

Private Pilot Flight to Certificate will enable the student to meet the requirements necessary to obtain a Private Pilot certificate. Private Pilot Flight training will the enable student to meet the prerequisite(s) specified in 14 CFR Part 61.109 or 14 CFR Part 141 Appendix B, as appropriate. Prerequisite(s): FAA Student Pilot Certificate and AVN 104ĪVN 106 Private Pilot Flight To Certificate Note: FAA minimum hours approved are 35 total hours for AVN 105 & 106. Students must have a FAA Student Pilot Certificate/FAA 3rd Class or higher Medical Certificate.
#ACCELERATION DUE TO GRAVITY LAB PHYSICS 411 FULL#
At the conclusion of the course, the student demonstrates proficiency in basic flight maneuvers and the student pilot will have successfully completed no less than three (3) takeoffs and full stop landings in the traffic pattern as Pilot-in-Command. The student becomes familiar with the training airplane and learns how the airplane controls are used to establish and maintain specific flight attitudes and ground tracks. During this course, the student obtains the foundations for all future aviation training. Private Pilot Flight to Solo will enable the student to meet some of the prerequisite(s) specified in 14 CFR Part 61.109 or 14 CFR Part 141 Appendix B, as appropriate.


Students will be assigned a term paper based on specific works studied, and will also be expected to maintain a journal including notes, drawings and other entries related to their experience abroad. Mythology and Homeric literature will be introduced in order to gain an insight into the cultural foundations of Western Art and Civilization. In Europe, students will explore the Aegean, Classical, Hellenistic, Roman and Byzantine art styles by studying works of architecture, sculpture, painting, illuminated manuscripts, archaeological and other applied arts in the context of churches, archaeological sites and art museums. This will occur before departing to Europe to visit the country of Greece to study the original art first hand over the period of two weeks. Students will study the art and the history surrounding the art's creation during three lectures on the campus of Farmingdale State. This course will introduce the Ancient through Byzantine periods of art as they occurred in Greece. Prerequisites: ENG 102 BIO 120 or 123 or 166 or 170 and ANT 212 or ANT 250 with a grade of C+ or higher The growing interest in global health and our own diversity makes this a course particularly interesting to those preparing for careers in health, international development, and health advocacy. Students will compare and contrast American methods and systems with another society to gain a better appreciation for the complexities and diversity of the human experience of health and disease, interpretations of the body and healing, the construction and distribution of knowledge, norms, and systems of medical care. Advanced Medical Anthropology builds on material covered in Medical Anthropology, moving from a general overview and introduction, to the concentration on a specific culture, its concepts of wellness and disease, the methods and practices used for diagnosis and treatment, and ethics and health disparities. Medical Anthropology is a subfield of anthropology utilizing various methods to understand factors that influence health, disease and its experience, as well as medical systems. Prerequisites: ANT 100 or ANT 110 or ANT 120 or SOC 122 or SOC 150, and EGL 102 all with a grade of C+ or higher Recommended: ANT 210, Modern Anthropology and Globalization ANT 211 Caribbean Cultures ANT 260 Anthropological Theory ANT 266 Anthropological Research Utilizing a four-field approach, this course will look at the migrations from Africa to the rest of the world through DNA markers, material and social culture explore the changing meanings and presentations of pan-Africans in literature, religion, art, and film discover some of the ways in which scientists and social scientists trace physical and cultural artifacts, and note some of the controversies and contexts for cultural claims. From cuisine to crafts, technologies to the arts, pan-Africans have influenced our language, music, philosophies, and social policies in ways both direct and subtle. In providing the largest body of slave labor in known history, Africans changed the cultures of all inhabitants of the Americas and were themselves changed in the process.
