|
Dec 04, 2024
|
|
|
|
2020 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Transfer Guide SCC AA to UCM BS Criminal Justice and Criminology
|
|
|
Saint Charles Community College
The below courses are required for Criminal Justice and Criminology majors and can be fulfilled at SCC as part of the AA Criminal Justice requirements. If these courses are not taken at SCC, they must be completed at UCM. The full list of SCC AA requirements can be found in the SCC catalog.
Students who transfer to UCM with a completed Associate of Arts degree will be considered to have met all general education requirements except for those specificaly required by the major (see UCM General Education Requirements section below, if applicable).
AA General Education Requirements: 42 Semester Hours
See SCC catalog for AA general education requirements.
AA Elective Options: 22 Semester Hours
Minimum Total Hours Required for SCC AA: 64 Semester Hours
UCM BS Criminal Justice and Criminology
The below list of courses represents the requirements a student will have left to complete after transferring to UCM with an Associate of Arts degree. Any courses listed above not taken at SCC must be completed as part of the BS requirements.
Major Requirements: 15 Semester Hours
Free Choice Electives: 41 Semester Hours
Free choice elective hours may vary depending on transfer coursework and course selection at UCM.
Students must take at least 30 upper-level (3000/4000) hours to graduate. Courses taken at SCC that articulate to upper-level UCM courses do not count towards upper-level hours.
Minimum Total Hours Required for BS: 120 Semester Hours
This guide is based on the UCM 2020 Undergraduate Catalog and is subject to change. This guide is a recommendation only and your actual program may vary. Time to degree completion and course sequencing will depend on any credits transferred to UCM and on planned placement in math, reading, and writing. See the current UCM Undergraduate Catalog and SCC Course Catalog for a complete listing of academic policies, curriculum, prerequisites, and course descriptions.
|
|
|