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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
3 HRS. An overview of the security field, covering the organization and management of the security function in industry, business, government and institutions. The protection of personnel, facilities and other assets as well as the administrative, legal and technical problems of loss prevention and control are analyzed. Various areas within the security field are explored along with employment opportunities. S
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3.00 Credits
3 HRS. Develop skills required for crime incident note taking, observation, interviewing and report writing techniques. Scenario exercises will be utilized for hands-on instruction to prepare data and provide courtroom information for prosecution purposes. (Prerequisite: READ 079/080, ENGL 091) S
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2.00 Credits
4 HRS. An introductory lab-based course involving a basic understanding of forensic science and how it is used in the criminal justice system, focusing on crime scene evidence, lab analysis techniques, recording, and presenting data. Mock crime scenes will be investigated, and real crime studies analyzed. (3 lecture hours; 2 lab hour per week) (Prerequisite: MATH 021, ENGL 091, READ 079/080) F
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3.00 Credits
3 HRS. A course providing knowledge of crisis theory and development of communication skills necessary for application to intervention services for family violence, sexual assault and other crisis situations. (Prerequisite: READ 079/80, ENGL 091.) F
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3.00 Credits
3 HRS. The course is organized around the phenomenon of crime as a developmental process occurring in social, political, and individual contexts, examining the criminal and juvenile justice systems; the biological, psychological, social and environmental roots of crime; the nature of the crimes themselves; the victims of crime; and the punishment of crime. S
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3.00 Credits
3 HRS. The study of the development, organization, operation, and result of the systems of probation and parole, as substitutions for incarceration methods; selection, success criteria, and public attitudes. F
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3.00 Credits
3 HRS. Constitutional law is concerned primarily with the exercise of judicial review. The focus is on the manner in which the courts generally have interpreted the cryptic provisions of the US Constitution; the principles, doctrines and rules developed in the cases and the underlying policies and values.
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3.00 Credits
3 HRS. Development of interpersonal communication and decision making skills for direct intervention with correctional clients and analysis of current methods of correctional treatment. F
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3.00 Credits
3 HRS. An introductory examination of women's roles in the various aspects of criminal justice, including the various theories and approaches to the slow but progressive changes taking place by women as offenders, victims and professionals within the criminal justice system. (Prerequisite: CJ 111, SOC 101 or PSYC 101) F
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3.00 Credits
3 HRS. An introductory examination of victimology within the sociological framework in order to deepen the student's understanding of the victim of a crime, to provide an organizing structure of the roles of victimology and the reasons for victimization. The student will explore the role of victimology in today's criminal justice system, examining the consequences of victimization and the various remedies now available for victims. (Prerequisites: CJ 111, PSYC 101 or SOC 101.) S
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