Catalog

Public Safety Administration (BS)

Doug Cremer, PhD

Coordinator

Introduction

The Public Safety Administration major is an innovative program that broadens the scope of the traditional criminal justice degree. The degree focuses on both public and private safety systems with emphases on intervention, community relations, public communication, policing, corrections, and societal reaction to offenders and affected communities. The aforementioned issues are investigated with respect to process—from communities and families, to crime and police, to arrest and prosecution through the correctional system—and reintegration efforts. The major offers students both soft (i.e., community relations) and hard (i.e., policing) skills relevant to criminal justice and is aligned with local law enforcement communities.

The Public Safety degree offers both standard criminal justice coursework and four distinct emphases: 1. law enforcement; 2. legal studies; 3. community service; and 4. forensic science. The aforementioned emphases illustrate the expansive nature of public safety and give students the opportunity to choose areas within the discipline in which to specialize. The program revolves around three core ideas: applied skills, transdisciplinary pedagogy, and civic engagement.

Applied Skills

The Public Safety degree program will provide students with a theoretical foundation of the fundamentals of public and private safety. However, in an effort to create the most competitive students within the discipline, it is important to apply theory to practice. Students will have an opportunity to consider if they have chosen the appropriate specialization by participating in hands- on simulations.

Transdisciplinary Pedagogy

Public Safety Administration is, by definition, transdisciplinary. Collaboration among academicians, practitioners, and community members is critical to understanding all dimensions of public and private safety. Academicians, practitioners, and community members will exchange ideas and share resources with one another to achieve common goals and transform local communities using ethical public safety frameworks in their problem solving.

Civic Engagement

The Public Safety Administration degree is also a forum for civic engagement. Students in the program will strengthen communities by actively applying critical knowledge, skills, and values in varied communities across Los Angeles county. Students learn from faculty members who also work in the field (i.e., police officers, correctional officers, rehabilitation experts) and will have service-learning opportunities open to them so as to better understand the specific issues and needs of their own communities.

Mission

To serve the criminal justice professions through the interdisciplinary and comparative study of crime and criminal behavior as well as the policies and systems designed to control criminality: The program promotes lifelong learning among students who develop into justice professionals prepared to ethically lead public and private efforts to make communities safer and promote the equitable application of the law across all boundaries, perceived and real. Our curriculum provides a base comprised of both substantive and practical knowledge linking multidisciplinary social science theories and methods with effective, responsible public policy to advance the ethical practice of the justice professions within a multicultural, constitutional democracy.

Licensure

The Public Safety Administration (PSAD) program offers a 120-unit Bachelor of Science (B.S.) degree in criminal justice that prepares students for a wide variety of career paths, such as law enforcement, correctional counselor, CSI careers, legal/court positions, and more.

 

The PSAD program meets all educational requirements preparing graduates for pursuing state-mandated law enforcement certification in California, as well as all other U.S. states and the District of Columbia.  California requires Peace Officer Standards and Training (POST) certification for police officers, deputy sheriffs, school district police officers, district attorney investigators, and a few other classifications of peace officers.

 

Students who wish to pursue law enforcement careers in locations outside of California may or may not have additional non-educational requirements to complete prior to, or in association with, seeking employment in law enforcement.

 

Woodbury University encourages prospective and current students to explore certification processes in the states where they anticipate working. Prior to enrollment, prospective students must visit Woodbury’s PSAD Professional Licensure webpage to review a full list of U.S. states and jurisdictions in which the PSAD program meets the educational requirements. Woodbury University will assist individuals in exploring certification requirements in states and U.S. jurisdictions where students wish to practice this profession. For assistance, please contact Admissions at admissions@woodbury.edu or 818-252-5221. For more information on state legislature-mandated law enforcement requirements see: National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL).

 

Additional Learning Opportunities/Requirements

Woodbury’s Career Development Office offers a variety of programs, services, and resources to assist students in exploring careers and securing internships. The staff works with students one-on-one to develop successful internship search strategies and help students connect with employers through internship postings, résumé collections, on- and off-campus interview opportunities, alumni connections, and employer outreach in the United States.

Internship

To reinforce knowledge and skills acquired in the classroom, all students are required to complete a four-unit practical internship of 160 hours at a site of their choosing. Internship possibilities include law enforcement agencies, state and local political offices, non-profit organizations related to criminal and social justice, and various government offices, among others. The internship includes regular journaling, evaluations, and a concluding reflective essay.

Students may also fulfill the internship requirement by attending American University’s Semester in Washington Program in the nation’s capital, and serving in one of more than 2,000 internship sites in Congress, the White House, and numerous federal agencies.

Program Learning Outcomes

Civic Engagement

  • Evaluate the merits of competing theoretical perspectives used to explain the nature of crime and application of criminological theories to specific types of crime.
  • Apply ethical principles to criminal justice issues, policies, and practices and evaluate their implications

Processes

  • Explain the criminal justice process, the role of discretion among criminal justice actors, and evaluate best practices.
  • Understand the research process (both qualitative and quantitative) gained by conducting original research and analyzing existing data.
  • Express a thorough knowledge of the criminal justice system, including the police, the courts, and corrections.

Roles

  • Describe and relate the constitutional rights and responsibilities of citizens, offenders, and victims as they apply to state, federal, and procedural laws.
  • Identify the legal and moral responsibilities of criminal justice professionals as they relate to cultural diversity and the foundation of positive community relationships.
  • Understand public safety careers and explore their own qualifications for entry-level public safety positions.

Contexts

  • Evaluate the historical, political, and social contexts and empirical support for a particular criminal justice policy area.
  • Identify ways in which oppression, privilege, discrimination, and social and economic disadvantage contribute to inequalities and injustices within criminal justice systems.

Program Specific Academic Standards

Assessment Process

The Public Safety Administration faculty assess individual student learning for each assignment in every course based on established University grading guidelines. Beyond evaluating individual learning, the department faculty regularly review the collective work of students over time. The department archives students’ research papers, exams, presentation evaluations, internship reports, and senior theses for review purposes. Every other year, an assessment report is written for the faculty and used to make adjustments and improvements to the program, its courses, and students’ overall learning.

The PSAD curriculum has two major components— foundational and advanced concentrated coursework—and culminates in a capstone project (the senior thesis) that demonstrates summative student learning. In the first two years, PSAD students take courses on the building blocks of the discipline, specifically, critical writing, research methodology, and various foundational survey coursework. Introductory coursework provides a forum where students are evaluated individually on their analytical abilities, writing, and understanding of research methodologies before taking advanced courses that regularly test and utilize these skills.

Seminar-style advanced courses not only require students to present ideas coherently in written work, but also demand an ability to orally articulate ideas to their peers and to the faculty. Students make individual choices based on their interests (i.e., law enforcement, legal studies, community service, or forensic science) and take advanced courses that will contribute to the production of their senior thesis.

In upper-division classes, students become familiar with the peer-review process and will produce several revisions of any given term paper. Thus, the faculty continually evaluate student progress on argument formation, critical thinking, and writing.

The senior thesis project, or capstone, is designed to show a mastery of critical thinking, writing for the discipline, oral presentation, and a deep understanding of the chosen topic and associated literature. The senior thesis is presented to all PSAD faculty members and simulates the professional conference experience where other scholars openly critique and evaluate scholarship.

Finally, every PSAD student completes an internship relevant to his or her major and career goals. Departmental faculty and the student’s internship mentor—a professional in the industry—evaluate this work. The internship opportunity allows students to put skills learned at Woodbury into practice and is part of their senior-year experience.

Overall, the collaboration between students, faculty, and professionals allows for evaluation not only of the individual student, but also of the effectiveness of the advanced curriculum and the extent to which upper-division classes build on and integrate the foundational coursework in the curriculum.

Results of Learning

The primary focus of the Public Safety Administration program is on improving students’ analytical abilities, their knowledge of the world, and their awareness of their own values and ambitions. The emphasis is on how student learning is expressed in written and oral arguments and in the organization and display of information, both qualitative and quantitative. Evidence of student learning in research papers and oral presentations, with particular emphasis on the senior thesis, is collected and reviewed by the department faculty on a regular basis to monitor the collective performance of the students in the program.

Curriculum Summary

Program Major Curriculum

Unit Type (UT) Number of Units (U)
Major (MA) 48
General Education (GE) 49
Unrestricted Electives (UE) 19
Internship (IN) 4
Minimum Total Units Required 120

Suggested Sequence of Courses

First Year

Fall Semester

WRIT 113First-Year Academic Writing

3

ENVT 220Environmental Studies

3

PSAD 101Introduction to Public Safety

3

____ ___
Unrestricted Elective

3

____ ___
Unrestricted Elective

1

Total Credit Hours:13

Type:

WRIT 113 and ENVT 220: GE.

PSAD 101: MA.

Unrestricted Elective: UE.

Spring Semester

PSAD 102Enforcement and Corrections

3

PSAD 202

3

MDST 120Public Speaking

3

PSYC 150General Psychology

3

LSCI ___
Information Sources Elective

1

____ ___
General Education Elective

3

Total Credit Hours:16

Type:

PSAD 102 and PSAD 202: MA.

MDST 120, PSYC 150, LSCI (Information Sources Elective), and General Education Elective: GE.

Second Year

Fall Semester

PSAD 201

3

PSAD 203

3

BIOL 231Human Biology

3

INDS ___
Interdisciplinary Core Elective

3

____ ___
Humanities Elective

3

Total Credit Hours:15

Type:

PSAD 201 and PSAD 203: MA.

BIOL 231, INDS (Interdisciplinary Core Elective), and Humanities Elective: GE.

Spring Semester

PSAD 204

3

PHIL 210Ethical Systems

3

ARTH 205History of Contemporary Art

3

PSYC 221Statistics for the Behavioral Sciences

3

WRIT 313Advanced Academic Writing

3

Total Credit Hours:15

Type:

PSAD 204: MA.

PHIL 210, ARTH 205, PSYC 221, and WRIT 313: GE.

Third Year

Fall Semester

PSAD 301Criminology and Forensic Psychology

3

PSAD 302Data Analysis for Public Safety

3

PSAD ___
Concentration Elective

3

PSAD ___
Concentration Elective

3

____ ___
General Education Elective

3

Total Credit Hours:15

Type:

PSAD 301, PSAD 302, and PSAD (Concentration Elective): MA.

General Education Elective: GE.

Spring Semester

PSAD 303

3

INDS 350Interdisciplinary Research

3

PSAD ___
Concentration Elective

3

____ ___
Unrestricted Elective

3

____ ___
Unrestricted Elective

3

Total Credit Hours:15

Type:

PSAD 303 and PSAD (Concentration Elective): MA.

INDS 350: GE.

Unrestricted Elective: UE.

Fourth Year

Fall Semester

PSAD 491

3

PSAD 490_
Internship

4

PSAD ___
Concentration Elective

3

____ 3__
Upper Division General Education Elective

3

____ ___
Unrestricted Elective

3

Total Credit Hours:16

Type:

PSAD 491 and PSAD (Concentration Elective): MA.

PSAD 490 (Internship): IN.

Upper Division General Education Elective: GE.

Unrestricted Elective: UE.

Spring Semester

PSAD 492

3

PSAD ___
Concentration Elective

3

____ 3__
Upper Division General Education Elective

3

____ ___
Unrestricted Elective

3

____ ___
Unrestricted Elective

3

Total Credit Hours:15

Type:

PSAD 492 and PSAD (Concentration Elective): MA.

Upper Division General Education Elective: GE.

Unrestricted Elective: UE.

Public Safety Concentrations

Students must choose one of the following two concentrations by the beginning of their junior year: 1. law enforcement; or 2. community justice. Note: Concentration electives above refer to classes taken in the chosen concentration.

Community Justice

PSAD 324

3

PSAD 331

3

PSAD 332

3

PSAD 333

3

PSAD 334

3

PSAD 335

3

Law Enforcement

PSAD 311

3

PSAD 312

3

PSAD 313Criminal Investigations

3

PSAD 314

3

PSAD 315

3

PSAD 321

3

PSAD 342

3

PSAD 343

3