Canisteo-Greenwood Central School
ACE courses offered 2024-25
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Vocabulary and concepts of accounting and bookkeeping for the small business. Provides
some knowledge of accounting for working in a business environment and some skills
to do the accounting in a small business organization.
Cannot be taken for credit if credit has already been earned for ACCT 1030.
Credits: 4
Explores interrelationships between organisms and the environment. The impact of human
activities such as pollution, resource use and population growth. Basic ecological
concepts provide a foundation for understanding environmental problems and global
change. Labs will illustrate the complexity associated with environmental change and
emphasize sustainability. Laboratory includes the observation of plants, algae, bacteria
and animals.
Cannot receive credit for BIOL 1030 after successfully completing BIOL 1500.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in Natural Sciences and Critical Thinking.
Credits: 4
Essay writing designed to sharpen the student's perceptions of the world and to facilitate
communications with correctness, clarity, unity, organization, and depth. Assignments
include expository writing, argumentation, and research techniques.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in Written Communication and Information
Literacy.
Credits: 3
Essay writing course designed to advance critical, analytical, and writing abilities
begun in ENGL 1010. Literary analysis essays and interpretation on works of fiction,
poetry, and drama.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in Humanities.
Credits: 3
Designed to assist first-year students in adjusting to the college environment as
well as becoming familiar with strategies for success. A general orientation to the
resources of the college, essential academic success skills to better understand the
learning process, and career exploration will be covered.
Credits: 3
Surveys the cultural and continuities of selected world societies during the early
modern and modern eras, from the sixteenth century CE to the present. Students will
utilize methods of the social sciences by researching, interpreting, and communicating
and understanding of primary and secondary historical sources. This world history
course studies human patterns of interaction with a particular focus on change over
time, global exchange, and those phenomena that connect people, places and ideas across
regional boundaries, with an emphasis on the shaping of the modern age and the implications
for the future of the global community.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in World History/Global Awareness.
Credits: 3
Dreams and concepts brought to the New World and their development into America's
institutions and social fabric. Conflict and consensus among groups, dilemmas facing
revolutionaries and reformers, and ways economic, political and social changes have
occurred.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in US History/Civic Engagement.
Credits: 3
End of Civil War to the present. Topics include industrial-urbanization, racism, sexism,
the new manifest destiny, political changes, and the growth of a modern nation.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in US History/Civic Engagement.
Credits: 3
An intuitive approach to statistics. Analysis and description of numerical data using
frequency distributions, histograms and measures of central tendency and dispersion,
elementary theory of probability with applications of binomial and normal probability
distributions, sampling distributions, confidence intervals, hypothesis testing, chi-square,
linear regression, and correlation.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in Mathematics/Quantitative Reasoning.
Credits: 4
This course is designed to prepare students for calculus. Topics include problem solving,
algebraic and graphical analysis, equations, inequalities, absolute values, polynomial,
rational, exponential, logarithms, trigonometric and circular functions, inverses,
polar coordinates and conics.
Cannot take both MATH 1411-1412 and 1413 for credit.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in Mathematics/Quantitative Reasoning.
Credits: 4
The first semester of differential and integral single variable calculus. Basic theory
using algebraic and trigonometric function and applications are covered concurrently.
Topics include limits, derivatives, considered algebraically and graphically, differentials
and their use as approximations, the indefinite and definite integrals with applications
to areas, volumes, surface area, arc length, moments and center of mass.
Cannot receive credit for this course and MATH 1510-1520.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in Mathematics/Quantitative Reasoning.
Credits: 4
A continuation of Calculus I. Topics include calculus of conics, logarithmic, exponential,
and hyperbolic functions, techniques of integration, infinite series, parametric equations
and polar coordinates.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in Mathematics/Quantitative Reasoning.
Credits: 4
An introduction to psychology. Includes scientific method, measurement in psychology,
motivation, learning, thinking and problem solving, perception, behavior disorders
and varieties of treatment, biological basis of behavior, social determinants of behavior,
human development and personality.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in Social Sciences, Critical Thinking, and
Information Literacy.
Credits: 3
Development of facility in reading, writing, speaking, and understanding the language
through a systematic review of its structure. Representative readings as an introduction
to Spanish civilizations.
Meets SUNY General Education requirement in World Languages.
Credits: 4
A thorough analysis of the language; intensive discussion of grammar, usage, style
and vocabulary, enhancing expression through composition, oral reports, and more informed
class discussions and conversations.
Credits: 4
