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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
No course description available.
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3.00 Credits
Comments: POLS 2120 is also listed under the Criminal Justice heading as CRMJ 2120. This course examines the foundations of the criminal justice system in the United States including the rule of law and causes of crime. It explains law enforcement, courts, and corrections, their goals and processes, and the impact of crime on society.
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3.00 Credits
This course is a broad study of how individual states, international organizations, governmental and non-governmental entities, economics, and other forces affect the world. Introduction to International Relations (IR) is a combination of many approaches including the application of theory, economics, history, sociology, and more.
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2.00 Credits
No course description available.
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4.00 Credits
This course is intended for students who wish to learn the basics of the discipline of psychology. It offers a contemporary view of the human organism through the study of topics concerned with growth and development, motivation, behavior disorders, emotion and adjustment, learning and thinking, perception, individual differences, social adjustments.
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4.00 Credits
This course is a lecture course introducing the student to the methods of investigating psychological questions and interpreting statistics commonly found in psychology. The student will become familiar with a variety of research strategies including observation, experimentation, survey, and correlation.
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3.00 Credits
This course explores the behavior of non-human animals on multiple levels of analysis, including ontogenetic (the developmental origins of behavior), phylogenetic (the evolutionary origins of behavior), proximate (the physiology and neurophysiology of behavior), and functional (the fitness consequences of behavior).
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3.00 Credits
This course introduces biological bases of behavior. It includes ethology and comparative behavior, psychobiological development, physiological and sensory mechanisms of behavior, and evolution and behavioral genetics. It presents basic structural and functional properties of the nervous system.
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3.00 Credits
This course focuses on the production and application of forensic psychological knowledge and research findings for the civil and criminal justice systems. The student explores the role of a psychologist within the justice agencies, behavioral analysis and criminal profiling, psychology of crimes and delinquency, "victimology" and victim services, psychological assessments, mental disorders, and correctional psychology.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides an introduction and overview of the various substances the human body is exposed to and how we react to them. Students analyze the interaction between drugs and human behaviors. Students predict the function of the major groups of legal and illicit substances and examine U.S. drug policy. Students also categorize the social effect of drugs on humans as well as evaluate drug activity and its use.
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