This
class offers a broad coverage of technology concepts and trends underlying
current and future developments in information technology, and fundamental
principles in information systems including the World Wide Web, hardware,
operating systems, software, databases, security, enterprise applications, and
electronic commerce.
Teacher: James Koo
This course introduces students to the fundamentals of
economics, a social science that studies the production, consumption, and
distribution of goods and services. Emphasis is on providing students with
basic concept and knowledge of the economy. While microeconomics studies
individual choices under certain condition, macroeconomics studies the overall
consequences of the economy as a whole. The main purpose of this course is to
enable students to apply economic concepts to the real world.
This
course is to survey the date, purpose, authorship, and theological emphases of
the General Epistles. This course will attempt to demonstrate that this group
of New Testament documents clearly identifies itself as the literature of
Jewish of literary style, but maintains a similar Christological and
eschatological outlook.
The course will present the basic Biblical
teaching about Christian discipleship. Course objectives will focus, not only
on the relevant Scriptures describing and demonstrating discipleship, but also
the practical engagement in the New Testament call to follow Christ and obey
God’s Word. The goal of the course will be to demonstrate that Christian
discipleship is the process by which believers grow in the Lord Jesus Christ
and are equipped by the Holy Spirit to share Christ and serve others, with the
ultimate goal of becoming more and more Christ-like.
This course offers an introduction to Reformed
theology, one of the most historically important, ecumenically active, and
currently generative traditions of Christian doctrinal inquiry. The course
proceeds by examining major figures and contexts for Reformed theology, and an
array of doctrinal concerns that provide coherence to the “tradition,”
including: the authority of Scripture, and the nature of Confession, Election,
Christology, Sacraments, and the Christian life.