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Fire Science Course Descriptions


FS362 Analytic Approaches to Public Fire Protection 3(3,0)
Examines tools and techniques of rational decision-making in fire departments, including databases, statistics, probability, decision analysis, utility modeling, resource allocation, cost-benefit analysis, and linear programming.

Prerequisites: ENG 300, FS355, FS359, Statistics highly recommended

FS344 Applications of Fire Research 3(3,0)
Examines the rationale for conducting fire research, various fire protection research activities, and research applications, including fire test standards and codes, structural fire safety, automatic detection and suppression, life safety, and firefighter health and safety.

Prerequisites: ENG 300, SSC 320

FS355 Advanced Fire Administration 3(3,0)
Examines organization and management in the fire service, including new technologies, changing organizational structures, personnel and equipment, municipal fire protection planning, manpower and training, and financial management.

Prerequisites: ENG 300

FS357 Fire Prevention Organization and Management 3(3,0)
Examines the factors that shape fire risk and the tools for fire prevention, including risk reduction education, codes and standards, inspection and plans review, fire investigation, research, master planning, various types of influences, and strategies.

Prerequisites: ENG 300

FS359 Personnel Management for the Fire Service 3(3,0)
Examines relationships and issues in personnel administration and human resource development within the context of fire-related organizations, including personnel management, organizational development, productivity, recruitment and selection, performance management systems, discipline, and collective bargaining.

Prerequisites: ENG 300

FS415 Fire Related Human Behavior 3(3,0)
Examines human aspects of the fire problem, including research and analysis of the problem and related issues in residential properties, wild land fires, assisted living/group home situations, commercial/industrial settings and multi-use high-rise buildings.

Prerequisites: ENG 300

FS440 Disaster and Fire Defense Planning 3(3,0)
Examines the concepts and principles of community risk assessment, planning, and response to fires and natural disasters, including the Incident Command System (ICS), mutual aid and automatic response, training and preparedness, communications, civil disturbances, natural disasters, hazardous materials planning, mass casualty disasters, earthquake preparedness, and disaster recovery.

FS442 Fire Dynamics 3(3,0)
Examines fire dynamics within the context of firefighting and its applications to fire situations, including combustion, flame spread, flashover, and smoke movement, as well as applications to building codes, large-loss fires, and fire modeling.

FS446 Fire Investigation and Analysis 3(3,0)
Examines technical, investigative, legal, and managerial approaches to the arson problem, including principles of incendiary fire analysis and detection, environmental and psychological factors of arson, gang-related arson, legal considerations and trial preparations, managing the fire investigation unit, intervention and mitigation strategies, and shaping the future.

FS474 Fire Protection Structure and Systems Design 3(3,0)
Examines design principles involved in structural fire protection and automatic suppression systems, including fire resistance and endurance, flame spread evaluation, smoke control, alarm systems, sprinkler innovations, evaluation of sprinkler system designs, and specialized suppression systems.

Prerequisites: ENG 300


FS482 Political and Legal Foundations of Fire Protection 3(3,0)
Examines the legal, political and social aspects of the government’s role in public safety, including the American legal system, liability, negligence, code enforcement, and public sector personnel issues.

Prerequisites: ENG 300


FS484 Community Risk Reduction3(3,0)
Examines concepts of community sociology, the role of fire-related organizations within the community, and their impact on the local fire problem, including fire service relationships within the community and other agencies, developing a community inventory, shaping community policy, master planning, and shaping community perceptions about the local fire service.

Prerequisites: ENG 300


FS486 Managerial Issues in Hazardous Materials 3(3,0)
Examines regulatory issues, hazard analysis; multi-agency contingency planning; response personnel; multi-agency response resources; agency policies, procedures and implementation; public education and emergency information systems; health and safety; command post dynamics; strategic and tactical considerations; recovery and termination procedures; and program evaluation.

Prerequisites: ENG 300

FS494 Senior Project 3(3,0)
Requires a formal, written paper that presents a project the student has handled at his/her place of employment.

Prerequisite: EN300, SS320, and completion core and concentration fire science courses


EN300 Essentials of Written Communication 3(3,0)

Is an intermediate course in expository writing available to students who have completed their lower division writing requirements. Students enrolled in English 300 should have developed sufficient writing and research skills to meet the demands of college level writing. This course provides the additional opportunity for students to review, reassess, and further develop their writing skills.

Prerequisites: ENG 100. This course does not fulfill the General Education requirements for either Engineering or Digital Arts degrees.

SS 320 Research Methods 3(3,0)

Is an upper division foundational course in research methods in the field of Social Sciences. The course (a) emphasizes qualitative and quantitative methodological approaches; (b) introduces descriptive and inferential statistics; (c) enables students to become more effective consumers of research; (d) prepares students for subsequent and related courses; and (e) provides a foundation for students to be able to conduct original research that may lead to term papers, senior project, and other products.

Pre-requisites: ENG 300

HU360 Ethics & the Fire Service 3(3,0)

Helps students develop a critical, analytic, and constructive perspective regarding the ethical issues, which arise in contemporary world and in the fire and emergency services. For this purpose, the course draws on philosophical, psychological, and religious resources and insights as important conceptual tools. First, major competing contemporary approaches to ethical theory including psychological perspective on moral development are discussed. The course covers ethical theories such as Utilitarianism, Deontology, and Virtue Ethics and problems such as relativism. In addition to these, several issues related to ethics in our modern world will be examined.

Pre-requisites: ENG 300, SS 320. This course does not fulfill the General Education requirements for either Engineering or Digital Arts degrees.

SS 400 Topics in International Studies: GPE

Provides students with an introduction to the issues, history, perspectives, and analytical methods in the field of Global Political Economy (GPE). The course tries to create a conceptual landscape of the global political economy, to grasp some big trends and processes and movements related to it. This is a “big picture” course that serves as an introduction to the fields of International Economics and Political Science.

Pre-requisites: SS 320.This course does not fulfill the General Education requirements for either Engineering or Digital Arts degrees.

MA112 College Algebra 3(3,0)

Covers the real and complex numbering systems, equations, inequalities, function theory, polynomial functions, exponential and logarithmic function.

Prerequisite: Intermediate Algebra or appropriate score on placement test. This course does not fulfill the General Education requirements for either Engineering or Digital Arts degrees.

MA355 Statistics 3(3,0)

Covers topics in descriptive and inferential statistics, including data collection, condensations, permutations, combinations and probability theory, binomial and normal distributions, confidence limits, hypothesis testing; level of significance, errors, distribution tests, regression and correlation.

Prerequisites: MA 112. This course does not fulfill the General Education requirements for either Engineering or Digital Arts degrees.

PA320 Public Administrations

Provides a broad understanding of basic concepts and principles of public administration, including role, structure, and functions of public agencies and how they operate.

MNG310 Management

Examines the different ways to manage organizational change and meet the rapid pace of change in the business environment. Cases and current research inform class discussions of different types of restructuring. Topics may include creating learning organizations, designing for innovation, managing growth and downsizing, and building sustainable organizations.

BLW300 Business Law

Presents an integrated approach to the legal environment of business with a fresh up to date introduction to those aspects of our legal system which cut across all areas of law, establishing a vital foundation for understanding the substantive subjects such as the American system of jurisprudence, constitutional law, the dual court system, administrative agencies, consumer protection, environmental law, Uniform Commercial Code, torts and crimes and a thorough understanding of the Law of Contracts.