Certificate in Computing in Arts & Social Sciences
This certificate is open to currently registered HÂþ» undergraduate students in the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences; it will not be open for direct application.
Designed for students in the arts, social sciences, and humanities, this certificate program is intended to develop participants’ digital literacy. Students will develop and apply technical computing skills and also explore key social and intellectual issues in an increasingly digital world. This program will give students important skills for future employment and will impart the tools they will need to understand and navigate a rapidly changing society.
This certificate can be completed by students in any BA program, in addition to the students’ regular program requirements, and will appear on the students’ transcripts. Note, too, that courses completed for this certificate can also count toward regular degree requirements for a student’s major or minor, depending on the subject.
ÌýStudents can enrol in the certificate by logging in to : under ‘Web for Students’, click on ‘Admissions’ then ‘Declare a Major or Minor’, and at the bottom of that screen, click on the appropriate link in the drop-down list of certificate options.
What will I learn in this certificate program?
-you will become familiar with simple programming concepts and apply them
-you will become familiar with and use typical software applications such as word processors, spreadsheets, and database applications.
-you will become familiar with and practice web page creation.
-you will critically appraise scholarly literature on ethical and intellectual issues with computing as it exists today
To earn this certificate, students will complete the following three courses:
CSCI 1105: Introduction to programming
CSCI 1170: Introduction to Website development
CSCI 2203: Data Science for Everyone
+ 3 credit hours from the following list of applied skills courses:
CSCI 1107.03: Social Computing
CSCI 1109.03: Practical Data Science
PHIL 2490: Social, Ethical and Professional Issues in Computer Science
CSCI 2201.03: Introduction to Information Security
CSCI 2670.03: Introduction to Server-Scripting
ENGL 3310.03: Writing in a Digital Age
MGMT 2601.03: Knowledge Management
MGMT 3601.03: Information in a Networked World
MGMT 3603.03: Beyond Google
MGMT 4540.03: Data Management
MGMT 4620.03: Web Design and Architecture
Questions? Contact the Associate Dean Academic of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences at fassadac@dal.ca.
**Looking for more? Students who wish to add more computing to their BA degree might wish to complete a Minor in Computer Science or a Minor in Informatics.
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