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Click on the name of an online undergraduate course to view the detailed information; you can also find out about the college or university offering the category by clicking on "School's Profile". |
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Name (Section Id) |
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Program |
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Degree |
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Name of College, University |
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School's Profile |
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Media Relations (0688-357) |
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Engineering |
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U |
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Roosevelt University |
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Details |
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Designed for writers whose positions frequently require preparation of public relations correspondence as well as copy for inbound and outbound company publications. Emphasis is on developing clarity, precise use of language, and style in writing media letters and news releases, reporting information and creating feature articles.Credit 2 |
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Medical Billing and Insurance Procedures (MS160) |
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Healthcare |
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Herzing College, Atlanta |
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Details |
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This course is designed to provide students with an understanding of the basic types of medical insurance programs available in today's health care system. It also acquaints students with billing formats using the universal claim form and provides the skills necessary to master the basic aspects of medical insurance billing. Current reimbursement methodologies (i.e., RBRVS, APC's) and compliance will also be covered. |
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MEDICAL EMERGENCIES MANAGEMENT (EMS 303) |
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Engineering |
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American College of Prehospital Medicine |
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Details |
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This course investigates in depth the physiologic and intervention aspects each of a variety of medical emergencies. Included are cardiovascular, respiratory, neurological, endocrine, metabolic, environmental, gastrointestinal, electrolyte and hematological emergencies, shock, poisoning and infectious diseases. A physician level text and a supplementary superb manual prepared by the professor, Mikel Rothenberg, M.D. are utilized. Students are required to keep a journal for responding to assignments. Course evaluation involves completion of two open book comprehensive situational essay assignments. |
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Medical Intelligence (IS388) |
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Public Services |
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American Public University |
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Details |
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Medical intelligence investigates the role that medical information plays in supporting the war fighter and the policy maker. This course will specifically examine foreign and civilian medical capabilities, infectious disease, environmental health risks, scientific and technical developments in biotechnology, and biomedical subjects of importance to the military or to public policy. |
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Medical Office Administration I (MS104) |
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Healthcare |
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Herzing College, Atlanta |
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Details |
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This course introduces the student to HIPPA (Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act) guidelines and the administrative portion of the health care environment. Students will become familiar with scheduling patients, medical record management, banking procedures, financial record keeping, and billing and insurance coding. |
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Medical Office Administration II (MS124) |
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Healthcare |
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Herzing College, Atlanta |
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Details |
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This course provides an overview of administrative tasks performed in a medical office. Students will apply knowledge to practical situations using skills gained from this course. Students increase typing skills during 3-minute drills and straight copy work. |
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Medicinal Herbs and Other Alternative Therapies (NC301) |
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Finance |
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U |
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American Academy of Nutrition |
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Details |
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A basic foundation and understanding of the principles of the science and art of herbal medicine; a historical and modern perspective of herbal medicine; herbal preparations and formulas; Materia Medica; overview of the chemical composition, scientific research, and uses of medicinal herbs; scientific review of the most important herbs used worldwide for specific health conditions; safety and efficacy, herbal regulatory issues; an unbiased and authoritative overview of, other alternative health care traditions available today including: Chinese Medicine, Ayurveda, Naturopathic Medicine, Homeopathy, Mind/Body Medicine, Osteopathic Medicine, Chiropractic, Massage Therapy and Bodywork; provides an overview of the subject and is not intended to prepare the student to be an herbalist or alternative therapist. |
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Medicine and the Holocaust (HS372) |
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History |
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American Public University |
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Details |
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This course on Medicine and the Holocaust will first examine the Nazis? euthanasia program, as a backdrop to the later genocide. How did physicians react to the termination of life considered inferior by Hitler?s standards? Were they reluctant to abandon the Hippocratic oath?s admonition to first do no harm? Or did they willingly take up the needle to terminate life that was flawed? Once involved with this limited destruction of life, was it a giant leap to the genocidal slaughter of Jews, Gypsies, and Slavs? Or a natural slide down the slippery slope of human destruction? Both the German medical establishment as a whole, and individual physicians specifically, such as the infamous Josef Mengele, will be examined for clues as to how enlightened professionals could degenerate into torturers and killers. The medical atrocities inflicted on helpless victims in the name of science and supported by major pharmaceutical firms will be considered in detail. A careful look at Auschwitz and other death camps will be undertaken. By course end, the student will have a thorough knowledge of this most heinous aspect of the greatest slaughter of human life the world has ever seen. |
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Medieval English Literature (EN360) |
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English |
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American Public University |
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Details |
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The course in Medieval English literature will range from the earliest writings in Old English (in translation) to the Middle English writings of Chaucer and his contemporaries. Readings will include Beowulf, selections from The Canterbury Tales, Morte D'Arthur, Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People, as well as shorter poetry and prose, secular and religious. Attention will be devoted to the nature of the Old English language and the shift into Middle English. |
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Medieval Military History (MH364) |
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Public Services |
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American Public University |
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Details |
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This course is a comprehensive survey of European post-classical warfare (c. 450 to c.1500 AD), and the social, political, economic, religious and technological forces that have shaped its evolution from the decline and fall of the Western Roman Empire in the fifth century to the integration of reliable gunpowder technologies in western warfare in the sixteenth century. Students will read and analyze a wide variety of sources on medieval warfare in order to develop an appreciation of the important contributions of the European Middle Ages to the continuity of warfighting in Western Civilization. The millennium under study in this course was a dynamic period in warfare, full of important rediscoveries and innovations in fortification, siegecraft and combined-arms technology, organization and tactics, all of which factored into Europe becoming the preeminent military power in the world in the period after 1500 AD. |
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Mesoamerican Peoples and Cultures (SS383) |
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Humanities & Liberal Arts |
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American Public University |
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Details |
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The course is an ethnographic and ethnohistorical survey of the peoples and cultures of Mesoamerica, focusing on the Maya, Aztec, and their present-day descendants. Texts, narratives, documents, and ethnographic accounts are interpreted in light of critical theory and analysis, using ethnology, ethnohistory, archaeology, and literature. Colonial history, colonialism, representation, indigenous "voices," and strategies of resistance and cultural survival will be examined. |
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MET Lab II (0610-409) |
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Engineering |
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Roosevelt University |
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Details |
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A course in laboratory techniques, the analysis of experimental result and the preparation of laboratory reports. Experimental work in materials science and plastics technology will be conducted with special emphasis on plastics technology. Please Note: 3-day On-campus lab sessions at RIT. For more information contact Prof. James Scudder, EMET Program, at 585-475-2055 or via 1-800-CALLRIT(v/tty). E-mail at jfsite@rit.edu. |
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Mexican Literature (EN316) |
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Humanities & Liberal Arts |
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American Public University |
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This course examines contemporary Mexican-American poetry, the Mexican-American novel, prose, and drama, and will reference the influence of the United States and the rest of the world on Mexican literature in modern times. |
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Microcomputer Applications (CS163) |
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Computer Science |
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Grantham University |
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Details |
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An introductory course that teaches microcomputer applications using Microsoft Office software. This course introduces the use of word-processing (Word), presentation software (PowerPoint), spreadsheets (Excel) and a desktop information management program (Outlook). Students are required to create a series of projects utilizing the software package and the Internet. Includes 1 lab credit. Software included: Microsoft Office Professional Edition 2003. OS required by student: Windows 2000 or XP. |
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Microeconomics (ECON-315) |
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E-Commerce & E-Business |
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DeVry University Online |
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Details |
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Building on principles introduced in ECON-312, this course focuses on microeconomic topics dealing with market forces and the behavior of individual consumers, firms and industries. Key areas emphasized are supply and demand, competition, market structure, utility theory, production costs, labor markets and the role of government in the economy. |
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Microeconomics (ECOP 3023) |
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Economics |
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Florida Metropolitan University |
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Details |
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This course is the study of economic analysis and includes the market price theory, the theory of the firm, and the theories of production and distribution. |
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Microeconomics (ECO 3028) |
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Economics |
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Florida Metropolitan University |
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Details |
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Microeconomics |
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Microeconomics (SS101) |
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Economics |
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U |
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American Community College |
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Details |
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Microeconomics is an overview course that covers how households (consumers), firms (producers), and governments interact in competitive and other markets to set prices, and determine what and how much is produced. Key concepts introduced include the role of scarcity and choice, incentives and competition, and the law of supply and demand.
This course has been evaluated by the American Council on Education. Credit Recommendation - at the lower division Baccalaureate/associate degree category, 3 semester hours in Economics or Micro-Economics. |
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Microeconomics (SS101) |
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Economics |
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American Public University |
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Details |
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Microeconomics is an overview course that covers how households (consumers), firms (producers), and governments interact in competitive and other markets to set prices, and determine what and how much is produced. Key concepts introduced include the role of scarcity and choice, incentives and competition, and the law of supply and demand. |
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MICROECONOMICS (SOC441-OL) |
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Economics |
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U |
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Westwood College Online |
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Details |
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Introduces microeconomic topics such as the components of economics, trends, prices and allocations, market dynamics and failures, operations of a firm and big business, taxing and spending, market power, income distribution, unemployment and poverty, gains and strains of trade, and buying and selling abroad. |
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