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- Lecturer: Brenda Kahuikee
- Lecturer: Ms Martha Namutuwa
- Lecturer: Abraham Shilomboleni
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Pharmacology forms part of the second year BPEMC programme. This course aims to equip students with knowledge and understanding of the general concepts of pharmacology in order to enable the student to predict the possible effects of medications on the body. The course provides an overview of common medication classes and basic medications utilised in the hospital setting and emphasis will be placed on the detailed understanding and application of medications under the emergency care practitioners’ scope of practice.
This is a Postgraduate Supervision Portal
The aim of this course is to teach students the principles of Digital Photogrammetry, enabling them to use a Digital Photogrammetrical Workstation (DPW) to perform basic aerial and close range photogrammetry for the creation of Digital Terrain Models, orthophotos and maps.
The enrollment key is for this course is: dpg710s
The course is designed to give the student an understanding of the concepts in physical chemistry covering units and behaviour of ideal and non-ideal gases, thermodynamics and thermochemistry, phase and chemical equilibria, reaction rates and mechanism, conductivity of ionic solutions and electrochemical cells. Students should be able to analyse and apply these principles to a wide range of chemical and physical situations.
The aim with this Course is to instill in students a mindset, skills and knowledge to understand:
By the end of this course of study, you should be able to demonstrate knowledge of the anatomical, molecular, and biochemical characteristics of plants, their growth cycles, and the biotic and abiotic factors that affect plant growth.

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Lectuter Dr Edgar Mowa |
Plant protection (PPN 601S) This course aims to provide students with knowledge and basic understanding of weeds, plant pests, diseases and disorders including methods of prevention and control including principles of Integrated Pest Management (IPM), pests control. Examples of current pest problems in different crops will be discussed. This lecture provides students with principles and best practices of crop protection, decision making process based on the ecosystem analysis, and selection of the technology that can be applied in the field. Lectures are divided into three main parts. First part discusses the definition and historical perpectives of plant protection and classification of harmful organisms; the second part deals with methods to recognize the type of pests and plant diseases, methods of observations in the field, and ecosystem analysis as the base for selecting technology; and the last part discusses the principle of Integrated Pest Management, and its implementation in different crops. By the end of this course, each student should be able to,
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The course is designed to provide and equip students with a wide range of knowledge on the concepts and norms of democratic policing in Namibia, the SADC and the world. The course equips students with knowledge and understanding of normative prescriptions for what the police can do to promote equitable policing in society to support democratic development. Also, the course intends to instil in students an understanding that democracy requires not only that the police, as part of the executive arm of the state, be constrained by law but also that they may make a special effort to safeguard activities that are essential to the exercise of democratic policing in a multicultural society.
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