Oregon Institute of Technology
Information Technology 2008-2009
Degree: Bachelor of Science
Options in: Applications Development, Business Systems/Analysis, and Health Informatics
Lower division courses for all three options
| PCC Courses | Credits | additional PCC Courses | Credits |
|---|---|---|---|
WR 121 & 122 English Composition WR 227 Technical Writing |
9 | WR 121 & 122 English Composition WR 227 Technical Writing |
12 |
| SPE 111 Fundamentals of Speech | 3 | SP 111 Public Speaking | 4 |
MTH 111 College Algebra MTH 361 Statistical Methods MTH 371 Finite Math/Calc. I |
12 | MTH 111B or C College Algebra MTH 244 Statistics II MTH 251 Calculus I |
13 |
ECO 201 Principles of Econ, Macro. ECO 202 Principles of Econ, Microeconomics |
6 | EC 201 Microeconomics EC 202 Macroeconomics |
8 |
| PSY 201 Psychology | 3 | PSY 201 (A) Intro. to Psychology, Part I | 4 |
| MIS 275 Introduction to Relational Databases | 3 | CIS 275 Data Modeling and SQL Introduction | 4 |
MIS 115 Visual BASIC Programming MIS 215 Business Applications Programming |
4 4 |
CIS 133B Intro. to Visual Basic. NET CIS 233B Intermediate Visual Basic Programming |
4 4 |
| MIS 256 Hardware/Software Integration | 4 | CIS 145 Microcomputer Hardware and CIS 240L Linux Install. or A+ Certification Hardware and Software |
8 |
| MIS 312 Systems Analysis | 4 | No PCC course equivalent | - |
| MIS 313 Relational Database Systems | 4 | No PCC course equivalent | - |
| MIS 325 Computer Networks I | 4 | No PCC course equivalent | - |
| MIS 335 Database Programming | 3 | No PCC course equivalent | - |
| Math/Science/Social Science Elective | 9 | See General Education sheet for list of courses | 9-12 |
| Humanities Elective | 9 | See General Education sheet for list of courses | 9-12 |
| Technical Elective | 3 | No PCC course equivalent | 3 |
Applications Development Option
The Information Technology Applications Development Option focuses on the acquisition of theory and technical competencies to prepare student for successful careers as applications programmers. The curriculum is designed to produce graduates with the competencies, skills and attitudes necessary for success in the workplace or further graduate education. The management components include analytical skills and problem solving; business organization and management; project management; leadership, teams, and communications. Information technology skill areas include database development, applications development, web development, technical support, telecommunications, and additional technical electives.
Additional Courses for Applications Development option
| MTH 327 Discrete Math | 4 | MTH 231 Elements of Discrete Math | 4 |
| ACC 201 Principles of Accounting I | 4 | BA 211 Accounting I | 3 |
| ACC 202 Principles of Accounting II | 4 | BA 212 Accounting II | 3 |
| ACC 203 Principles of Managerial Accounting | 4 | BA 231 Accounting III | 3 |
| BUS 215 Principles of Management | 3 | BA 206 Management Fundamentals | 3 |
CST 116 C++ Programming I CST 126 C++ Programming II |
4 4 |
CS 161 Computer Science I CS 162 Computer Science II |
4 4 |
| CST 136 Object Oriented Programming w/C++ | 4 | CS 261 Programming Systems | 4 |
| MIS 331 Oracle DBMS & PL/SQL | 4 | No PCC course equivalent | - |
| Social Science Elective | 3 | See General Education sheet for list of courses | 4 |
| Lab Science Elective | 4 | See General Education sheet for list of courses | 4 |
| Math/Science Elective | 4 | See General Education sheet for list of courses | 4 |
| Technical Elective | 12 | No PCC course equivalent | - |
Business/Systems Analysis Option
The Information Technology Business/Systems Analysis Option integrates technical, business, and interpersonal skills to prepare students for successful careers as business/systems analysts. The curriculum is designed to produce graduates with the competencies, skills and attitudes necessary for success in the workplace or further graduate education. The management components include analytical skills and problem solving; business organization and management; project management; leadership, teams, and communications. Students gain theoretical and practical experience with systems analysis and design, project management, personal computers, operating systems, applications, networks, web page design and development, and databases.
Additional Courses for Business/Systems Analysis option
| ACC 201 Principles of Accounting I | 4 | BA 211 Accounting I | 3 |
| ACC 202 Principles of Accounting II | 4 | BA 212 Accounting II | 3 |
| ACC 203 Principles of Managerial Accounting | 4 | BA 213 Accounting III | 3 |
| BUS 215 Principles of Management | 3 | BA 206 Management Fundamentals | 3 |
| BUS 306 Principles of Marketing | 3 | BA 223 Principles of Marketing | 3 |
| BUS 355 Business Law | 3 | BA 226 Business Law | 3 |
| MIS 102 Spreadsheet Software Lab | 1 | CAS 170 Beginning Excel | 3 |
| MIS 225 Business on the Internet | 4 | CIS 243 E-essentials of E-commerce | 4 |
| Lab Science | 4 | See General Education sheet for list of courses | 4 |
| Math/Science/Social Science Elective | 6 | See General Education sheet for list of courses | 8-10 |
| Technical Elective | 7 | No PCC course equivalent | - |
Health Informatics Option
Health Informatics is the rapidly developing scientific field that utilizes computer technology in the advancement of health care. As an applied science Health Informatics sits at the junction of computer technologies, information science, clinical practice and business management. It is the study of how health data are collected, stored and communicated; how those data are processed into health information suitable for administrative and clinical decision making; and how computer and telecommunications technology can be applied to support these processes. Students learn to identify what information and data are needed by doctors, nurses, hospital administrators, consumers, patients, government planners and other health care professionals and how they are used in order to make effective health care decisions. Graduates from a degree program in health informatics work in a variety of environments. These include hospitals, medical research laboratories, health insurance companies, Internet companies, health information technology suppliers, or consulting organizations. Within each of these environments lie opportunities as database administrators, project managers, project designers, researchers, or systems analysts.
Additional Courses for Health Informatics
| BIO 103 General Biology | 4 | BI 121 & 122 Intro to Anatomy and Physiology | 8 |
| BIO 200 Medical Terminology | 2 | MP 111 Medical Terminology | 4 |
| BA 321 Managerial Accounting | 3 | BA 211 Principles of Accounting I | 3 |
| BA 349 Human Resource Management | 3 | BA 224 Human Resource Management | 3 |
| MIS 101 Word Processing Software Lab | 1 | CAS 133 Basic Comp. Skills or CAS 216 Beginning Word |
3-4 |
| MIS 102 Spreadsheet Software Lab | 1 | CAS 133 Basic Computer Skills or CAS 170 Beginning Excel | 3-4 |
| MIS 103 Presentation Graphics Software Lab | 1 | CAS 133 Basic Comp. Skills or CAS 109 Beg. PowerPoint | 1-4 |
| MIS 225 Business on the Internet | 4 | CIS 243 E-essentials of E-commerce | 4 |
| MIS 331 Oracle DBMS & PL/SQL | 4 | No PCC course equivalent | - |
| MIS 206 Introduction to Management Information Systems | 3 | CIS 244 Structured Systems Analysis | 4 |
| Math/Science/Social Science Elective | 3 | See General Education sheet for list of courses | 4 |
The Information Technology program is going through changes, please contact Grant Kirby 503-725-2165 (Applications Development and Business/Systems Analysis) at OIT for questions.
PCC endeavors to create accurate transfer guides for students; however, requirements may change without notice. Students are responsible for working with PCC advisors and their transfer institution to ensure that their academic plan will meet requirements and timelines.
Last updated: September 2008