Campus code
L
Page URL
/academics/online-learning/cityonline

Linux System Administration

The administration of a Linux server. Prepares students for industry certification and entry-level employment in system administration. Topics include process control, system monitoring, filesystem preparation and maintenance, logical volumes, basic servers and the firewall, virtual machines, startup and shutdown, user accounts, periodic tasks, security issues, and installations.

Data Structures & Algo: Java

The analysis and design of computer algorithms and their underlying data structures. Analysis of the timing and efficiency of algorithms. Study of lists, stacks, queues, trees, backtracking, searching, sorting and recursion. Introduction to graphs, hash tables, heaps, priority queues and direct access files. Further study of abstract data types and object-oriented programming.

Deciding on a Career

An in-depth study of the process of deciding on a career. Students are guided through the career decision-making process, which includes career curiosity, self-assessments, the world of work, job market trends, and career development over the lifespan. Social, cultural and relational factors impacting major and career choice will be explored through self-evaluation of interests, personality preferences, values, and skills. This course is helpful for anyone making a career change or undecided about a major or career path.

Job Search Tech.

Practical step-by-step instructions and techniques to plan and organize an effective job search and promote an overall understanding of the job search process. Topics include best practices for writing cover letters and resumes, popular online job search tools, job description analysis to identify key workplace skills, networking for career success, interview preparation strategies, and successful interviewing techniques.

Intro to Public Speaking

In this course, students learn and apply foundational rhetorical theories and techniques of public speaking in a multicultural democratic society. Students discover, develop, and critically analyze ideas in public discourse through research, reasoning, organization, composition, delivery to a live audience and evaluation of various types of speeches, including informative and persuasive speeches.