Posts Tagged ‘probability and statistics’

Graduate Course Analysis of Criminal Intelligence at Adelphi University New York

Eligibility:
Studied 4 years or more, personal and / or the military police or security forces Superior.
Curriculum:
First Level
Research Methodology and Analysis
Risk Analysis
Applied to the Criminal Investigation
Formal and Applied Logic
Application of Analytical Techniques in crime situations I
Institutional Sociology

Second Level
Analysis Applied to Criminal Investigation
Criminal Psychology
Elements of Probability and Statistics
Application of Analytical Techniques in Criminal Situations II

Course: Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 18 to 22 hours.

Start of classes: April 2008

Information and registration:
November 2007 and since February 2008

Department of Postgraduate - Faculty of Security Sciences
posegu@universidad-policial.edu.ar
Rosario 532 - Piso 1 º - Hotline 4901-9733
Int Switch 4902-4759. 261

Fees: PFA Institute of Community and Alumni
Tuition: $ 170 Tuition: $ 200
Fee: $ 120 Fee: $ 180

Requirement in criminal justice at La Roche College, Pennsylvania

Language Requirement – No Credits Required.
APCRP students do not have a modern language requirement but can take language courses as alternatives and may minor in Spanish.

General Electives - 15 Credits
APCJP students have been granted 11 credits (W) from the elective component based upon work experience and prior academic/training courses.

The elective requirement may be fulfilled through a minor or certificate program. Recommended programs are: Criminalistics, Modern Languages, Computer Science, Psychology, Sociology, Accounting, Pre Law, and Management.

Criminal Justice elective courses in excess of the required credit (6) may be taken and applied to the general elective component.

Criminal Justice -15 credits required: Students granted 12 credits for CRIM 101–Introduction to the Criminal Justice System (A); CRIM 216–Police and Society (W); CRIM 345–Criminal Investigations (A); and CRIM 211-Intelligence Analysis and Presentation (A)

CRIM 310 Criminal Law
CRIM 455 Senior Criminal Justice Capstone
CRIM/PS 205 Constitutional Law
CRIM/PSY 311 Research Methods
CRIM/SOC 330 Theories of Criminal Deviance

Criminal Justice Electives - Select 6 credits: Students are granted 6 credits for CRIM 354 – Law Enforcement Communications (A); and CRIM 451 – Internship (W)

CRIM 210 Introduction to Corrections
CRIM 300 Correctional Counseling
CRIM 334 Enterprise & Transnational Crime
CRIM 336 Terrorism
CRIM 340 Crime Scene & Forensics Laboratory
CRIM 341 Criminalistics
CRIM 343 Computer Crime
CRIM 346 Security Management & Loss Prevention
CRIM 352 Administration of Criminal Justice Organizations
CRIM 457 Independent Study

Criminal Justice Skills - 12 credits required: Students are granted 3 credits for CRIM 207 – Professional Responsibility (A). (Select CRIM 212 or MT 140)

CRIM 212 Analysis of Criminal Justice Data

EN 230 Technical Writing
IST 208 Introduction to Cyberspace
MT 140 Probability and Statistics
PH 120 Logic

Curriculum in criminal justice at Anna Maria College, Massachusetts

The program consists of a required 4 course sequence, seven electives, and successful completion of the Capstone Project.

Required Courses (4)Ethical Theory
Research Design and Methodology
Statistical Analysis
Justice Administration

Elective Courses
Seven elective courses are required of the degree. Students are encouraged to take up to 3 courses (9 credit hours) in elective graduate coursework from related disciplines, especially Business, Psychology and Emergency Management. Program director approval required.

Required Courses Descriptions (all classes are 3 credits unless otherwise noted)

Capstone Requirement
Policy and Strategy

JAD 710 Research Design and Methodology
Designed to help students become acquainted with the fundamentals of research and research design. Students are required to adopt an individually designed research project that demonstrates their ability to conceptualize ideas in criminal justice and apply methods for exploring those ideas.

JAD 711 Statistical Analysis
Focuses on probability and statistics with an emphasis on data analysis, including univariate and multivariate techniques. Statistical problem solving is engaged using various data-sources.

JAD 840 Justice Administration
Examines planning models and techniques applicable to public administration. Topics will also include theories of administration, leadership types, group decision-making, the budget process, the role of the work environment and grant writing.

JAD 891 Policy and Strategy (Capstone Project)
Serves as the final evaluation for Justice Administration students. Requires case studies and other materials to demonstrate oral and written competence in the areas of research, professional responsibility, and management. Analyzes issues of law, policy, and society, allowing students to integrate knowledge and experience as they apply ethical principles in developing effective strategies to confront issues facing practitioners within the realm of human service and criminal justice. Culminates with a final project presented to a faculty panel. Prerequisite: JAD 710, 711 and completion of 24 credit hours.

Elective Course Descriptions (all classes are 3 credits unless otherwise noted)

CRJ 712 Technology and Crime
Provides an overview of the intersection between technology and crime. This includes the study of criminal acts committed with the use of technology and the role of technology in investigation and analyzing crime rates and patterns.

CRJ 713 Forensic Anthropology
Designed to introduce the graduate student to the realm of Forensic Anthropology as a Forensic Science and its place within the criminal justice system for criminal investigation, civil matters, and human rights issues. The techniques of skeletal biology as they relate to Forensic Anthropology will be presented and will provide a foundation for an understanding of how these techniques fit into a team approach in forensic inquiry. The ethical and moral underpinnings of casework are presented, as well as, issues derived from working with families of traumatic death and multiple fatality events. Human rights exhumations of political dissidents and government ethnic cleansing campaigns will be presented and the legal presentation of forensic evidence at tribunals will be discussed.

CRJ 803 Juvenile Offender
Explores the philosophy and practice of the juvenile justice system from the Illinois Juvenile Justice Act of 1899 to present policies and process. Students are challenged to critically examine the juvenile justice system - its mandate, separateness, and effectiveness.

CRJ 805 Forensics
Studies the application of science to law. Introduces forensic science concepts, history, processes and issues including how forensic science is linked with other components of the criminal justice system.

CRJ 806 Ethics in Public Safety
Examines ethical principles as they apply to the many practical problems that confront criminal justice professionals in the performance of their duties and responsibilities. Uses case studies to illustrate ethical reasoning and examine issues of social justice.

CRJ 808 Contemporary Case Law
An examination and analysis of recent decisions and opinions of federal and state courts around current issues in the criminal justice system.

CRJ 816 Criminological Thought
A presentation of major theories of crime and criminality. Theories are analyzed by common sense, logic, evidence, policy utility and compatibility with one another. Theories will be examined through a discussion of measures, correlates and popular beliefs regarding the prevalence, causes and continuance of criminal offending.

CRJ 817 Victim Studies
The evolution of the study of victimology and historical perspective will be considered. This study will culminate in the victims’ rights movement and resulting legislation including the Victim Bill of Rights and Victim Compensation. The experience of the criminal victimization will be analyzed from the crime scene to proceedings at the courthouse.

CRJ 820 Police and Community Initiatives
Designed to provide students with an understanding of the relationship that exists between the police and the community, and an examination of the police role in society and the psychological, sociological, and ethnic factors which influence this relationship.

CRJ 822 Criminal Justice and Public Policy
Facilitates critical thinking about the approaches to the delivery of public safety services in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Includes the study of actual behaviors and attitudes of individuals in various agencies in an attempt to understand and assess planning decisions. Develops concepts of interdependence, jurisdictional disputes and the goals of contemporary justice administration in a democratic society.

CRJ 823 Drugs and Human Behavior
A consideration of the effects of psychotropic substances on individual and societal human behavior. Students will study the history of drug use in the United States, and the development of regulatory and enforcement policies and practices. The behaviors studied will chronicle the effects of drug abuse upon individuals. Societal behaviors, domestic and international, that result from widespread use or trafficking of illegal drugs will also be examined.

CRJ 825 Policy Development in Community Corrections
A critical view of policy formation in probation and parole through legislative initiatives and institutional philosophy in our state and federal systems.

CRJ 826 Social Issues in Criminal Justice
Examines those forces in a society that shape thinking and group attitudes. Gives special consideration to diverse issues related to the break down of the family structure, domestic violence, child abuse, problems of the economically deprived, race and ethnic relations, the homeless, the mentally ill, and alcoholism and drug abuse.

CRJ 827 Deviance in America
An analysis of various topics relevant to issues of deviance, their societal impact and solutions in both the individual and group setting.


CRJ 828 Women and Crime

Examines gender differences in criminal offending, criminological theory, and the experiences and treatment of women offenders, victims and professionals in the criminal justice system.

CRJ 829 The Supreme Court
An analysis of recent decisions of the United States Supreme Court. Concentration will be on case analysis of major decisions as they impact upon the criminal justice system and its professionals. A review of the Court’s decisions from a societal context will be a focal point of class discussions.

CRJ 832 Penology
An examination of the philosophy and practice of the penal system as it exists today. Students will critically examine the structure of the system, sentencing, alternative methods of punishment, and the effectiveness of capital punishment as a deterrent to crime.

CRJ 834 Political Philosophy and the Criminal Justice System
An analysis of the American criminal justice system as it reflects the values and principles inherent in our democratic system of government. Principles of political philosophy in the works of Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Locke, Madison, deToqueville, and others will be studied in the context of order vs. liberty; liberalism vs. conservatism; rights vs. duties; and individualism vs. collectivism.

CRJ 844 Private Sector Security
Examines the historical, philosophical and legal foundations of private sector security. The course will include an analysis of private sector security problems, liability issues, powers and restrictions.

CRJ 850 The Analysis of Terrorism
Examines fundamental issues concerning terrorism, including the doctrine of systematic terrorism, current interpretations of terrorism, and its common patterns and motives. Probes the structure of organized terrorist groups, universally accepted military principles and doctrine, terrorist profiles and personalities, and the group dynamics of belonging to a terrorist organization. Examines prevention, societal impact, and federal, state, and local agency responses.

CRJ 852 Comparative Justice Systems
A comparative study of criminal justice systems extant in various countries. The course will focus on the definition and organization of the nation state; its history and culture and how these shaped the legal system; its process; and the degree and role of democracy within the nation state.

JAD 630 Directed Study
Examines specific topics within justice administration under the direction of a faculty advisor.


JAD 798 Justice Colloquium

A seminar designed to allow for focused analysis on selected justice issues.

JAD 802 Contemporary Justice Issues
Designed to enhance the knowledge of criminal justice professionals in the interdisciplinary field of criminal justice. The course uses lectures, discussion, and case studies to develop critical thinking concerning various issues.

JAD 804 Interventive Methods
Designed to provide knowledge of interventive and counseling strategies. Topics include behavior modification, crisis intervention, aggression, violence, and interpersonal communication.

JAD 818 Issues in Juvenile Justice
An exploration of contemporary local, national, and international issues regarding juvenile justice.

JAD 821 Community Partnerships
Uses a community approach model to examine initiatives with public and private institutions and state and local agencies.

JAD 824 Stress Management in Public Safety
The study and identification of stress and tension in the public safety environment. Topics include the origins of stress theories, types of stress, history of stress research, establishing a stress program, and techniques used to reduce stress in the workplace.

JAD 830 Civil Liability
Students will use statutory and case law decisions to analyze specific areas of potential civil liability facing the criminal justice manager. The course will include an examination of possible defenses and resulting damages.


JAD 842 Issues in Correctional Administration

Evaluates specific problems faced by correctional administration. Analyzes issues of resource allocation, prisoner management strategies, philosophies of punishment, political climate and the legal and medical costs of maintaining the correctional system.

JAD 843 Public Sector Arbitration
Focuses on the relationship of management and labor in criminal justice agencies. Emphasizes analysis of dispute resolution and mechanisms and assesses the impact of civil service and unions on the quality and productivity of agencies in the criminal justice system.

JAD 890 Internship
Advanced students may undertake an applied internship at a specified agency. The internship is supervised by a faculty member and requires the student to submit a written proposal and final written report. Program Director approval required.

Course Description of criminal jusice at Anna Maria College, Massachusetts

CRJ 710 Research Design and Methodology
Designed to help students become acquainted with the fundamentals of research and research design. Students are required to adopt an individually designed research project that demonstrates their ability to conceptualize ideas in criminal justice and apply methods for exploring those ideas.

CRJ 711 Statistical Analysis
Focuses on probability and statistics with an emphasis on data analysis, including univariate and multivariate techniques. Statistical problem solving is engaged using various data-sources.

CRJ 816 Criminological Thought
A presentation of major theories of crime and criminality. Theories are analyzed by common sense, logic, evidence, policy utility and compatibility with one another. Theories will be examined through a discussion of measures, correlates and popular beliefs regarding the prevalence, causes and continuance of criminal offending.

CRJ 891 Policy and Strategy (Capstone Project)
Serves as the final evaluation for Criminal Justice students. Requires case studies and other materials to demonstrate oral and written competence in the areas of research, professional responsibility, and management. Analyzes issues of law, policy, and society, allowing students to integrate knowledge and experience as they apply ethical principles in developing effective strategies to confront issues facing practitioners within the realm of human service and criminal justice. Culminates with a final project presented to a faculty panel. Prerequisite: CRJ 710, 711 and completion of 24 credit hours.

CRJ 892 Thesis (Optional)
Facilitates thesis writing within criminal justice. Specific guidelines are available from the Program Director. Prerequisite: CRJ 710 and CRJ 711. Registration requires completion of 24 credit hours.

Elective Course Descriptions (all classes are 3 credits unless otherwise noted)

CRJ 630 Directed Study
Examines specific topics in criminal justice under the direction of a faculty advisor.

CRJ 712 Technology and Crime
Provides an overview of the intersection between technology and crime. This includes the study of criminal acts committed with the use of technology and the role of technology in investigation and analyzing crime rates and patterns.

CRJ 713 Forensic Anthropology
Designed to introduce the graduate student to the realm of Forensic Anthropology as a Forensic Science and its place within the criminal justice system for criminal investigation, civil matters, and human rights issues. The techniques of skeletal biology as they relate to Forensic Anthropology will be presented and will provide a foundation for an understanding of how these techniques fit into a team approach in forensic inquiry. The ethical and moral underpinnings of casework are presented, as well as, issues derived from working with families of traumatic death and multiple fatality events. Human rights exhumations of political dissidents and government ethnic cleansing campaigns will be presented and the legal presentation of forensic evidence at tribunals will be discussed.

CRJ 799 Justice Colloquium
A seminar designed to allow for focused analysis on selected justice issues.

CRJ 803 Juvenile Offender
Explores the philosophy and practice of the juvenile justice system from the Illinois Juvenile Justice Act of 1899 to present policies and process. Students are challenged to critically examine the juvenile justice system - its mandate, separateness, and effectiveness.

CRJ 805 Forensics
Studies the application of science to law. Introduces forensic science concepts, history, processes and issues including how forensic science is linked with other components of the criminal justice system.

CRJ 806 Ethics in Public Safety
Examines ethical principles as they apply to the many practical problems that confront criminal justice professionals in the performance of their duties and responsibilities. Uses case studies to illustrate ethical reasoning and examine issues of social justice.

CRJ 808 Contemporary Case Law
An examination and analysis of recent decisions and opinions of federal and state courts around current issues in the criminal justice system.

CRJ 817 Victim Studies
The evolution of the study of victimology and historical perspective will be considered. This study will culminate in the victims’ rights movement and resulting legislation including the Victim Bill of Rights and Victim Compensation. The experience of the criminal victimization will be analyzed from the crime scene to proceedings at the courthouse.

CRJ 820 Police and Community Initiatives
Designed to provide students with an understanding of the relationship that exists between the police and the community, and an examination of the police role in society and the psychological, sociological, and ethnic factors which influence this relationship.

CRJ 822 Criminal Justice and Public Policy
Facilitates critical thinking about the approaches to the delivery of public safety services in the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Includes the study of actual behaviors and attitudes of individuals in various agencies in an attempt to understand and assess planning decisions. Develops concepts of interdependence, jurisdictional disputes and the goals of contemporary justice administration in a democratic society.

CRJ 823 Drugs and Human Behavior
A consideration of the effects of psychotropic substances on individual and societal human behavior. Students will study the history of drug use in the United States, and the development of regulatory and enforcement policies and practices. The behaviors studied will chronicle the effects of drug abuse upon individuals. Societal behaviors, domestic and international, that result from widespread use or trafficking of illegal drugs will also be examined.

CRJ 825 Policy Development in Community Corrections
A critical view of policy formation in probation and parole through legislative initiatives and institutional philosophy in our state and federal systems.

CRJ 826 Social Issues in Criminal Justice
Examines those forces in a society that shape thinking and group attitudes. Gives special consideration to diverse issues related to the break down of the family structure, domestic violence, child abuse, problems of the economically deprived, race and ethnic relations, the homeless, the mentally ill, and alcoholism and drug abuse.

CRJ 827 Deviance in America
An analysis of various topics relevant to issues of deviance, their societal impact and solutions in both the individual and group setting.

CRJ 828 Women and Crime
Examines gender differences in criminal offending, criminological theory, and the experiences and treatment of women offenders, victims and professionals in the criminal justice system.

CRJ 829 The Supreme Court
An analysis of recent decisions of the United States Supreme Court. Concentration will be on case analysis of major decisions as they impact upon the criminal justice system and its professionals. A review of the Court’s decisions from a societal context will be a focal point of class discussions.

CRJ 832 Penology
An examination of the philosophy and practice of the penal system as it exists today. Students will critically examine the structure of the system, sentencing, alternative methods of punishment, and the effectiveness of capital punishment as a deterrent to crime.

CRJ 834 Political Philosophy and the Criminal Justice System
An analysis of the American criminal justice system as it reflects the values and principles inherent in our democratic system of government. Principles of political philosophy in the works of Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Locke, Madison, deToqueville, and others will be studied in the context of order vs. liberty; liberalism vs. conservatism; rights vs. duties; and individualism vs. collectivism.

CRJ 844 Private Sector Security
Examines the historical, philosophical and legal foundations of private sector security. The course will include an analysis of private sector security problems, liability issues, powers and restrictions.

CRJ 850 The Analysis of Terrorism
Examines fundamental issues concerning terrorism, including the doctrine of systematic terrorism, current interpretations of terrorism, and its common patterns and motives. Probes the structure of organized terrorist groups, universally accepted military principles and doctrine, terrorist profiles and personalities, and the group dynamics of belonging to a terrorist organization. Examines prevention, societal impact, and federal, state, and local agency responses.

CRJ 852 Comparative Justice Systems
A comparative study of criminal justice systems extant in various countries. The course will focus on the definition and organization of the nation state; its history and culture and how these shaped the legal system; its process; and the degree and role of democracy within the nation state.

CRJ 890 Internship
Advanced students may undertake an applied internship at a specified agency. The internship is supervised by a faculty member and requires the student to submit a written proposal and final written report. Program Director approval required.

Courses, Seminars and Conferences at Instituto Universitario de la Policia

Eligibility:
Studied 4 years or more, personal and / or the military police or security forces Superior.
Curriculum:
First Level
Research Methodology and Analysis
Risk Analysis
Applied to the Criminal Investigation
Formal and Applied Logic
Application of Analytical Techniques in crime situations I
Institutional Sociology

Second Level
Analysis Applied to Criminal Investigation
Criminal Psychology
Elements of Probability and Statistics
Application of Analytical Techniques in Criminal Situations II

Course: Tuesdays and Wednesdays from 18 to 22 hours.

Start of classes: April 2008

Information and registration:
November 2007 and since February 2008

Department of Postgraduate - Faculty of Security Sciences
posegu@universidad-policial.edu.ar
Rosario 532 - Piso 1 º - Hotline 4901-9733
Int Switch 4902-4759. 261

Fees: PFA Institute of Community and Alumni
Tuition: $ 170 Tuition: $ 200
Fee: $ 120 Fee: $ 180

B.A. Degree with a major in criminal justice at Georgia College & State University

Area F
18 semester hours

1.
CRJU 1100 Introduction to Criminal Justice (3 hours)

2.
Foreign Language (0-9 hours): must show competence at the level of the fourth university course (FREN, SPAN, GRMN or JAPN 2002 , Intermediate Readings)

3
Selections (0-6 hours) from:

ANTH 1102
Introduction to Anthropology

GEOG 1101
Introduction to Human Geography

GEOG 1102
World Regional Geography

PHIL 2200
Survey of Philosophy

PHIL 2250
Logic and Critical Thinking

SOCI 1121
Sociological Perspectives

SOCI 1160
Introduction to Social Problems

ECON 2106
Principles of Microeconomics

ECON 2105
Principles of Macroeconomics

ACCT 2101
Accounting Principles I

ACCT 2102
Accounting Principles II

HIST 1132
World Civilization and Society II

HIST 2112
The United States since 1870

PSYC 1101
Introduction to General Psychology

PSYC 2101
Introduction to the Psychology of Adjustment

POLS 2201
State and Local Government

4.
CSCI 1000 Introduction to Computer Science and Applications (3 hours)

5.
MATH 2600 Probability and Statistics (0-3 hours) (If not used to satisfy core requirements)

6.
CRJU courses at the 1000-2000 level (0-6 hours)

(NOTES: A course taken to satisfy an Area F requirement may not also be counted to satisfy a Major Requirement. Any transfer student who has not completed the courses in Area F, or their equivalents, must take these courses at GCSU.)

Major Requirements
27 semester hours

1.
CRJU 4101
Police Systems and Practices

CRJU 4103
Correctional Systems and Practices

CRJU 4307
Criminal Law and Procedure

CRJU 3424
Criminology (12 hours)

2.
POLS 4000
Systematic Analysis or SOCI 3442 Research Methods (3 hours)

3.
Successful completion of a senior capstone experience is required. CRJU majors can choose among CRJU 4920 (Senior Seminar), CRJU 4999 (Student Research), and an appropriate study abroad course. Advisor approval is required. (3 hours)

4.
Additional CRJU courses at the 3000-4000 level (9 hours)

Degree Requirements
0-14 semester hours

Students must show competence in a foreign language at the level of the fourth university course (2002 ). (0-9semester hours)

Other Requirements
6 semester hours

1.
Two additional non-CRJU social science courses are required. Students can select from 3000-4000 level offerings in POLS, PUAD, SOCI, PSYC, ECON, and ANTH.

2.
A grade of C or better must be earned in each course that counts toward major requirements and in the senior capstone.

3.
A minimum of 39 semester hours overall must be at the 3000-4000 level.

4.
The first-year academic seminar must be completed with a satisfactory grade. Students who transfer to GCSU are exempt from this requirement.

Electives
15-27 semester hours

Criminal Justice majors who use Degree Requirement courses in Area F will have the higher number of elective hours.

Total
120 semester hours