Minors

In order to provide students with additional opportunities to broaden and enrich their educations, the University offers several minors. A minor is a program of study that is distinct from and supplements a student's major. A minor may be taken as a way to give a coherent pattern to elective hours, to expand career options, to prepare for graduate study, or simply to explore in greater depth an area different from one's major.

Criminal Justice Minor (18 credits)

Required courses:
CRJ 201 Introduction to Criminal Justice (3 credits)
CRJ 301 Juvenile Justice (3 credits)
CRJ 303 Corrections (3 credits)
Select 3 courses from the following (at least one of which must be a CRJ course):
CRJ 305 Crime Prevention (3 credits)
CRJ 311 Forensics (3 credits)
CRJ 306 Criminal Law & Procedure (3 credits)
CRJ 320 Families & Domestic Violence (3 credits)
HIS 303 The American Constitution (3 credits)
LIB 318 Peacemaking (3 credits)
PSY 301 Social Psychology (3 credits)
PSY 303 Abnormal Psychology (3 credits)
POL 303 The American Constitution (3 credits)
SOC 203 Social Problems (3 credits)
SOC 305 Crime & Society (3 credits)
SOC 308 Racial & Ethnic Groups (3 credits)
SOC 312 Child, Family and Society (3 credits)
SOC 320 Public Policy and Social Services (3 credits)