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2004-06 IUPUI Campus Bulletin

The policies, regulations, and course descriptions that appear in this edition of the Bulletin are for the academic years specified. Curricular requirements are for students who entered the university or were admitted to a degree program during these specific academic years. As the "bulletin year" (the student's entry year) will be defined differently from school to school at IUPUI, consult your academic advisor to be sure you are using the appropriate edition of the Bulletin.

While every effort is made to provide accurate and current information, IUPUI reserves the right to change without notice statements in this bulletin concerning rules, policies, fees, curricula, courses, or other matters. Consult your academic advisor to learn if changes have occurred that may affect you.

Informatics Degree Programs

Prior to each semester’s enrollment, a faculty member or an academic advisor provides academic counseling for each student in the School of Informatics. Although academic counseling is intended to provide effective guidance, students are responsible for planning their own programs and for meeting the following degree requirements for graduation. Students are advised to read bulletin descriptions of all courses selected, paying careful attention to conditions concerning awarding of credit.

Bachelor of Science in Informatics

General Requirements

Students must successfully complete a minimum of 122 credit hours for the Bachelor of Science degree. The campus at which a student is admitted will award the degree. Students may transfer no more than 60 credit hours toward a Bachelor of Science degree. Students must complete the specific degree requirements of the School of Informatics as listed below.

  1. Students must complete a minimum of 30 credit hours in courses at the 300-400 (junior-senior) level.
  2. Students must have a minimum cumulative grade point average of 2.0 (C). Any course taken to satisfy the requirements of the major must be completed with a minimum grade of C– unless otherwise specified.
  3. Students are expected to complete the requirements for their undergraduate degree within eight years of admission to the School of Informatics. Students are allowed to continue beyond this time period only at the discretion of the dean. If a student has not taken classes for three years or more, that student must satisfy program requirements of the School of Informatics in effect at the time of reactivation. Requests for deviation from requirements listed in the bulletin must be approved in writing by the dean, whose decision is final.
  4. Courses that fulfill the requirements for a cognate area also may meet the general education distribution requirements.
  5. Cognate area courses cannot count as informatics core courses or informatics elective courses.
  6. If cognate area courses are equivalent to informatics core courses, students should substitute additional informatics elective courses in place of informatics core courses to meet the 34 credit hour requirement.
  7. Courses that fulfill the requirements for a bachelor’s degree in informatics also may apply to a minor outside of the School of Informatics.
  8. Students must file a degree application with the School of Informatics office by March 1 for December graduation and October 1 for May, June, or August graduation. Failure to file by the deadline may delay the official date of graduation.

Course Requirements

The course work required for the B.S. in Informatics consists of five parts:

  • Informatics Core Courses
  • Informatics Electives
  • Cognate Area Courses
  • General Education Requirements
  • General Electives

Required Informatics Core Courses (34 cr.)

INFO I101 Introduction to Informatics (4 cr.)

INFO I201 Mathematical Foundations of Informatics (4 cr.)

INFO I202 Social Informatics (3 cr.)

INFO I210 Information Infrastructure I (4 cr.)

INFO I211 Information Infrastructure II (4 cr.)

INFO I308 Information Representation (3 cr.)

Select two of the following four courses:

INFO I300 Human-Computer Interaction (3 cr.)

INFO I303 Organizational Informatics (3 cr.)

INFO I310 Multimedia Arts and Technology (3 cr.)

INFO I320 Distributed Systems and Collaborative Computing (3 cr.)

Select one of the following capstone options:

INFO I450/I451 Design and Development of an Information System (3/3 cr.)
(senior standing; capstone project), two semester course

INFO I460/I461 Thesis (3/3 cr.)
(senior standing; capstone experience)

Recommended Courses  The following course is recommended for students who lack a strong computing background. This course is considered a general elective course.

INFO I112 Basic Tools of Informatics—Programming and Database Concepts (3 cr.)

Informatics Electives (6 cr.)

Any course in the department of computer and information science, computer programming technology, informatics, new media, or journalism at the 300 level or above may count as an elective.

Note: The above courses are subject to the successful completion of prerequisites or approval of the instructor. Students also may count other courses with informatics content as informatics electives upon approval of the dean.

Cognate Area Courses (15-18 cr.)

Departments offering informatics cognate courses are listed on the informatics Web site (www.informatics.iupui.edu). Students should, in consultation with their academic advisors, choose cognate areas before their sophomore year. Students must receive a grade of C– or higher in each course, and a cumulative GPA of 2.0 or higher.

General Education Requirements (38-41 cr.)

English Composition (6 cr.)

ENG W131 Elementary Composition I

ENG W231 Professional Writing Skills

JOUR J200 Reporting, Writing and Editing

Students must check the listings for courses in the Schedule of Classes each semester to make certain the course section they have chosen fulfills the requirement.

Oral Communication (3 cr.)

COMM R110 Fundamentals of Speech Communication

Quantitative and Analytical Skills (9 cr.)

Six (6) hours from any of the following MATH courses:

M118; 153; 154; 163; 164

Three (3) hours from any of the following STAT courses:

350; 416; 417

Web-Based Programming (9 cr.)

Nine (9) hours from any of the following CSCI courses:

N307; N351; N331; N355; N341; N305; N311; N335

Students must check the listings for courses in the Schedule of Classes each semester to make certain the course section they have chosen fulfills the requirement.

Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences (12 cr.)

Informatics students must have basic training in the arts, humanities, and social sciences, which will assist them in their lives and give them a broader perspective from which to approach the applications of information technology. The requirements for each campus are as follows:

One arts and humanities course (3 cr.) selected from the following:

AFRO A150 Survey of the Culture of Black Americans (3 cr.)

AMST A103 Topics in American Studies (3 cr.)

CLAS C205 Classical Mythology (3 cr.)

CMLT C190 Introduction to Film (3 cr.)

COMM T130 Introduction to Theatre (3 cr.)

ENG L105 Appreciation of Literature (3 cr.)

ENG L115 Literature for Today (3 cr.)

FLAC F200 World Cultures Through Literature (3 cr.)

FOLK F101 Introduction to Folklore (3 cr.)

HER H100 Art Appreciation (3 cr.)

HER H101 History of Art I (3 cr.)

HER H102 History of Art II (3 cr.)

HIST H105 American History I (3 cr.)

HIST H106 American History II (3 cr.)

HIST H108 Perspectives on the World to 1800 (3 cr.)

HIST H113 History of Western Civilization I (3 cr.)

HIST H217 The Nature of History (3 cr.)

PHIL P110 Introduction to Philosophy (3 cr.)

PHIL P120 Ethics (3 cr.)

REL R133 Introduction to Religion (3 cr.)

REL R173 American Religion (3 cr.)

REL R180 Introduction to Christianity (3 cr.)

REL R212 Comparative Religions (3 cr.)

MUS M174 Music for the Listener (3 cr.)

WOST W105 Introduction to Women’s Studies (3 cr.)

One social science course (3 cr.) selected from the following:

AFRO A150 Survey of the Culture of Black Americans (3 cr.)

ANTH A104 Culture and Society (3 cr.)

COMM C180 Interpersonal Communication (3 cr.)

ECON E101 Survey of Current Economic Issues and Problems (3 cr.)

ECON E201 Introduction to Microeconomics (3 cr.)

ECON E202 Introduction to Macroeconomics (3 cr.)

ENG G104 Language Awareness (3 cr.)

FOLK F101 Introduction to Folklore (3 cr.)

GEOG G110 Introduction to Human Geography (3 cr.)

GEOG G130 World Geography (3 cr.)

HIST H117 Introduction to Historical Analysis (3 cr.)

POLS Y101 Principles of Political Science (3 cr.)

POLS Y103 Introduction to American Politics (3 cr.)

POLS Y213 Introduction to Public Policy (3 cr.)

POLS Y219 International Relations (3 cr.)

PSY B104 Psychology as a Social Science (3 cr.)

PSY B310 Life Span Development (3 cr.)

SOC R100 Introduction to Sociology (3 cr.)

SOC R121 Social Problems (3 cr.)

WOST W105 Introduction to Women’s Studies (3 cr.)

One comparative world cultures course (3 cr.) selected from the following:

ANTH A104 Culture and Society (3 cr.)

CLAS C205 Classical Mythology (3 cr.)

FLAC F200 World Cultures through Literature (3 cr.)

GEOG G110 Introduction to Human Geography (3 cr.)

HIST H108 Perspectives on the World to 1800 (3 cr.)

POLS Y217 Introduction to Comparative Politics (3 cr.)

REL R133 Introduction to Religion (3 cr.)

REL R212 Comparative Religions (3 cr.)

One of these must be a course in ethics:

CPT 410 Information Technology, Ethics, and Leadership (3 cr.)

REL R283 Religion, Ethics, and Values (3 cr.)

REL R293 Ethics and World Religions (3 cr.)

REL R393 Comparative Religious Ethics (3 cr.)

PHIL P120 Ethics (3 cr.)

PHIL P326 Ethical Theory (3 cr.)

PHIL P493 Biomedical Ethics (3 cr.)

General Electives (24-30 cr.)

Courses for the remaining credits will be decided by the individual student, in consultation with an advisor, to fulfill additional career and/or personal interests. Students may take a maximum of 4 credit hours of HPER elective physical education courses numbered Exxx.

Dual Baccalaureate Degree

In certain circumstances students may be permitted to pursue a B.S. in Informatics and complete an undergraduate degree in another degree-granting school of the university. Check with an academic advisor for more details.

Second Baccalaureate Degree

In certain cases the dean may admit bachelor’s degree holders to candidacy for a second bachelor’s degree. When such admission is granted, the candidate must earn at least 60 additional credit hours and meet the requirements of the School of Informatics. Students seeking second degree candidacy should review the guidelines available from the informatics office. Students with a bachelor’s degree who wish to further their education should also consider becoming qualified for admission to a graduate program.

Minor and Certificate in Informatics

The undergraduate minor or certificate allows a student majoring in another subject to get appropriate training in informatics and obtain certification as someone who knows how to apply informatics tools to that subject area.

Certificate in Informatics

  1. Minimum grade of 2.0 (C) in all courses taken for the certificate.
  2. Students are required to complete 27 credit hours from the following list:
  3. INFO I101 Introduction to Informatics (4 cr.)

    INFO I202 Social Informatics (3 cr.)

    INFO I210 Information Infrastructure I (4 cr.)

    INFO I211 Information Infrastructure II (4 cr.)

    INFO I300 Human-Computer Interaction–Design and Programming (3 cr.)

    INFO I303 Organizational Informatics (3 cr.)

    INFO I308 Information Representation (3 cr.)

In addition, students must take an additional course (3 credit hours) from the informatics curriculum. These additional courses can be chosen from the listed electives for informatics and can therefore be taken in another department, if the other department is not the student’s major department.

Minor in Informatics

  1. Minimum grade of 2.0 (C) in all courses taken for the minor.
  2. Students are required to take three courses from the following list:

    INFO I101 Introduction to Informatics (4 cr.)

    INFO I202 Social Informatics (3 cr.)

    INFO I210 Information Infrastructure I (4 cr.)

    INFO I211 Information Infrastructure II (4 cr.)

    INFO I308 Information Representation (3 cr.)

  3. Students are required to take two courses from the following list of upper level courses:

    INFO I300 Human-Computer Interaction–Design and Programming (3 cr.)

    INFO I303 Organizational Informatics (3 cr.)

One course from the list of approved informatics elective courses. The course cannot be in the student’s major department.

Minor in Business

IUPUI students pursuing a bachelor’s degree in the School of Informatics may obtain a minor in business by successfully fulfilling the following requirements:

BUS A100 Basic Accounting Skills (1 cr.)

BUS A201 Introduction to Financial Accounting (3 cr.)

BUS A202 Introduction to Managerial Accounting (3 cr.)

ECON E201 Introduction to Microeconomics (3 cr.)

ECON E202 Introduction to Macroeconomics (3 cr.)

ECON E270 Introduction to Statistical Theory in Economics (3 cr.)

MATH M118 Finite Mathematics (3 cr.)

MATH M119 Brief Survey of Calculus I (3 cr.)

In addition, BUS K201 The Computer in Business, or its equivalent, must be completed with a minimum grade of C prior to starting the integrative core. Students are required to take the integrative core, which is 9 credit hours taken together as a single educational unit (BUS F301 Financial Management, M301 Introduction to Marketing Management, and P301 Operations Management).

In addition to the 12 required courses listed above, BUS X204 Business Communications, BUS L302 Commercial Law I, and BUS Z302 Managing and Behavior in Organizations are recommended.

This page last modified on April 24 2006
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