Graduate Catalog 2019-2021
Graduate Catalog 2019-2021 > College of Arts and Sciences > Criminal Justice M.S. (Online)
Sara Doude, Coordinator
E-mail: sara.doude@gcsu.edu
Mission
The mission of the masters of criminal justice program is to create opportunities for critical thinking for future and current practitioners and academic researchers in the field of criminal justice/criminology. Moreover, the program encourages and creates environments conducive to learning the body of knowledge generally defined within the field of criminal justice/criminology which includes the meaning of laws, the creation of laws, the breaking of laws, social reactions to deviant and criminal behavior, and how individuals are processed over time.
The liberal arts mission is at the center of the program by placing emphasis on classroom discussion and experiential learning by a diverse group of faculty and professionals in the field. Individual relationships between faculty and students create unique opportunities through internships and independent research within the vast field of criminal justice.
More specifically the program is structured to focus on the areas of criminal justice policy, policing, corrections, criminological theory, legal issues, research design and statistics, and ethics. After the completion of the program, graduates will be able to critically analyze criminal justice policy and practices in relation to functioning in a democratic society. The goal of the program is to prepare graduates to assume roles as ethical, responsible citizens and professionals in the field.
Admission Requirements
All applicants
Regular Admission Requirements
Provisional Admission
Graduate Dismissal Policy
Students are required to maintain a B average in order to remain in the program. Regular status students who receive a final grade of C must have an A to offset the C grade. Regular students whose grade average falls below B will be placed on academic probation. Students on academic probation must bring their average up to B during the semester they are on academic probation. If a student does not bring his/her average up during the probation period, he/she will be dismissed from the program. A student will not get program credit for a D grade and has one opportunity to retake the course (with graduate coordinator’s approval).
A student may be summarily dismissed from the program if one or more of these conditions exist:
Career Information
Some students in the MSCJ program are already employed in the public sector and are interested in the MSCJ program for reasons of career development and mobility. In-service students come from practically every possible public sector setting and every level of government. Pre-service students will have available to them the information and assistance of the GCSU Career Services Office. Faculty will work with students in exploring career options. Many students have found their classmates to be valuable sources of networking information. Students should understand, however, that the purpose of graduate education in criminal justice is to prepare one to be a better manager of a criminal justice agency or to pursue further education. No graduate degree is a guarantee of employment.
The curriculum is divided into required courses and elective courses. Students are strongly encouraged to take CRJU 6100 and CRJU 6605 in their first or second terms in the MSCJ program. CRJU 6100 serves as an overview to criminal justice and to this particular MSCJ program. At the culmination of the curriculum, students are required to take and pass CRJU 6700 the comprehensive exam. Students must take this exam during their last semester of course work. The comprehensive exam covers core curriculum classes, which include CRJU 6100, 6200, 6300, 6400, 6500, 6515, and 6605/6610. Students are given two days to complete 7 general questions from each section. Students are given two questions from each subject area and choose one question to respond to. Any subjects that are failed on the comprehensive exam must be tested on a second time. If the student fails the second attempt at the exam, the student will be required to take that course over, and go through the testing process again. If a comprehensive exam subject is failed twice, that student is dismissed from the program.
Required of all students:
3
0
Select from the following:
1 - 3
Total Credit Hours: 36
Further Information
Prospective students desiring further information may contact the Graduate Coordinator, Department of Government and Sociology, Georgia College, Campus Box 18, Milledgeville, GA 31061. You may contact the department at, (478) 445-4562, by e-mail at sara.doude@gcsu.edu.