
NAVAL SCIENCE (N S)
100. Naval Laboratory (1) [Rpt./10 units] Various topics such as drill
and ceremonies, physical fitness, cruise preparation, sail training, safety
awareness, personal finances, and applied exercises in naval ship systems,
navigation, naval operations, naval administration, and military justice. 3L.
101. Introduction to Naval Science (3) Introduction to the naval
profession and to concepts of seapower, with emphasis on mission,
organization, and warfare components of the Navy and Marine Corps; naval
courtesy and customs, military justice, shipboard damage control and safety.
102. Naval Ship Systems I: Engineering (3) Ship characteristics and
types including ship design, hydrodynamic forces, stability, compartmentation,
propulsion, electrical and auxiliary systems, interior communications, ship
control, and damage control; basic concepts of the theory and design of steam,
gas turbine, and nuclear propulsion.
103. Naval Laboratory (2) [Rpt./9] Various topics such as drill and
ceremonies, physical conditioning, cruise preparation, safety awareness, naval
warfare doctrine and operations, administration and military justice. USMC
history, traditions, missions, land navigation, troop leading skills and small
unit tactics.
105. Marine Lab for Platoon Leaders (1) [Rpt./9] USMC history,
traditions, missions, land navigation, troop leading skills and small unit
tactics.
201. Naval Ship Systems: Weapons (3) Theory and employment of weapons
systems, the processes of detection, evaluation, threat analysis, selection,
delivery, and guidance. Physical aspects of radar and under-water sound. P,
102.
202. Seapower and Maritime Affairs (3) U.S. Naval history from the
American Revolution to the present. Discussion of the theories of Mahan,
political issues of merchant marine commerce, and a comparison of U.S. and
Soviet naval strategies.
301. Navigation and Naval Operations I (3) Theory, principles, and
procedures of navigation. Students learn piloting navigation including the use
of charts, visual and electronic aids, the theory and operation of magnetic
and gyro compasses, and celestial navigation.
302. Navigation and Naval Operations II (3) International and inland
rules of the road, relative-motion vector-analysis, formation tactics, and
ship employment. Introduction to naval operations and ship handling. P, 301
310. Evolution of Warfare (3) The development of warfare to present,
focusing on theorists, strategists, tacticians, and technological
developments. Student acquires sense of strategy and impact of precedent on
military actions.
400. Advanced Naval Laboratory (1) [Rpt./6 units] Command and
leadership training associated with the student battalion. Includes settings
which manifest conditions of stress, time management, personal accountability,
decision making, and command leadership. Open to students of NROTC only.
401. Leadership and Management I (2) Organizational behavior and
management in the context of the naval organization. A survey of management
functions of planning, organizing, and controlling; and introduction to
individual and group behavior in organizations; motivation and leadership.
402. Leadership Management II (2) Naval officer responsibilities in
naval administration: counseling methods, military justice administration,
naval human resources management, directives and correspondence, naval
personnel administration, material management and maintenance. P, 401 or MAP
305.
403. Advanced Naval Laboratory for Marines (2) [Rpt./12 units]
Commanding and leadership training associated with the student battalion.
Includes settings which manifest conditions of stress, time management,
personal accountability, decision making, and command leadership. Open to
students of NROTC only.
410. Amphibious Warfare (3) Historical survey of the development of
amphibious doctrine and amphibious operations, with emphasis on the evolution
of amphibious warfare in the 20th century; present day potential and
limitations on amphibious operations, including the rapid deployment force
concept.