Wilsonville, Oregon

Oregon Institute of Technology

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Courses through Oregon Tech

  • Basic human anatomy and physiology, including a survey of all major bodily systems. 4 Credits

  • Survey of medical and health-related occupations, including biomedical sciences. Discussion of health care structure, private and public entities, the research community, and trends in health education and practice. 2 Credits

  • Basic structure of medical works including prefixes, suffixes, roots and combining forms. Correct spelling, pronunciation, and meaning of terms are stressed. 2 Credits

  • Pre-Columbian and colonial times to 1840. The historical development of the United States, its economic, political, and social institutions from the colonial period to the present. Courses need not be taken in sequence. 3 Credits

  • 1840, Westward expansion and the Civil War to 1899. The historical development of the United States, its economic, political, and social institutions from the colonial period to the present. Courses need not be taken in sequence. 3 Credits

  • 1900 to present. The historical development of the United States, its economic, political, and social institutions from the colonial period to the present. Courses need not be taken in sequence. 3 Credits

  • An introduction to the economic problem. Topics include gross domestic product, unemployment, monetary policy, fiscal policy, macro equilibrium, inflation, and supply and demand. 3 Credits

  • Introduces fundamental concepts used in Cybersecurity. Topics covered include: threats, attacks, and vulnerabilities; confidentiality, integrity, and availability; common cybersecurity technologies and tools; security architecture and design principles; identity and access management; risk management; and cryptography. 3 Credits

  • A course primarily designed for students preparing for trigonometry or calculus. This course focuses on functions and their properties, including polynomial, rational, exponential, logarithmic, piecewise-defined, and inverse functions. These topics will be explored symbolically, numerically, and graphically in real-life applications and interpreted in context. This course emphasizes skill building, problem solving, modeling, reasoning, communication, connections with other disciplines, and the appropriate use of present-day technology. 4 Credits

  • A course primarily designed for students preparing for calculus and related disciplines. This course explores trigonometric functions and their applications as well as the language and measurement of angles, triangles, circles, and vectors. These topics will be explored symbolically, numerically, and graphically in real-life applications and interpreted in context. This course emphasizes skill building, problem solving, modeling, reasoning, communication, connections with other disciplines, and the appropriate use of present-day technology. 4 Credits

  • Theory, computational techniques and applications of the derivative. 4 Credits

  • Computational techniques for and applications of the definite and indefinite integrals. 4 Credits