Criminal Justice / Bachelor of Arts to Master of Science in Criminal Justice / Fast Track Program
Program: BA-CSJS-3
The Justice, Law and Public Safety Studies Department (JLPSS) offers a Bachelor's to Master's Fast Track Program option for Lewis University undergraduate Criminal Justice majors. The Fast Track Program option allows qualified undergraduates to complete the graduate MSCSJ (Master of Science in Criminal Justice) in less time than would be possible if the two programs would be taken separately. Nine to fifteen graduate hours may be used to complete the Bachelor's degree (120 hours) and to satisfy specific course requirements for the Master's program. The total number of required graduate credits (36) will remain the same. Students apply for admission to the Fast Track Program option by submitting the Fast Track application form located in the Advising and Academic Support area of MyLewis when they reach senior status 75 completed credit hours and have achieved an overall GPA of 3.0. Qualified students approved for the Fast Track Program option may apply graduate courses to the 18-hour block in the semesters when they take these select graduate courses. Students can start taking classes when they reach 90 completed hours. With planning, the MSCSJ could be awarded within one year of graduating with the Bachelor's degree. Students who take nine to fifteen credit hours of approved graduate courses in Criminal Justice in their senior year and earn a grade of "B" or better in each of those courses will have to complete only 21 to 27 more credit hours of remaining core and elective courses including passing a comprehensive examination to earn the MSCSJ. Students accepted into this Fast Track Program option are required to apply for admission to the MSCSJ.
Graduate courses that may be taken in their senior year during the fall and spring semesters are listed below. With permission of the JLPSS Department Chair, one to five of these graduate courses may be applied to the undergraduate core or elective courses in the Criminal Justice curriculum. Listed next to each graduate course is the undergraduate course for which it substitutes:
CSJS 52000 Violent Crime substitutes for CSJS 35700 Victims and Victimization
CSJS 52400 Correctional Counseling and Rehabilitation substitutes for CSJS 48500 Rehabilitative Counseling
CSJS 52500 Drugs-Distribution and Impact substitutes for CSJS 34000 Drugs: Incidence and Abuse
CSJS 53300 Ethics and Integrity substitutes for CSJS 35600 Professionalism and Ethics
CSJS 53600 Criminal Procedure substitutes for CSJS 44500 Criminal Procedure / Rules of Evidence
CSJS 55500 Criminal Law substitutes for CSJS 43000 Elements of Criminal Law
CSJS 55900 Police Civil Liability substitutes for CSJS 49600 Rights and Civil Liability
CSJS 56900 Criminology substitutes for CSJS 22000 Criminology
See Baccalaureate-to-Masters Degree Program Guidelines for additional information.