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Where we foster excellence in education that challenges students of every background to develop their intellect, character, and abilities; to assist students in achieving their educational and career goals; and to be responsive to the greater community.

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Spring 2026 Courses

 

SUBJECT AND COURSE # 

CLASS TITLE 

CREDITS 

FORMAT 

Start & End Dates 

AJ 102 

Concepts of Criminal Law 

3 

Face-to-Face 
T & TH 
3:30pm-5:20pm 
(IHS) 

02/17-05/29 

ANTH 100 

Physical Anthropology 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

ART 100 

History of Art I 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

ART 102 

History of Art II 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

AUT 170 

Engine Diagnosis and Repair 

3 

Face-to-Face 
T & TH 
3:30pm- 6:30pm (CUHS) 

02/17-05/29 

CHIC 100 

Intro to Chicana/o Studies 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

COMM C1000 

Intro to Public Speaking 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

ENGL C1000 

Academic Reading and Writing  

4 

Face-to-Face 
T & TH 
4:30pm-6:50pm 
(SHS & IHS) 
 

02/17-05/29 

HIST 120 

US History: Prehist-Reconstruc 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

HIST 121 

US History: Reconstruct-Present  

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

MUS 100 

Intro to Music Foundations 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

MUS 102 

Intro to Music Lit & Listening 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

POLS C1000 

American Gov & Politics  

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

PSYC C1000 

Introduction to Psychology 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

RELS 100 

Religions of the Modern World 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

SOC 101 

Introduction to Sociology 

3 

ONLINE 

02/17-05/29 

* Subject to change


AJ 102 Concepts of Criminal Law

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
The course covers the historical development of law and constitutional provisions; definitions and the classification of crime and their application to the system of administration of justice; legal research, study of case law, methodology, and concepts of law as a social force are presented. Crimes against persons, property, government, and organized crime are discussed. (C-ID: AJ 120) (CSU/UC)

ANTH 100 Physical Anthropology

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
Physical anthropology is the study of humans as biological beings subject to the forces of both evolution and culture. Physical anthropology studies humans in a biological context and explains our relationship to other primates and the rest of the natural world. Throughout the course we will examine anatomical, behavioral, and genetic similarities and differences among the living primates, and by illustrating the scientific method, learn the basic mechanism of the evolutionary processes and trace a pathway of human evolution in relation to environmental adaptation as reconstructed from the fossil record. (C-ID: ANTH 110) (CSU/UC)

ART 100 History of Art I

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
This course provides an overview of Western art and architecture from prehistory through the medieval period.(C-ID: ARTH 110) (CSU/UC)

ART 102 History of Art II

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
This course provides an overview of art and architecture from the Renaissance to the contemporary period. This course may be taken by itself, after, before, or concurrently with ART 100. (CSU/UC)

AU T 170 Engine Diagnosis and Repair

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 36.0 Lecture, 54.0 Lab
(Letter Grade Only)
This course provides advanced operation and hands on experience of electronic injection systems and their sub-assemblies. Students will learn operation and repairs of sensors and actuators of injection systems. This class emphasizes diagnostic procedures and techniques using basic and sophisticated test equipment. (CSU)

CHIC 100 Introduction to Chicana/o Studies

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade or Pass/No Pass)
This course offers an introduction to Chicana/o studies as an academic discipline. It focuses on its origins, development, and theories that contribute to its formation. Furthermore, it analyzes and evaluates Chicana/o perspectives on revisionist history; demographics; employment; political and socioeconomic trends; education; and the arts. This course will also examine, compare and contrast, such topics as cultural values, social organization, urbanization patterns of the Chicana/o in the U.S., migration, identity and gender roles as well as their struggles in education, politics and legislation. Due to the nature of the subject, students will be exposed to some Spanish phrases, words, and expressions. (CSU/UC)

COMM C1000 Introduction to Public Speaking

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
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. (CSU/UC)

ENGL C1000 Academic Reading and Writing

Unit(s): 4.0 Class Hours: 72.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
Prerequisite(s): Placement as determined by the college’s multiple measures assessment process.
In this course, students receive instruction in academic reading and writing, including writing processes, effective use of language, analytical thinking, and the foundations of academic research. (Formerly ENGL 110) (CSU/UC)

HIST 120 United States History: Prehistory to Reconstruction

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
This course is a survey of American history from the pre-Columbian era to the end of Reconstruction. This course will cover the major political, economic, social, gender, racial, cultural and intellectual transformations of the colonial and early American eras. At the completion of this course students will have a broad understanding of the most important ideas, personalities, movements, and events in the colonial and early American periods. (C-ID: HIST 130) (CSU/UC)

HIST 121 United States History: Reconstruction to the Present

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
This course is a survey of American history from Reconstruction to the present. This course will cover the major political, economic, social, gender, racial, cultural and intellectual transformations of the modern American eras. Of special note will be an examination of America's rise to global power. At the completion
of this course students will have a broad understanding of the most important ideas, personalities, movements, and events in the modern period. (CSU/UC)

MUS 100 Introduction to Music Foundations

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
An introduction to basic concepts of music. The development of the skills and knowledge needed to read music, to hear music, and to use some instrument (including the voice) with skill. (C-ID: MUS 110) (CSU, UC credit limited. See a counselor.)

MUS 102 Introduction to Music Literature & Listening

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
An introduction to music literature with emphasis on listening experience. Students study the expressive materials of music and the major forms of music literature including music of the Middle Ages, Renaissance, Baroque, Classical, and Romantic eras as well as 20th century, Jazz, American music, Rock, and Non-Western music. Emphasis placed on the skills and understanding necessary for lifelong music listening experiences. (CSU/UC)

POLS C1000 American Government and Politics

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
This course is an introduction to government and politics in the United States and California. Students examine the constitutions, structure, and operation of governing institutions, civil liberties and civil rights, political behaviors, political issues, and public policy using political science theory and methodology. (Formerly POLS 102) (CSU/UC)

PSYC C1000 Introduction to Psychology

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
This course is an introduction to psychology, which is the study of the mind and behavior. Students focus on theories and concepts of biological, cognitive, developmental, environmental, social, and cultural influences; their applications; and their research foundations. (Formerly PSY 101) (CSU/UC)

RELS 100 Religions of the Modern World

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
An introduction to the various contemporary religions of the world with an emphasis on their historical development. Study of the basic beliefs in religions such as Hinduism, Buddhism, Sikhism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. (CSU/UC)

SOC 101 Introduction to Sociology

Unit(s): 3.0 Class Hours: 54.0 Lecture
(Letter Grade Only)
Introduction to the study of society. Overview of major concepts, methods and theoretical perspectives including: culture, social structure, institutions, socialization, gender, race, social class, inequality, deviance, and social control. Topics include macro and micro theories. (CSU/UC)

 

Dual Enrollment