Search results: 933
Clinical Operative Dentistry 1 (RES411/RES411n)
The Clinical Operative Dentistry 1 course aims to provide the dental students different protocols for proper infection control in addition to the health and occupational hazards of the dental procedure. It also helps them to identify the different types of bases and liners and their application.
Understand the biological influences of dental materials and restorative procedures on health status of dentino-pulpal organ.
Clinical Operative Dentistry 2 (RES421n/RES421)
This course is concerned with providing the dental students with the art and science of selection of proper restorative material, the different methods of control of pain. It also introduces them to oral environment and moisture control in dentistry, in addition to teeth hypersensitivity and management of deep caries.
This course fulfils SDS3 which is good health and well being.
Clinical Operative Dentistry 3 (RES531a)
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Clinical Operative Dentistry 4 (RES541a/RES541n)
This course is concerned with providing the dental students with the art and science of remineralization and conservation of teeth defects, the different light curing units and managing cases of teeth discoloration. It also introduces them to nanotechnology in dentistry, which has recently been formulated the new era in conservative dentistry worldwide.
Clinical Partial Denture (PRS422n/PRS422)
This course deals with clinical steps of removable partial denture construction as well as principles of partial denture design and also biomechanics concerned with this design.
Clinical Pharmacology and Drug Interaction (PO512/PO412)
The aims of the course are to provide the Pharmacologic and clinical knowledge about some commonly occurring clinical problems affecting different body systems and their implications in health promotion. To enable students to understand the safe use of drugs as regards adverse effects, contraindications and drug interactions.
Clinical Removable Prosthodontics 4
This course deals with immediate dentures and different maxillofacial prosthesis.
Clinical Removal Prosthodontics -3
This course deals with advanced cases such as flat ,flabby ,overdentures cases as well as recent advances in removable partial denture.
COM155/COM135/GSE024 - Introduction To Information Technology
- Define types of data, simple model of computer, data storage, data processing, integrated circuits (ICs), and registers.
- Recognize number systems and coding schemas.
- Identify the functions of OS, basics of programming languages, and computer software categories.
- Apply computer skills on mini-projects serving different engineering departments.
- Explain the types of computer networks and data communication.
- Organize the information security, Malicious Software, and solutions.
- Have a view on the concepts and the future of AI & IoT.
COM265/COM245 - Programming II
Depth coverage of more advanced features of the C++ language : Two Dimensional Arrays- Structures and Arrays of Structures-Pointers-Classes Usage and Declaring-Objects as Function Arguments-Operator Overloading- Inheritance.
Communication Systems I (ECE432/ECE452)
This module focuses on the Fourier analysis of signals, analysis of the continuous wave (CW) modulation techniques (AM, DSB-SC, QAM, SSB, VSB, FM and PM) and their applications, mathematical description and spectral analysis of AM, FM and PM signals.
Communication Transmission System (ECE4431/ECE4631)
This module is designed to provide students with the necessary knowledge about communication, transmission and systems, and how all relate to what we do everyday. The students will examine source, encoder (transmitter), channel, and receiver functions in communication transmissions of all types. Emphasis will be placed on principles of line(wired)and air (wireless) communication, a study of various systems, and future developments in communication transmission systems.
Communications Systems II (ECE462 / ECE442)
Comparative Literature II - LIT302
Animal studies is among the budding fields that is attracting a lot of attention over the past two decades. This is partially due to the cultural and conceptual shifts in the figuration of animals from mere objects, serving the humans, to subjects in their own rights. Admittedly, such shifts are triggered by our growing awareness of environmental and animal rights questions in what may be deemed a post-human age.