Criminology & Criminal Justice BA, Criminal Justice MA 4 Plus 1
The Department of Criminology and Criminal Justice offers a combined degree program that affords students the opportunity to combine their undergraduate and graduate studies. With the approval of their academic advisor and the program director, students can take up to three designated graduate courses (referred to as dual courses) that fulfill the requirements for both undergraduate and graduate degrees, thus accelerating completion of their Master of Arts in Criminal Justice.
Admission Requirements
Students opting for the combined degree program must meet the minimum admission requirements for students applying to the graduate program in criminal justice as set forth in the current issue of the Graduate Studies Bulletin; the only exception of having obtained their baccalaureate degree.
It is recommended that students interested in the combined degree program declare their candidacy upon successful completion of 60 credits and/or upon entering their junior year; however, no later than having completed 90 undergraduate credits. This affords students the opportunity to collaborate with their advisor in the timely and appropriate selection of undergraduate and graduate courses.
To qualify for the combined program in Criminal Justice, students must possess and maintain a minimum of a 3.00 overall cumulative grade point average (CGPA), a 3.25 grade point average (GPA) within the criminal justice major and be able to demonstrate a proficiency in writing. Students in the combined degree program must maintain a minimum of a 3.00 GPA in the graduate courses for which they have been approved.
Program Learning Objectives
At the completion of the MA, students will:
- Be able to demonstrate a thorough knowledge and understanding of (1) administration of justice, (2) corrections, (3) criminological theory, (4) law adjudication, (5) law enforcement, and (6) research and analytic methods.
- Be able to demonstrate critical thinking, skeptical inquiry, and the scientific approach to problem solving by selecting and organizing information, identifying assumptions and causal relationships, distinguish between verifiable facts and value claims, determine the credibility of sources, distinguish between warranted or unwarranted reasons or conclusions, detect biases, and evaluate appropriate problem-solving strategies, their feasibility and efficacy.
- Be able to communicate effectively, in writing and verbally, the conventions of the English language in a clear, concise, articulate, literate, and professional manner consistent with those of college writing and those specific to the discipline of law and criminal justice.
- Be able to use, manage, understand, and evaluate technologies to aid and solve practical problems. It involves possessing the knowledge and ability to access and research information utilizing contemporary technologies (hardware and software), as well as the ability to identify and discern qualified data, academic knowledge and information from unqualified data, non-academic knowledge and information.
- Be able to identify, evaluate, assess, and employ appropriate legal, ethical, and professional behaviors and practices within all aspects of their life, including, but not limited to an academic and criminal justice environment.
Degree Plan
Note: All students are required to complete the General Education Requirements of their campus in fulfillment of their bachelor’s degree requirements.
Required Undergraduate Major Courses (45 credits)
Core Requirements (18 credits)
- CJUS1101 Introduction to Criminal Justice (3 credits)
- SOCI1201 Introduction to Sociology (3 credits)
- CJUS1102 Criminology & Social Theory (3 credits)
- CJUS3500 Research Methods in Criminology & Criminal Justice (3 credits)
- CJUS3941 Criminal Justice Internship (3 credits)
- CJUS4405 Criminology & Criminal Justice Capstone (3 credits)
Dual Courses (9 credits)
Dual courses are to be taken during senior year of the undergraduate program. Free electives are reduced by 9 credits to accommodate dual credit courses in the undergraduate degree plan.
- CRIM6000 Criminal Justice (3 credits)
- CRIM6010 U.S. Constitution & Public Policy
- Any CRIM6000 or 7000 elective
Elective Courses (18 credits)
Take any six courses in the Criminology & Criminal Justice major.
OR choose one of the following concentrations:
Justice Systems Concentration (18 credits)
Take six courses from the following:
- CJUS1103 Introduction to Law
- CJUS1125 Introduction to Social Advocacy
- CJUS1130 Working with Children & Families
- CJUS2100 Professional & Legal Writing
- CJUS2201 Police & Society
- CJUS2202 Courts & Judicial Process
- CJUS2203 Corrections, Probation and Parole
- CJUS2204 Juvenile Justice & Delinquency
- CJUS2206 Criminal Investigation
- CJUS2208 Victimology
- CJUS2210 Criminal Law
- CJUS2212 Crime & Forensics
- CJUS2217 Computer Technologies & Cybercrime
- CJUS2230 The Death Penalty
- CJUS2240 Criminal Profiling
- CJUS2247 Criminal Justice & Mental Health
- CJUS2250 Emerging Issues in Crime & Justice
- CJUS3012 Crisis Intervention
- CJUS3019 Restorative Justice
- CJUS3226 Criminal Procedure Law
- CJUS3304 Criminal Justice Ethics
- CJUS3305 Intro to Homeland Security
- CJUS3307 Domestic Violence
- CJUS3310 Criminal Justice Professional Lecture
- CJUS3314 Comparative Justice Systems
- CJUS3317 Psychology & the Law
- CJUS3318 Fraud Investigation
- CJUS3320 Interviewing & Counseling Strategies
- CJUS3322 Negotiation & Conflict Management
- CJUS3324 Community Resource Management
- CJUS3325 Trauma, Injuries, & Death Investigation
- CJUS3326 Rehabilitation & Reentry Strategies
- CJUS3424 Terrorism & Counterterrorism
- CJUS3890 Legal & Analytical Reasoning
- CJUS4436 Criminal Case Studies
- CJUS4447 Intro to Intelligence Studies
Crime, Law, & Society Concentration (18 credits)
Take six courses from the following:
- CJUS1112 Race, Gender, and Criminal Justice
- CJUS1135 Intro to Social Justice
- CJUS2205 Crime & Inequality
- CJUS2208 Victimology
- CJUS2209 School & Workplace Violence
- CJUS2212 Crime and Forensics
- CJUS2216 Sex, Deviance, and the Law
- CJUS2235 Cybercrime
- CJUS2240 Criminal Profiling
- CJUS2246 School to Prison Pipeline
- CJUS2247 Criminal Justice & Mental Health
- CJUS2250 Emerging Issues in Crime & Justice
- CJUS2300 Wrongful Convictions
- CJUS2307 Deviance and Social Control
- CJUS2503 Crime & Media
- CJUS2523 Mass Shootings and Hate Crimes
- CJUS2701 Penology
- CJUS3012 Crisis Intervention
- CJUS3019 Restorative Justice
- CJUS3020 Race, Class, and Policing
- CJUS3201 Race and Crime
- CJUS3301 Women and Crime
- CJUS3303 Law & Society
- CJUS3306 White Collar Crime
- CJUS3307 Domestic Violence
- CJUS3311 Organized Crime
- CJUS3313 Serial Killers
- CJUS3314 Comparative Justice Systems
- CRIM3315 Abnormal Psychology
- CJUS3316 Global Terrorism
- CJUS3317 Psychology & the Law
- CJUS3329 Public Health & Criminal Justice System
- CJUS3331 Gangs in America
- CJUS3360 Forensic Psychology
- CJUS3841 Torture
- CJUS4430 Hate Crimes
- CJUS4436 Criminal Case Studies
Master’s Degree Courses (24 credits)
- CRIM6005 Advanced Criminological Theory (3 credits)
- CRIM6015 Research Methods in Criminal Justice and Criminology (3 credits)
- CRIM6020 Statistics and Data Analysis Graduate Electives (3 credits)
- CRIM8001 Qualifying Exam/Thesis (0 credits)
- 15 credits of graduate electives may be selected from any CRIM6000 or 7000 level courses.