The Bachelor of Science in Information Technology
Information technology is concerned primarily with the application of existing computing technologies to the information needs of organizations and individual computer users. Potential careers include network administrator, database administrator, system administrator, and website administrator.
IT programs aim to provide IT graduates with the skills and knowledge to take on appropriate professional positions in information technology upon graduation and grow into leadership positions in the field. Specifically, within five years of graduation a student must be able to:
- Explain and apply appropriate information technologies and employ appropriate methodologies to help an individual or organization achieve its goals and objectives;
- Manage the information technology resources of an organization;
- Anticipate the changing direction of information technology and evaluate and communicate the likely utility of new technologies to an organization;
- Demonstrate professional advancement, lifelong personal development, and social responsibility.
The B.S. in information technology degree program was approved by the College of Engineering and Physical Sciences in May 2008 and the USNH Board of Trustees in fall 2008. We will welcome our first IT class in fall 2009. Note: the B.S. in information technology degree program has not yet been accredited by the Accreditation Board for Engineering and Technology.
Information technology majors must maintain an overall grade-point average (GPA) of 2.00 or better in all required information technology, and computer science-required courses in order to graduate. If at the end of any semester, including the first, a student's cumulative GPA in these courses falls below 2.00, the student may not be allowed to continue as an IT major. All required IT courses offered by the CS department at the 400-600 level must be passed with a C- or better.
If a student wishing to transfer into the information technology major has any coursework that is applicable to the major, the grades in those courses must satisfy the minimum grade requirements for the B.S. degree in information technology. The student must have an overall grade-point average of 2.00 or better in all courses taken at UNH.
The IT major requires students to take the equivalent of ten courses within the CS department that constitute the core coverage of the breadth of IT topics. In addition, students much choose a depth track, consisting of three courses that focus on a more specialized area within the IT field. The CS department currently offers a Web Track and an Admin Track. Students who choose the Web Track must take IT 604, Intermediate Web Development; CS 771, Web Programming Paradigms; and IT 704, Advanced Web Topics. Students who opt for the Admin Track must take IT 609, Network/System Administration; IT 725, Network Technology; and IT 775, Database Technology.
The IT curriculum includes a number of courses outside of the CS department. Two courses in mathematics are required - Calculus I and a statistics course. A two-semester lab science sequence is also required, as are a philosophy course (PHIL 424) and a technical writing course (ENGL 502).
In addition, by the end of the sophomore year, each student must choose a Second Discipline – a particular domain outside of IT to which the student’s IT skills can be applied. Second Disciplines (typically five courses) have been defined by the CS department in such areas as Business Administration, Health Management and Policy, and Justice Studies. If a student is interested in an area that is not currently defined, the option of a student-designed Second Discipline is also available.
The following is a sample schedule depicting the necessary requirements and the layout of the curriculum. Students must consult with their advisers in order to come up with the proper schedule for themselves.
Freshman Year
Course |
Fall |
Spring |
| CS 400, Introduction to Computing |
1 |
- |
| MATH 425, Calculus I |
4 |
- |
| CS 403, Weaving the Web (Gen Ed 3) |
4 |
- |
| CS 415, Introduction to Computer Science I |
4 |
- |
| Gen Ed |
4 |
- |
IT 506, Intermediate Applications Programming with Visual Basic
or CS 416, Introduction to Computer Science II
|
- |
4 |
| IT 502, Intermediate Web design |
- |
4 |
| GenEd |
- |
4 |
| ENGL 401, First-year Writing (Gen Ed 1) |
- |
4 |
| Total |
17 |
16 |
Sophomore Year
Course |
Fall |
Spring |
| MATH 439, Statistical Discovery for Everyone |
4 |
- |
| IT 520, Computer Architecture |
4 |
- |
| Gen Ed |
4 |
- |
| Lab Science I&II (Gen Ed 3B or 3P) |
4 |
4 |
| IT 505, Database Programming |
- |
4 |
| ENGL 502, Technical Writing |
- |
4 |
| Second Discipline I |
- |
4 |
|
|
|
| Total |
16 |
16 |
Junior Year
| Course |
Fall |
Spring |
| Depth Track I |
4 |
- |
| PHIL 424, Science, Technology and Society (Gen Ed 8) |
4 |
- |
| Second Discipline II |
4 |
- |
| Gen Ed |
4 |
- |
| CS 600, Internship |
- |
1 |
| CS 595, Computer Science Seminar |
- |
2 |
| Depth Track II |
- |
4 |
| IT 666, Computer Security |
- |
4 |
| Second Discipline III |
- |
4 |
| Total |
16 |
15 |
Senior Year
Course |
Fall |
Spring |
| Depth Track III |
4 |
- |
| Second Discipline IV |
4 |
- |
| Free Elective |
4 |
- |
| IT 705, Project Management |
4 |
- |
| IT 710, Senior Project |
- |
4 |
| Second Discipline V |
- |
4 |
| Free Elective |
- |
4 |
| Free Elective |
- |
4 |
| Total |
16 |
16 |
|