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Course Criteria
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3.00 Credits
Learners in this course will review the legal rights available to security officers, corporations, partnerships, and individually owned businesses for the protection of their property from employee and customer theft. It also discusses the legal rights of and responsibilities of security personnel and merchants as they pertain to theft and lawful arrest. Negligence, intentional torts, agency, contracts, alarms, damages, authority of private citizens, probable cause, arrest, search and seizure, interrogation, use of force by the private citizen, deprivation of rights, and entrapment are also examined. Credit 3 hours.
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3.00 Credits
The primary concentration for this course covers the essentials of private and public investigations with the comprehensive study of the investigative process, tools of investigations, and types of investigations. A thorough examination of fraud detection, employee theft, embezzlement, accounting improprieties, compliance investigations, internal controls and safeguards to prevent fraud, information access and control strategies, and legal issues in corporate investigations are also reviewed. Other covered areas include surveillance and undercover, violent crimes, property crimes, controlled substances and drug offenses, terrorist activities, computer crime, and private sector investigations. Credit 3 hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course provides a comprehensive overview of America's homeland security system, including key federal, state, local, and private organizations. Policy issues, technologies, legislation, preparedness recommendations, and trends are analyzed. Threat assessments, critical infrastructure protection, weapons of mass destruction, cyberterrorism, business preparedness, and emergency response and public protection are covered as well. Credit 3 hours.
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3.00 Credits
Learners in this course will examine the current ability of national, state, and local agencies to respond to terrorism. Lessons learned and best practices from past emergencies and terrorist events are reviewed to identify preparedness and mitigation methods. Individual and local government preparedness, response, and practices are covered. Credit 3 hours.
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3.00 Credits
Learners in this course will thoroughly examine the complex issues surrounding terrorism via a discussion of theories, domestic and international threats of terrorism, motivations for terrorism, and a review of the various religious, ideological, nationalistic, and ethnic movements taking place around the world. Consequence management is studied with a review of the incident management system, federal response plan, weapons of mass destruction effects, mass casualty decontamination, crime scene operations, and technology and emergency response. Credit 3 hours.
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3.00 Credits
This course outlines the essential roles of corporate and municipal managers and demonstrates the importance of their relationships with federal, state, and local government agencies as well as public and private community sectors. The emergency response plan, hazards, personnel training, and hazard and risk reduction strategies are covered. Contingency planning to protect vital facilities and critical operations is discussed via an implementation strategy, guidelines for minimizing development costs, and proven plan development methodology. Credit 3 hours.
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3.00 Credits
All learners in the M.S.S.A. program will be required to submit a professional portfolio addressing the competencies and skills they have achieved as a result of their graduate studies in Security Administration. The purpose of the portfolio is two-fold: to serve as a professional tool for the learner and will prove valuable in helping the learner document achievements and knowledge gained through the completion of the program, and will further serve as an assessment tool to ensure the currency and relevancy of the curriculum. Prerequisite: This course should be taken after completion of all courses in the program. Credit 3 hours.
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3.00 Credits
Course is part 1 of a 3 part course designed to acquaint students with the body of knowledge contained in the American Society for Quality (ASQ) exam for Certified Quality Engineer. Subjects include quality management, audits, customer relations, cost of quality, and training. Credit 3 hours.
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3.00 Credits
Course is part 2 of a 3 part course designed to acquaint students with the body of knowledge contained in the American Society for Quality (ASQ) exam for Certified Quality Engineer. Subjects include reliability, maintainability, material control, sampling, and metrology. Credit 3 hours.
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3.00 Credits
Course is part 3 of a 3 part course designed to acquaint students with the body of knowledge contained in the American Society for Quality (ASQ) exam for Certified Quality Engineer. Subjects include quality tools, continuous improvement corrective and preventative action, probability distributions, and statistical decision making. Credit 3 hours.
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