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Nov 21, 2024
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Undergraduate Catalog 2023 - 2024 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Applied Social Research, Accelerated 4+1 BA/MA
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The purpose of this accelerated program is to allow undergraduate students to complete an undergraduate and graduate degree in the equivalent of five years of study (depending on course load).
Undergraduate students in their 3rd or 4th year, once accepted into the 4+1 program, will be required to take SOC 550: Applied and Evaluation Research, and two 500-level elective seminar courses. They will also be encouraged, but not required, to take SOC 540: Social Theory and Application. SOC 540 has a prerequisite of an undergraduate theory course in social science, so it cannot replace the students’ undergraduate theory requirement. It can, however, count as undergraduate elective credit.
After graduation with their B.A., students will need to take one of their Tool Skill requirements during the summer between their senior year and their graduate year. The exception to this will be students who have not taken SOC 540, as they will need to plan to take two summer tool skill courses or take one each summer.
During the one year of coursework, 4+1 students will take SOC 551 and 552 (Statistics I & II), the Master’s Research Practicum, and two Tool Skill electives. Students who have not taken SOC 540 will also have to take that during their fall semester. The expectation is that students will take 9 credit hours per AY semester to complete the accelerated program.
If you are interested in this program, please contact:
Department of Criminology and Sociology
Rhodes Tower (RT) 1721
216-687-4517
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Overview
To be eligible for admission to the 4+1 program, the student must:
- Have a cumulative grade point average of 3.25 or higher;
- Major in criminology, anthropology, or sociology;
- Have completed 60 credit hours of the Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology, Criminology, or Sociology.
GRE scores are not required. Undergraduate students must submit the Accelerated 4+1 Master’s program application submitted to the graduate program director of the Master of Arts in Applied Social Research program no later than the spring semester of junior year (junior year standing). Immediately upon approval of graduation applications, the Graduate Program Director will process this paperwork and notify students that they are accepted pending successful completion of the semester. The graduate program director will be assigned as an advisor, and the undergraduate program directors in their undergraduate major division also will be consulting advisors as needed.
Course Requirements
In addition to meeting all University requirements, degree candidates must successfully complete a minimum of thirty credit hours, or ten courses. These must include five core courses (with a choice of either SOC 695 or SOC 690) two graduate-level seminars and three tool skill electives.
1. CORE COURSES (15 CREDITS):
Students must take either SOC 695 (3 credits) or SOC 690 (3 credits), not both. All other courses listed are required.
- SOC 540 - Social Theory and Application
- SOC 550 - Applied and Evaluation Research Methods
- SOC 551 - Social Statistics I
- SOC 552 - Social Statistics II
- SOC 690 - Masters Research Internship or SOC 695 - Masters Research Practicum
2. TWO GRADUATE-LEVEL SEMINARS (6 CREDITS):
- SOC 512 - Sociology of Mental Illness
- SOC 519 - Sociology of Religion
- SOC 520 - Globalization
- SOC 525 - Sustainable Development
- SOC 530 - Evaluation Research
- SOC 541 - Juvenile Delinquency
- SOC 545 - Social Control
- SOC 560 - Interpersonal Violence and Its Control
- SOC 561 - Aging and the Life Course
- SOC 564 - Aspects of Police Work
- SOC 565 - Incarceration and Health
- SOC 568 - Sociology of Health and Health Care
- SOC 570 - Gender and Society
- SOC 575 - Ecology of Crime and Punishment
- SOC 580 - Racial & Ethnic Inequality
- SOC 584 - Urban Social Change
- SOC 588 - Sociology of Work and Organization
- SOC 593 - Special Topics in Social Research
3. THREE TOOL SKILL ELECTIVES (9 CREDITS):
Three tool skill courses including SOC 590, SOC 595, or approved graduate-level courses from related social science and interdisciplinary social science departments. At least one must be taken outside of Criminology and Sociology, but most students will take at least two from another department or college. The department has a list of pre-approved outside tool skill courses, but others may be taken with permission.
- SOC 590 - Internship
- SOC 595 - Writing for the Profession
- COM 631 - Multivariate Statistical Methods
- COM 634 - Qualitative Research Methods
- ECN 503 - Economic Concepts
- ECN 622 - Econometrics
- HSC 510 - Principles of Evidence-Based Practice in Health Sciences
- HSC 533 - Program Development & Evaluation
- SWK 624 - The Social Worker as Leader and Manager
- SWK 627 - Program Evaluation
- UST 510 - Proposal Writing
- UST 585 - GIS Principles
- UST 586 - GIS Methods
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