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    • 3.00 Credits

      Survey of law office management techniques and practices; business aspects of law offices, including management concepts, chain of command, record keeping, billing procedures and other technology aspects. Three hours lecture per week. F
    • 3.00 Credits

      This course examines the expanding field of efficient computer supported warehouses and logistics from an operations management standpoint in both manufacturing and distribution settings. Topics include supply chain management, order processing, traffic management, electronic data interchange, handling and tracking shipments, scheduling of work, diagramming work and product flow, safety programs and security issues. Three hours per week. F
    • 3.00 Credits

      This course examines the field of transportation including the various modes of roads, railroads, airports, pipelines and water transportation. Other concepts covered include estimating costs; regulation and deregulation of transportation; international, intermodal and drayage trends; provider relations, contract and common carrier services; compliance standards; and the transportation challenges related to growing international trade. Three hours per week. S
    • 3.00 Credits

      This course places emphasis on physical distribution, supply chain management, distribution centers and supply chain operations. Includes warehouse operations, inventory management, warehouse management systems and material flow using hardware/software applications, bar codes, effective organization structures, just-in-time logistics, continuous replenishment and third-party logistics services. Three hours per week. S
    • 3.00 Credits

      This course provides the foundation required for understanding logistics processes, compliance and custom regulations required in moving goods and people across foreign trade zones and international boundaries, the transportation modes used in such movement and current logistics issues in the global environment. Three hours per week. F
    • 3.00 Credits

      This course examines the expanding field of sourcing and procurement, its tie to supply chain management and bottom line impact to the business. Topics include chain of commerce, purchasing operations, process and procedures, supplier evaluation, supplier quality, global sourcing, e-commerce, contracts and their legal implications, negotiation and ethics. Three hours per week. F
    • 3.00 Credits

      This capstone course is a study of the strategic and tactical decisions throughout the logistics and supply chain management processes. Topics include the supply chain concept; obtaining a competitive advantage through supply chain management; techniques to measure, improve and manage supply chain performance; the effect of interdependent activities and firms on overall performance and behavior; inventory management approaches; trade-offs made in managing supply chain activities; the role of logistics management and its effect on supply chain performance; and safety and risk management. This course should be taken during the last semester before graduation after all other required LOGI courses have been successfully completed or are concurrently being completed. Three hours per week. S
    • 3.00 Credits

      This internship course requires students to apply critical thinking, problem-solving and communication skills in a real-world logistics and supply chain management setting. Three hours per week. S
    • 3.00 Credits

      This course is designed to prepare students for algebra-intensive college-level courses, such as MATH 1130, 1200, 1410, 1630, 1710, 1720 and 1830. It covers polynomial operations, rules of exponents, negative exponents, scientific notation, factoring polynomials, solving equations by factoring, solving equations by graphing, rational expressions, radical expressions, quadratic functions, solving quadratic equations, completing the square, square root property, quadratic formula, graphing parabolas, finding intercepts, finding maxima and minima and solving business applications. Graphing calculator required - see course syllabus for details. This course does not fulfill the math requirement for graduation. F,S
    • 3.00 Credits

      This course is designed for Engineering Systems Technology students. Topics include angles, parallel lines, polygons, circles, area of plane figures, definitions of trigonometric functions, graphs of trigonometric functions, right triangles, law of sines and law of cosines, vectors and applications of these topics. One and half hour lecture and one and one half hour lab per week. (Prerequisite: ACT Math of 19 or higher or all required learning support Math competencies or corequisite of MATH 0100.) F,S