|
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||
|
GRADUATE PROGRAMSMasters ProgramThe Graduate School of Criminal Justice at Northeastern University offers both full-time and part-time programs of study with late afternoon and evening classes scheduled to accommodate the needs of both types of study. With a full-time course load, students generally complete the masters program in eighteen months. Part-time students complete their degree in three to four years depending on their pace and course selection. In Fall 2003, Northeastern University converted its academic calendar from the current quarter system to a semester-based calendar to enhance students' education. Currently, the academic calendar for graduate students in all the colleges except the School of Law and University College will consist of 15-week semesters in the fall and spring and two 71/2-week sessions in the summer. The fall semester runs from early September to mid-December; spring semester runs from early January to late April; and summer sessions will run from early May to mid-June and early July to mid-August. Full-time graduate students will typically take classes for three to four semesters. The graduation timetable will remain unchanged for students who began in the quarter system and finish under the semester calendar. The masters program is comprised of seven required courses encompassing both substantive and technical skills. Additionally, students choose five elective courses from offerings within the Graduate School of Criminal Justice. The course offerings afford students the flexibility to customize their own programs, which may include an Internship, Directed Study, or Masters Thesis. The masters program in Criminal Justice concentrates both on the problem of crime as a form of deviant behavior, and on the criminal justice and private security systems that deal with it. The program emphasizes a systems approach to criminal justice, stressing policy development and analysis, as well as the impact these policies have on the individuals and organizations charged with delivering justice in a fair and equitable manner. Broad in concept and scope, it encompasses such related disciplines as law, sociology, political science, psychology, criminology, and public administration. Faculty members in the Graduate School represent several different academic disciplines and teaching activities vary in nature, depending on the instructors' specific objectives. The faculty's specialized interests help make possible a broad range of program offerings including courses on, the criminal justice process, victimology, security management, criminal law, juvenile justice, law and psychology and terrorism. Briefly stated, the Graduate School of Criminal Justice endeavors to:
Graduate study in criminal justice may be pursued on either a full or part-time basis. All candidates for the Master of Science in Criminal Justice degree must successfully complete a minimum of thirty-two semester hours of credit in course work.
|
||||||||||||||||||||||