Criminal Justice B.S. Online Program courses
First Semester Courses
These courses are for new transfer students in the Spring 2025 semester.
Landmark U.S. Supreme Court cases are significant social, historic and legal events. Drawing from the humanities, criminal justice, and social sciences, this course examines the social and historical context of legal decisions as well as their impact. Students will critically analyze legal documents and identify connections to contemporary questions of justice in the U.S. Each semester, course sections focus on a different case(s) selected by the faculty.
Prerequisite
ENG 201 and junior standing or above
This course satisfies the College Option: The Struggle for Justice & Equality in the U.S. (300-Level) area of the Gen Ed Program
HUM 300: "Citizenship, Rights, and Expression" Section OL98: Registration Code: 40687
Live Meeting on Zoom, Wednesdays, 5:50-7:10 pm
HUM 300: "You Can’t Say That! Exploring Freedom of Speech in Art and the Law" Section OL99 Registration Code: 40684
Live Meeting on Zoom, Tuesdays, 4:30-5:45 pm
Section OL 98, Registration Code: 40704
Section OL99, Registration Code: 40705
Course Description: This research-based academic writing course prepares students to write effectively in their upper-level Criminal Justice courses. Focused on empirical writing, students will write about observations and patterns of behavior, investigating how arguments are made in the field of Criminal Justice. They will also learn to make original scientific inquiries, to structure empirical arguments, and to utilize a guided peer-reviewed writing process. This writing course also focuses on recognizing power structures and bias embedded in scholarly research and in the role of the researcher-writer’s position. Overall, the course will prepare students to produce logically organized, complex research-based writing projects within the field of Criminal Justice.
Continuing Student Courses
Students in their second semester or beyond should complete the CJBS 250, CJBS 300 and CJBS 415 major core courses in sequence.
CJBS 250, Section OL99, Registration Code: 41160
This course will present the research process, types of studies, appropriate descriptive statistical techniques and guidelines for formulating research questions and testable hypotheses. It will also review how to decide on an appropriate population for study, how variables are constructed, and how data are collected and organized, and discuss sampling methods and sample size. A variety of research methods will be covered, including experimental, quasi-experimental and survey methods, as well as other forms of data collection and the use of existing databases. Students will also be exposed to qualitative methodologies including ethnography, observation, content-analysis, and interviewing techniques.
CJBS 300 OL-98 Course Registration Code: 41081
CJBS 300 OL-99 Course Registration Code: 41082
This course builds upon knowledge acquired in previous courses and connects theoretical approaches with practical applications. Students will study a broad array of assessments and evaluations of the policies and programs that have evolved in the field of criminal justice. Students will review and analyze experiments such as D.A.R.E., Minneapolis Domestic Violence and Kansas City Preventive Patrol in the light of relevant criminal justice theories. The ultimate goal of the course is to provide students with essential skills for critically evaluating and assessing programs, based on findings from empirical studies and the scholarly literature.
Prerequisite: CJBS 250
CJBS 415 OL-98 Registration Code: 41524
CJBS 415 OL-99 Registration Code: 41523
This capstone seminar is required of all Bachelor of Science in Criminal Justice majors. It affords students the opportunity to reexamine and integrate the practical and theoretical knowledge and critical thinking skills acquired over the course of their studies within the major into a meaningful culminating experience. Students will participate in debates central to the understanding of the American criminal justice system. Focusing on reexamination of some prominent criminal justice texts, the course will require students to critically examine in depth an original work relative to its social and political context and to the theoretical and empirical literature. Students will also apply and advance theoretical arguments in oral and written form through an in-depth examination of a current or controversial issue of their choosing such as: the use of force by police, plea bargaining, or mass incarceration.
Prerequisite: CJBS 300
Major, minor, and elective courses
These courses are options for new and continuing students.
Section OL99 Registration Number: 41525
Current topics and problems in urban studies will be addressed from an anthropological perspective. The course examines cities as places where members of different groups come together in both cooperation and conflict. Students will examine the way global processes and local politics and culture have shaped and continue to transform the modern city. Students will engage with case studies from a variety of urban environments, including some in the United States, and will focus on various topics such as class, power, ritual, migration, lifestyle, ethnic tensions and alliances, social movements, and the meanings of space and place.
Prerequisite
ENG 101
Notes
This course satisfies the Flexible Core: World Cultures and Global Issues area of the Gen Ed Program.
This course counts towards the anthropology minor
Section OL99 Registration Number: 40258
This course examines crime, criminality and responses to crime from an anthropological and cross-cultural perspective. Students will analyze the concept of crime as a cultural construct and as a social phenomenon and consider its causes, factors and complexities in a global context. Norms and transgressions will be explored through ethnographic case studies of and cross-cultural research on a variety of world cultures and how power, economics, identity, gender, religion, and other meaning systems are integrated with these transgressions on local, national and global scales. Students will study cases critically and learn qualitative anthropological methods such as interviews and observation to consider and compare examples of and attitudes toward crime in their own society.
Prerequisite
ENG 101
Notes
This course satisfies the Flexible Core: World Cultures and Global Issues area of the Gen Ed Program.
This course counts towards the anthropology minor
Section OL99 Registration number: 41522
This course is intended as an introduction to the corrections system and will provide an overview of current institutional practices, policies and legal issues. The course focuses on the relation of corrections to the criminal justice system, theories underlying correctional practice and the role of institutions within the corrections system. Specifically, this course provides an overview of the field of corrections. It reviews the historical development of crime and corrections, sentencing, jails, prisons, correctional policies, agencies, prison life, and challenges facing correctional populations. It will further explore the principles and practices of treatment accorded to offenders in various types of correctional settings.
This course is required for the corrections minor
Section OL99 Registration number: 40559
This course provides an overview of correctional systems and methods adopted by selected foreign countries and describes similarities and differences in philosophy.
Prerequisite
ENG 201, junior standing or above, and one of the following: CRJ 101, CJBS 101, COR 101 or ICJ 101, or permission of the section instructor
This course counts towards the corrections minor
Section: OL99 Registration Code: 40278
Examination of the role of race, class and gender within the institutional correctional community. Analysis of the impact upon clients, staff and administration through examination of current correctional institutions and case studies by selected corrections experts.
Prerequisites
ENG 201; and COR 101 or CJBS 101 or CRJ 101 or PSC 101; and sophomore standing or above
This course counts towards the corrections minor
Section OL99 Registration Code: 39716
This course will explain the sources and consequences of stress. Key theories and terminology will be discussed and evaluated. A variety of instruments that measure stress levels among individuals will be demonstrated. Coping techniques enabling students to adjust to the demands of stress will be described and practiced.
PED 180 is an elective.
Section OL99 Registration number: 41521 (FULL)
Section OL98 Registration number: 54047
This course provides an analysis of the historical development of the relationship of the states to the Bill of Rights. The effect of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment on the application of the Bill of Rights to the states is examined through a study of the leading Supreme Court decisions relating to criminal justice.
Prerequisite
ENG 101 and sophomore standing or above
This course is required for the law minor
Section OL99 Registration Code: 40147
Analysis of the politics of race and racism in the United States through the examination of major court decisions and of legislations affecting minority groups. Treatment of racial minority groups in the criminal and civil justice systems, and by courts, police and prisons will be included.
Prerequisite
ENG 201, and GOV 101 or POL 101, and junior standing or above, or permission of the section instructor
This course counts towards the law minor
OL99 Registration Code: 41520
An intensive study of the law of search and seizure as it affects the private citizen and the law enforcement officer. An in-depth examination of court decisions that have followed seminal cases such as Mapp and Chimel. The rights of the individual and the corresponding obligations of the police officer are explored. Alternatives to the exclusionary rule are considered.
Prerequisite
Notes
This course counts towards the law minor
Section OL99 Registration Code: 41519
An intensive study of selected problems drawn from constitutional law. Analysis and evaluation of the growth of the constitutional relationship between the individual and government at the federal, state and local levels, with special attention to problems of law enforcement in the United States. Questions relating to search and seizure, interrogation of suspects, public speeches and mass demonstrations are explored.
Prerequisite
ENG 201, senior standing, and LAW 203 or LAW 301
This course is required for the law minor
Section OL99 Registration number: 40655
An analysis of the social and political forces that guided the evolution of women's role in policing from ancillary specialist to integrated member of the police establishment. Role enhancement from "Police Matron" to "Policewoman" to "Police Officer" is studied against the backdrop of women's reform movements. Title VII Equal Opportunity Act of 1972 and Supreme Court rulings abolishing barriers to women in policing are examined. Study of women police in other countries in state and federal agencies. Topics include female officers' occupational role conflicts; performance on patrol; coping with physical and psychological stressors - male peer prejudice jealous mates favoritism sexual harassment; women's special attributes in policing; female detectives; the future including the role of women in key policy-making decisions.
Prerequisite
ENG 101 and one of the following: PSC 101, CRJ 101, CJBS 101 or ICJ 101
Section OL99 Registration number: 40608
An identification and analysis of the diverse ethical issues encountered in the police service. Traditional ethical theories will be examined and will be applied to such topics as discretion, deadly physical force, misconduct, authority and responsibility, affirmative action, civil disobedience, undercover operations and privacy.
Prerequisite
ENG 201; and one of the following: CJBS 101 or CRJ 101 or ICJ 101 or PSC 101
Notes
This course counts towards the police studies minor
Section OL99 Registration number: 41518
This course offers a deep examination of police use of force and its implications for American police and the communities they serve from a current and historical context. Permissible limits of police use force are the subject of constant debate, interpretation and policy analysis. Topics include escalation, de-escalation and assessment period; problems arising between citizens and police resulting from use of force; social changes that impact police legitimacy; challenges and solutions for contemporary use of force; reasonableness; excessive force; proportionality and necessity.
Prerequisite
ENG 201; and PSC 101 or CJBS 101 or CRJ 101 or ICJ 101
Notes
This course counts towards the police studies minor
Section OL99 Registration number: 39190
This course examines the changes in the methods, patterns and meanings of violence. Special attention is paid to individual and collective violence in the streets, in schools, at home, within the media, by the police, by terrorists and by the military. The major theories explaining the causes of violence, and important research about attitudes toward violence and the use of force to bring about change are reviewed.
Prerequisite
Section OL98 Registration number: 39506
This course focuses on the illegal conduct of youth. It examines the ways that adults have reacted to misbehavior by youth over the centuries, how treatment approaches and prevention efforts by social welfare and social control agencies have changed, and how young peoples’ race, class, gender, and sexual orientation influence social and legal responses to problematic activities. This course also critically evaluates many of the sociological, psychological, and biological theories that attempt to identify the causes of a variety of youth crime and misbehavior.
Prerequisite
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You can register for any online course offered during the winter session that will help you meet a graduation requirement. Make sure you read the dates and any required meeting times for online courses.
Keep in mind that a three week winter course is condensed: you will have to dedicate a significant amount of time each week to complete readings and assignments.