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Show Technology — Electronic Technology Course (Second-Year Program) Title Distributive Education 95, 96, 97 Distributive Education 17 Distributive Education 35 Distributive Education 36 Distributive Education 37 Distributive Education 45 Distributive Education 50 Distributive Education 55 English 8 Management 160 Health Education 1 Physical Education Internship (Work Experience) Credit and Collection Methods Advanced Distribution Retail Store Operation Methods Buying Methods Display and Advertising Methods Principles of Supervision Sales Supervision Methods Applied English Business Law Personal Health Problems Selected A W S 1 1 5 3 4 2 111 12 17 13 ELECTRONIC TECHNOLOGY The two-year Electronic Technology curriculum prepares the student for employment as a technician in the field of electronics. Completion of the outlined program will qualify the student to receive a Certificate of Completion. If the student wishes to qualify for an Associate of Science degree, he should consult with the department chairman. Deviation from the outlined program requires written permission from the department chairman. 001. General Electronic Principles Shop Practice—Construction of and tests on selected projects for a better understanding of principles discussed in Elec. Tech. 002. Three laboratories. Su A (3) Lewis 002. General Electronic Principles—Basic Electronic concepts and principles. Prerequisite or concurrent: High School Algebra, Technical Education 13, or equivalent. Five lectures. Su A (5) Lewis 1. Direct Current Laboratory—Laboratory experiments to correlate with Elect. Tech. 2 to help teach the student D. C. concepts. Three laboratories. A W (3) Lewis 2. Direct Current Fundamentals—Atomic theory, Ohms law, Kirchoff's laws, power, resistance, inductance, capacitance, D. C. motors and D. C. generators as they apply to direct current 364 Technology — Electronic Technology circuits used in radio communications. Prerequisite and/or concurrent: Technical Education 14 or equivalent. Five lectures A W (5) Lewis 3. Alternating Current Laboratory—Experiments emphasizing fundamental concepts of Elect. Tech. 4. Three laboratories. W S (3) Lewis 4. Alternating Current Fundamentals—Fundamental concepts of A.C. circuits, containing resistance, inductance, and capacitance. Phase relationships, complex impedance, circuit Q, resonant circuits, coupled circuits, and transformers. Prerequisite and/or concurrent: Technical Education 15 or equivalent, Elect. Tech. 2. Five lectures. W S (5) Lewis 5. Basic Electronics Laboratory—A practical laboratory course to correlate with Electronics 6, allowing the student to examine the operating characteristics and parameters of vacuum tubes and transistors as they are used in present day equipments. Three laboratories. S Su (3) Lewis 6. Basic Electronics—A study of static and dynamic operating characteristics and basic circuit configurations of vacuum tubes and transistors. Prerequisite: Elect. Tech. 4, Technical Education 15 or equivalent. Five lectures, S Su (5) Lewis 7. Basic Electronics Laboratory—A practical laboratory course to correlate with Elect. Tech. 8, allowing the student, during the first five weeks, to operate and make tests on the circuits discussed in Elect. Tech. 8, then encouraging the student to extend his knowledge of circuit operation by maintenance of special electronic equipments. Three laboratories. A (3) Wright 8. Basic Electronics Continued—A study of basic vacuum tube and transistor circuits, such as automatic volume control, audio amplifiers, radio frequency amplifiers, oscillators, detectors, discriminators, automatic frequency control. Prerequisite: Elect. Tech. 6 or equivalent. Five lectures. A (5) Wright 10. Introduction to Electronic Principles—The student is introduced to electronic terms, symbols, component parts, and basic measuring instruments. Three lecture-demonstrations. A (3) Staff 12. Advanced Direct Current Circuits—Designed to meet the needs of the student who has had previous electronic training but needs additional study in network theorems. Replaces Direct Current Fundamentals. Prerequisite: qualifying examination. Two lectures, One laboratory. A (3) Harris 365 |