Our Eligibility Criteria

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Eligibility Criteria

High School Diploma, GED or equiv. International Education

Credit Hours

84 Hours

Course Duration

1 Year (Self-Paced) Program

Courses Offered

14

Courses Offered In ASSOCIATE TO BACHELORS DEGREE

  • Courses Name

  • Courses Description

  • Credit Hours

  • Essentials of Public Administration

  • This course explores how science and art of policy administration is definable, describable, replicable, and cumulative. Course describes several theories and analytical approaches that contribute to what we know about policy administration. Purpose of this course is to set out a detailed description of key theories in contemporary public administration.

  • 6 Credits

  • Essentials of Economics

  • Essentials of Economics course deliver a concise and balanced introduction to modern economics. This course combines a solid foundation of theory with real-world examples, applications, and data. Coverage of modern microeconomics sets the stage for a discussion of macroeconomics, providing a logical sequence that parallels how the field evolved.

  • 6 Credits

  • Basics of Urban Sociology

  • Globalization has changed the roles of cities in the global economy; the course conveys the need to understand the new order in our world. It allows you to understand how we cope in today's world. The course concentrates on the psychology of city and community-building process.

  • 6 Credits

  • Public Budgeting and Finance

  • Covering the essentials of fund accounting, this course introduces you to the basic accounting principles at work in both governmental and not-for-profit organizations. This course divides most of the chapters into independent sections, which may be covered as separate units.

  • 6 Credits

  • Foundations of State and Local Government

  • This is the most reliable course for state and local politics. This course is the perfect detailed overview and analysis for you to understand how America's state and local political systems work. America’s legislatives, executives and judiciary institutions are also discussed in details.

  • 6 Credits

  • Fundamentals of Political Science

  • This course provides an introduction to scientific study of politics, supplying you with basic tools needed to be both critical consumers and producers of scholarly research in political science. The course begins with a discussion of what it means to take a scientific approach to the study of politics.

  • 6 Credits

  • Political Ideologies

  • This course provides a clear, concise, and comprehensive introduction to the ideas and ideals that shake and shape our political world. It covers the range of contemporary political ideologies, from the standard categories of liberalism, conservatism, and socialism to newly emerging ideological alternatives.

  • 6 Credits

  • Foundations of Public Relations

  • This course provides latest theories and practices in easy-to-understand terms, exploring the role of competition and conflict in today’s modern public relations practice. It’s based on the idea that public relations are management of competition and conflict on behalf of one’s client or organization.

  • 6 Credits

  • Introduction to Comparative Politics

  • This course presents an introduction to the study of comparative politics. The course will survey some of the central topics in this political science sub-discipline; it will cover theoretical and empirical debates, and will introduce and strengthen your knowledge of different regimes in less developed countries.

  • 6 Credits

  • Introduction to Political Science

  • Political Science course offers an unbiased and thorough introduction to basic concepts and theories of political science. Major theories expose you to many ways of thinking. Emphasizing both U.S. and comparative politics, will provide you with a solid foundation of knowledge and the analytical skills necessary to understand modern politics in historical context.

  • 6 Credits

  • Research Methods in Political Science

  • This course offers an introduction to key empirical methods required for understanding, analyzing and researching problems in political science. In this course, you will learn and reflect about the different philosophical and practical issues, the concepts, the methods and other components in conducting scientific research in political science.

  • 6 Credits

  • Introduction to International Relations

  • This course analyzes the major theoretical perspectives in the field of international relations. You will study the mainstream realist and liberal approaches and explore theoretical alternatives to these paradigms. The relationship between theory and practice is also examined.

  • 6 Credits

  • Fundamentals of Urban Politics

  • This course is designed to introduce you to the major debates that have structured the field of urban politics; interaction among governmental institutions, political actors, private interests, and the marketplace. Other issues such as urban regimes, urban political history, urban growth, and gender are examined throughout the course.

  • 6 Credits

  • Introduction to Public Relations

  • This course will give you an opportunity to analyze how the public relations process is carried out through different public relations specializations. It examines what PR is, and how it has evolved. It looks at key areas of PR practice and specialization, and discusses concepts and skills basic to PR.

  • 6 Credits