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BIL 111 Old Testament Introduction and Sur vey 3 Credits The impor tance of the study of the

Old Testament and its authority for the Christian life; The divisions of the Old Testament; A survey of Old Testament history and the indispensable role it plays in understanding the Old Testament; Selected issues of ancient Israels culture; The background, content, purposes, and important themes of each Old Testament book; Key Old Testament theological themes. BIL 112 New Testament Introduction and Survey 3 Credits The history of the Je wish people from the time of Ezra until the end of the New Testament period, how this history shapes Judaism during the first century C. E., and how the New Testament church understood Jesus Christ as the fulfillment of the hopes and longings of that Judaism and its Scriptures; Geography of Palestine as well as the nor thern and eastern Mediterranean during the first century C. E., and its significance for understanding the New Testament; Introduction and summary of each New Testament book, including its purpose and key themes; a survey of the life and ministry of Jesus Christ; A survey of the life and ministr y of Paul, including an overview of the spread of the church outside the boundaries of Palestine; An introduction to impor tant factors of the cultural background of the New Testament. MAT 121 Differential Calculus 3 Credits Limits and continuity of functions: rates of change and limits; limits and their properties; rules of finding limits; sandwich theorem; infinite limits; continuity at a point; continuity on intervals and intermediate value theorem; differentiation: the derivative of a function; rules of differentiation; rates of change (motion); tangent and normal lines; trigonometric functions: revision on trigonometric identities; limits of trigonometric functions; derivatives of sine and cosine from 1st principles; differentiating trigonometric functions; exponential, logarithmic and implicit differentiation: exponential and logarithmic functions; differentiating exponential and logarithmic functions; implicit differentiation; related rates of change (growth and decay); LHospitals Rule; partial derivatives; application of differentiation: extreme values (local and global); Rolles theorem and the mean value theorems; chain rule, critical and stationary points (Fermats theorem); increasing and ecreasing functions; first derivative test for local extrema; second order derivative test for local extrema; curve sketching (identifying asymptotes); optimization. MAT 221 Integral Calculus 3 Credits Introduction to integration and techniques of integration: integration as reverse of differentiation; integration by substitution (standard substitution); integration by parts; trigonometric substitutions; trigonometric integrals; integration by partial fractions application of integrals: area under the curve and between two curves; volume of solids of revolution; surface area of surfaces of revolution; arc lengths and simple harmonic motion; improper integrals; inverse trigonometric and hyperbolic functions: definitions; differentiation (revisit implicit differentiation); integration; standard substitutions for hyperbolic functions; numerical methods: Taylors approximations to functions; bounding the errors; numerical integration; solving equations numerically and linear interpolation; fixed point methods. MAT 323 Ordinary Differential Equations 3 Credits Separable differential equations, exact differential equations, linear differential equations modeling 1st order and 2nd order linear differential equations: homogeneous, linear equations: Euler-Cauchy equation, existence and uniqueness theory, nonhomogeneous equations, undetermined coefficients, variation of parameters: 3rd order, linear differential equations: systems of differential equations: linear systems with constant coefficients, critical points, methods for non-linear systems; numerical methods for differential equations; methods for 1st order ordinary differential equations: Laplace transforms: inverse transform, linearity, t-shifting, unit step function, convolution, partial functions, periodic functions, general formula: Fourier series, integrals, and transforms, difference equations. MAT 322 Probability & Statistics 3 Credits Probability: events, conditional and joint probabilities, multiplication rule, Bayes theorem; random variables: probability distributions, probability density functions, independence, expectation and variance: binomial, hyper-geometric, geometric, Poisson, exponential and normal distributions: sampling distributions: chi-square, t, and f: statistical inference: estimation, confidence intervals, hypotheses testing, non-parametric tests, quality control and acceptance sampling. MAT 223 Discrete Mathematics 3 Credits Basic concepts of discrete mathematics are introduced including understanding the concepts of sets and logical statements, defining a function, constructing a function, knowing what constitutes a formal proof and understanding the basic concepts of applied logic. Topics will include: elementary notations, functions, construction techniques, equivalence, order and inductive proof, analysis techniques, elementary, predicate, applied and computational logic. MAT 312 Linear Algebra 3 Credits Systems of linear equations; row reduction and echelon forms (Gaussian elimination); matrices and matrix operations; diagonal, triangular and symmetric matrices; inverse of a matrix and elementary matrices; determinants: introduction to, properties of, Cramers rule, characterization of an invertible matrix, application to computer graphics; vector spaces and subspaces; linear independence; basis and dimension; null spaces, column spaces and row spaces; rank of a matrix; Euclidean n-space; linear transformations from Rn to Rm ; eigenvalues and eigenvectors; characteristic equation; diagonalization; eigenvectors and linear transformation; equations of lines, planes and orthogonality: co-ordinate and position vectors; parametric equations of lines and planes; inner product, length and orthogonality; cross products of vectors; angles between lines and planes; orthogonal sets; orthogonal projections. PHY 223 Electricity And Magnetism I 4 Credits Electrostatics: electric charge, insulators and conductors; Coulombs law, electric fields, electric flux; Gausss Law; electric potential, potential energy; capacitance and dielectrics; current and resistance; direct current circuits, Ohms law, Kirchoffs rules; magnetic fields, Biot-Savart law, Amperes law, magnetic flux, magnetic field of a current and a moving charge, force on a moving charge, torque on a current loop, Faradays law of magnetic induction, self and mutual inductance; alternating

current circuits. The laboratory sessions will include components on basic circuits, electronic devices including resistors, capacitors, RC circuits, diodes, transistors, digital circuits, and integrated circuits MAT102 Basic Mathematics 2 Credits Logic: simple and compound statements, logical connectives, truth tables, types of statements; sets: definitions, operations, Venn diagrams, enumerating sets; real numbers: sets of real numbers, properties, fractions and decimals, LCM and HCF, absolute values; powers, standard forms; linear equations, quadratic equations, linear simultaneous equations in two unknowns, application of equations; inequalities, functions: general concepts, linear functions, quadratic functions, graph of linear and quadratic functions, application of linear and quadratic functions; empirical functions: visual fit, direct and indirect variations. ENV112 Environmental Science 2 Credits The need to study the environment, introduction of environmental concepts, environmental pollution, impact of pests and pesticides on the environment, environmental improvement, role of man in the environment, population, demography and renewable and nonrenewable resources, deforestation and desertification, environmental conservation, the environment and human health, nuclear science and radiation, weathering, soil erosion and earthquakes. EEE 221 Digital Logic 3 Credits Introduction; digital electronics; analog and digital, relation to computers; number systems: binary, octal, decimal, hexadecimal; codes systems; basic logic components: AND, OR, NOT; universal gates: NAND, NOR; higher order gates: EXOR, ENOR gates; truth tables and combinational circuits; laws of Boolean algebra: Boolean expression; implementation using sum-of-products(SOP) and product of sums (POS); simplification using Boolean algebra and Karnaugh maps (Kmaps); analysis and design of combinational circuits using K-maps; implementation of combinational circuits using practical gates (TTL and/or CMOS gates); sequential circuits: characteristics and operation; flip flops(FFs); S-R FF, D-FF,TFF, JKFF; application of FFs in design of ripple counters and shift registers.

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