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The Department of Criminal Justice offers the Bachelor of Science degree and the Master of Science degree in Criminal Justice. The undergraduate program provides students with a broad foundation in the social sciences while emphasizing restorative justice, social and economic justice, fairness, community evolvement, and public safety. Students are encouraged to think critically about fundamental issues concerning crime and justice while preparing to become practitioners in the field. Upon graduation students are especially prepared for careers across the range of criminal justice including US Marshall, FBI agent, juvenile probation officer, parole officer, criminal investigator and more. Graduates are well prepared for law school as well as to continue their study of criminal justice in graduate school programs leading to the master's degree or Ph.D.
Students in the undergraduate program must complete a total of 120 semester hours: 39 hours of general education courses; 39 hours of criminal justice courses, 12 hours of required English cognate courses, and 30 hours of general electives. Students must earn a C or better in all courses required for the major and have an overall GPA of 2.5 for courses required for the major. At least 21 hours of criminal justice courses must be taken in residence at Chicago State University. And students must pass the state and federal constitution examination.
Students must complete 9 hours of required core courses including the following.
CJ 1200: Introduction to Law
CJ 2309: Survey of the Criminal Justice System
CJ 2316: Introduction to Criminology
Students must complete 12 hours of required English cognate courses including the following.
ENG 1360: Essentials of English Grammar
ENG 2100: Editing Nonfiction
ENG 2280: Critical Strategies in Research and Writing or ENG 2790: Business Writing
CMAT 2030: Basic Speech Communication
Students must complete 12 hours of required elective courses. One course must be selected from each of the following four categories.
Law
CJ 4318: Correctional Law and Prisoner Rights
CJ 4343: Constitutional Criminal Procedure
CJ 4344: Trial Practice
CJ 4345: Law, Judicial Process, and Society
CJ 4361: Elements of Substantive Criminal Law Law Enforcement
CJ 4325: Police Operation
CJ 4326: Police Community Relations
CJ 4334: Comparative Police Systems
CJ 4335: Police Organization and Management
CJ 4363: Criminal Investigation
Juvenile Justice
CJ 4323: Youth Gangs and Violence
CJ 4324: Youth Gang Intervention
CJ 4352: Juvenile Institutions
CJ 4357: Juvenile Delinquency and Juvenile Justice
Corrections
CJ 4318: Correctional Law and Prisoner Rights
CJ 4321: The Correctional Organization
CJ 4336: Sociology of Corrections
CJ 4351: Probation and Parole
CJ 4352: Juvenile Institutions
CJ 4353: Adult Institutions
CJ 4354: Community Based Corrections
CJ 4356: Local Detention Facilities
And students must complete 15 hours of criminal justice electives through which one can focus on law, law enforcement, juvenile justice, or corrections. The program culminates with students completing an internship in criminal justice or a service learning practicum in criminal justice. Students who have six months or more work experience in the criminal justice field may elect to write a bachelor's paper on some topic in criminal justice. |