathering and interpretation of assessment data. Emphasis is placed on assessment and nursing interventions to support or strengthen optimal level of functioning (OLF) for families across the life cycle.
  
  • NUR 334 - Maternity and Women’s Health Nursing

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 326, 327; Nursing Majors only
    Corequisites: NUR 335
    Integration of women-centered theory and practice concepts that focus on the nurse’s role in promoting health for women and beginning families. Variables that place women, the developing child, and the family at risk or that could render a population vulnerable are identified and appropriate therapeutic interventions explored. Common health problems that women experience across the reproductive years are also explored. Learners are introduced to the role of the nurse in women’s health that promotes health, shapes supportive environments, and provides anticipatory guidance. Global issues affecting the health of women and their families will be explored. Within the context of professional values and accountability, ethical and legal issues impacting maternity and women’s health are presented.
  
  • NUR 335 - Experiential Learning: Maternity and Women’s Health Nursing

    3 credits
    (9 hrs practice/wk)
    Prerequisites: NUR 326, 327; Nursing majors only
    Corequisites: NUR 334
    Application of evidence-based nursing interventions aimed at promoting, guiding, and shaping the health care environment for women, mothers, infants and families builds on previously learned foundational nursing concepts and skills as well as concepts from the social and biological sciences. Within an ethical and legal framework, nursing interventions are designed to reflect professional values, accountability and advocacy. Clinical experiences in both acute care and community settings will offer the learner opportunities to care for women within a family context across the lifespan. Standards of care published by the Association of Women’s Health, Obstetric and Neonatal Nurses (AWHONN) serve as the guide for practice.
  
  • NUR 336 - Child and Family Nursing

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 326, 327; Nursing Majors Only
    Corequisites: NUR 337
    Focuses on integrating prior knowledge, using scholarly inquiry, and designing therapeutic nursing interventions to promote health and manage illness in children from infancy through adolescence in partnership with their families. Emphasis is placed on applying knowledge of growth and development and health issues of children to plan and evaluate family centered nursing care that maximizes the health of children in a caring environment. Ethical, legal, cultural and advocacy concepts are explored. The ANA Standards of Care for the Pediatric Nurse (1996) and ANA Maternal Child Health Standards and the objectives of Healthy People 2010 that pertain to children and families provide the framework for constructing evidenced- based contemporary nursing care for children and families.
  
  • NUR 337 - Experiential Learning: Child and Family Nursing

    3 credits
    (9 hrs practice/wk)
    Prerequisites: NUR 326, 327
    Corequisites: NUR 336
    Provides an opportunity for experiential learning designed to develop nursing skills unique to the care of children and families from an individual, family and aggregate perspective. The learner promotes healthy growth and development in children, shapes safe, supportive environments, provides anticipatory guidance to families, uses appropriate community resources, and provides evidenced-based, clinically competent therapeutic interventions for children who are healthy or experiencing an illness. The experiences in this course also foster professional development of accountability and responsibility for learning, identifying ethical and legal dimensions of practice, and integrating nursing care with that of other health care providers.
  
  • NUR 340 - Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 326, 327
    Corequisites: NUR 341
    Introduces learners to the theoretical concepts that promote health in persons with brain disorders. Nursing interventions that support and promote the mental health of individuals, groups and communities toward health and shape therapeutic environments will be identified and explored. Curent ANA Scope and Standards of Psychiatric-Mental Health Nursing practice will guide the planning and evaluation of expected outcomes of care.
  
  • NUR 341 - Experiential Learning: Psychiatric Mental Health Nursing

    3 credits
    (9 hrs practice/wk)
    Prerequisites: NUR 326, 327; Junior Nursing Standing
    Corequisites: NUR 340
    Complements the theoretical concepts presented in NUR 340. Various mental health sites in the area will be selected for placement. Students will observe and practice diverse interventions that promote an individual’s mental health, guide them in their mental health care, and help to shape a therapeutic environment. Clinical settings, which treat individuals with severe and persistent mental illness, will be selected. Current standards of practice in a multidisciplinary team will guide the planning and evaluation of expected outcomes of care.
  
  • NUR 396 - Directed Study

    3 credits
    Conditions and hours to be arranged
    Prerequisites: Nursing major; At least Freshman standing
    Study under the supervision of a faculty member in an area covered in a regular course not currently being offered.
  
  • NUR 408 - Transition to Professional Practice

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: Senior Nursing Standing
    Exploration of historical, socioeconomic, and political forces that influence the profession of nursing and the health care delivery system. Leadership and team building skills are identified and developed to shape professional nursing practice that promotes health and facilitates the learner’s transition to professional nursing practice. Application of principles of safety and quality in healthcare systems are addressed. Guided by the ANA Scope & Standards of Practice (2004 ed.).
  
  • NUR 409 - Leadership in Nursing

    three credits
    This course will focus upon theories and key concepts associated with leadership and organizational skills as they pertain to the role of the professional nurse. Knowledge and skills associated with functioning as a manager of care as well as a member of the healthcare team will be considered, including strategies to enhance personal and professional effectiveness. Contemporary health care issues will be discussed related to quality and patient safety and the role of the nurse in effecting improved patient outcomes individually and collaboratively in teams.
  
  • NUR 420 - Nursing Hospitalized Adults

    four credits
    The application of the nursing process consistent with ANA Standards of Clinical Nursing Practice in support of adult clients experiencing multiple alterations in optimal level of functioning (OLF). Focus is placed on nursing interventions appropriate to clients with acute needs and multiple nursing diagnoses. Critical thinking, communication, and therapeutic nursing intervention skill development are emphasized.
  
  • NUR 421 - Pschiatric Mental Health Clinic

    three credits
    Theory/clinical lab course introducing the student to selected nursing and other theories of psychiatric and mental health nursing as the basis for application of nursing process to individuals with alterations in mental health. The goal of nursing with the client population is to promote optimal mental health of individuals and small groups within the context of the family and community. Emphasis will be on the evaluation of client outcomes attributable to care provided by nursing and other members of the health team.
  
  • NUR 450 - Nursing of Adults Experiencing Complex Health Problems

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: Senior Nursing Standing
    Corequisites: NUR 451 and 455
    Focuses on nursing care of adult clients experiencing complex health problems, those with unpredictable outcomes, consistent with the ANA (2004) Nursing: Scope and Standards of Practice. Therapeutic interventions address the nurse’s leadership role of promoting health, guiding the person, and shaping the health environment through advocacy, multidisciplinary collaboration, evaluation of outcomes and effective management of resources. Socio-environmental factors influencing the person, nurse and health care decisions are analyzed.
  
  • NUR 451 - Experiential Learning: Nursing of Adults Experiencing Complex Health Problems

    2 credits
    (6 hrs practice/wk)
    Prerequisites: Senior Nursing Standing
    The clinical management role of the professional nurse in the nursing care of older adults. Nursing practice occurs in skilled nursing facilities and other settings that provide students with the opportunity for clinical decision making, health promotion, health teaching, and referral within the long-term care system. Long-term care system regulatory processes, public policy, legal and ethical issues, and socioeconomic and cultural variables will be considered as they affect client outcomes.
  
  • NUR 452 - Nursing Care of Persons with Chronic Illness

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 306, NUR 322
    The nursing management of adults experiencing chronic health problems with complex responses. Emphasis is placed on the assessment of the functional health status of middle and older adults and families in multiple care settings. This theory/clinical course is designed to provide students with knowledge from bio-psycho-social sciences, nursing theory and research, and philosophy that supports a multidimensional perspective on the experience of chronicity. Selected concepts of chronicity are applied in clinical experiences with clients across the continuum of care. Nursing models are used to guide implementation of the nursing process for adults of various developmental stages. Course awards three clinical credits.
  
  • NUR 453 - Nursing Care of Persons with Chronic Illness

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: NUR 306, NUR 322
    The nursing management of adults experiencing chronic health problems with complex responses. Emphasis is placed on the assessment of the functional health status of middle and older adults and families in multiple care settings. This theory/clinical course is designed to provide students with knowledge from bio-psycho-social sciences, nursing theory and research, and philosophy that supports a multidimensional perspective on the experience of chronicity. Selected concepts of chronicity are applied in clinical experiences with clients across the continuum of care. Nursing models are used to guide implementation of the nursing process for adults of various developmental stages. Course awards three clinical credits.
  
  • NUR 455 - Experience Program: Senior Mentorship

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: Senior Nursing Standing
    Corequisites: NUR 450 and 451
    Provides students with repeated opportunities to critically analyze and apply knowledge and skills learned previously in the program to the care of persons, families, and communities under the supervision of a nurse-preceptor.  The students’ role consists of promoting health, guiding persons and families through the health care experience, and shaping the health environment to maximize health in a practice setting of the stuent’s choice. The practice setting may be maternal-child health, community health, psychiatric-mental health, sub-acute, long term care, or home care. In the acute care areas, medical, surgical, intensive or other critical areas may be selected. The concentrated clinical practicum supports the socialization and professional development of students while maximizing clinical competence. Students identify personal learning needs and objectives prior to the experience.
  
  • NUR 460 - RN Senior Mentorship

    3 credits
    (9 hrs practice/week)
    Prerequisites: NUR 302, 306, 314, 322, 332
    Synthesis experiential learning course, providing students with repeated opportunities to critically analyze and apply knowledge and skills learned previously in the program to the care of persons, families, and communities. The students’ role consists of promoting health, guiding persons and families through the health care experience, and shaping the health environment to maximize health in a practice setting of the student’s choice. The concentrated clinical practicum supports the socialization and professional development of students while maximizing clinical competence.
  
  • NUR 481 - Women’s Health Seminar

    3 credits
    Prerequisites: Nursing major; At least Freshman standing
    Research into the causes, treatments, and prevention of health problems that affect the quality of life of adult women in the United States. Material from the NIH, Office of Research on Women’s Health, and other relevant studies will be reviewed using electronic and other data sources. Issues that pertain to women’s health will be addressed as related to diseases, disorders, and conditions that are unique to, more prevalent among, or far more serious for women than for men. Factors such as biological processes, lifestyle, racial, ethnic, age, and socioeconomic variables will be studied.
  
  • NUR 485 - Environmental Health

    3 credits S
    Prerequisites: Introductory Chemistry or Biology or permission of the instructor
    The interaction of the environment and human health, from the perspective of an ecological framework. Physical, psychological, and psychosocial health responses to environmental toxins and infectious agents will be a central theme. Previous endeavors to maintain and improve the environment through the legislative process, public policy and regulation will be studied by examining case studies. The effects of war on the environment and public health will also be studied. (Only the 485 level carries general Education credit.)
 

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