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    Capital University
   
    Nov 23, 2024  
2012-2013 Undergraduate Bulletin 
    
2012-2013 Undergraduate Bulletin [ARCHIVED BULLETIN]

Sociology and Criminology


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Sociology and Criminology

Department Chair—Kardaras

Sociology and Criminology offers majors and minors in both fields.

Mission Statement for Sociology and Criminology

Grounding in the liberal arts tradition is essential preparation for a strong undergraduate major and minor in sociology that prepares students for continued engagement with the world, social and civic responsibility, and the pursuit of graduate study and lifelong learning.

Sociology and Criminology Goals

  1. Recognition of social, cultural, gender, ethnic and racial diversity;
  2. a broad and deep knowledge base incorporating both social and natural science aspects of each specific discipline;
  3. methodological competence in statistics, research design and assessment methods;
  4. practical research, laboratory or field experience to generalize a scientific style of though to the realm of application;
  5. effective communication skills; and
  6. sensitivity to ethical issues.

Curriculum

Integrated with Capital University’s liberal arts core educational goals, the sociology and criminology major and minor prepares students with a curriculum that reflects a commitment to human understanding of social diversity and ethical practice in the pursuit of knowledge, professional careers, and graduate study. In the advancement of knowledge, sociology and criminology students throughout the curriculum are assigned primary source material, e.g., classical and contemporary scholarly works, journal articles, and research material.

As a community of learners, thinkers, and scholars, students have the opportunity to attend the sociology and criminology lecture series, colloquia, and to join national honor societies based on high academic achievement, e.g., Alpha Kappa Delta for sociology majors and Alpha Phi Sigma for criminology majors. Students with high academic achievement may qualify for membership in multiple honor societies.

Under the direction and/or supervision of sociology and criminology faculty, students have the option to complete an Undergraduate Thesis, study and research specialized topics, pursue additional majors and minors in, e.g., sociology, criminology, psychology, cultural studies, business, environmental science, international studies, and computational science. Students can further participate in faculty supervised internships, volunteer activities, and service-learning in a variety of private and public agencies, local, state, and national government, business, and community-based organizations and social services, and law enforcement agencies.

World Languages and Cultures Requirement

Recognizing the importance of studying and understanding society, Sociology and Criminology majors are required to fulfill the language requirement by any of the following means:

  1. A student achieving an Advanced Placement (AP) language test score of 3 or better.
  2. A student that is fluent in a second language (bilingual or multilingual) can take a test to demonstrate proficiency. Proficiency in a second language is determined as having the equivalent to or greater than placement in a second year college language course.
  3. A student with second language proficiency acquired in high school can take a test to demonstrate proficiency. This requires having proficiency in a second language that is equivalent to or greater than placement in a second year college course.
  4. A student can complete two semesters of a world language at the college level (a student with prior world language experience may test out of first semester).
  5. A student can complete a semester-long study abroad experience in a non English-speaking country.

A student in the Adult Education Program is exempt from the world languages and cultures requirement.

Sociology

Department Chair—Kardaras
Professors—Kardaras
Associate Professor—Poteet
Assistant Professor—Broh

Sociology is the systematic study of society, social institutions, social organization, and social behavior, focusing primarily on the influence of social relationships upon people’s attitudes and behaviors and on how societies are established and changed. Sociology has an extremely broad scope, encompassing, for example, the study of social theory, social change, social structures, gender, ethnicity and race. A major goal of sociology is to identify underlying, recurring patterns of and influences on social behavior—love, poverty, conformity, discrimination, illness, alienation, deviance, crime, overpopulation and community.

Major and minor requirements are found in the Sociology and Criminology Department section of this bulletin. A sociology major who declares a second major in criminology or psychology is waived from the corresponding 100 and 200 Seminar courses.

Criminology

Department Chair—Kardaras
Professors—Kardaras
Associate Professor—Poteet
Assistant Professor—Broh

Criminology is the science which studies crime and criminal behavior, which includes forms of criminal behavior, the causes of crime, the definition of criminality, and the societal reaction to criminal activity. Related areas of inquiry may include juvenile delinquency, victimology (the study of crime victims), theories of prevention, policing and corrections. The criminology major requires students to complete course work in criminology and sociology.

Major and minor requirements are found in the “Sociology and Criminology” section of this bulletin. A criminology major who declares a second major in psychology or sociology is waived from the Seminar courses.

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