May 02, 2024  
2018-2019 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2018-2019 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

University College Additional Program Information


Major

Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services, (B.P.S.)

Students in the Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services concentration will select courses in alcohol & drug abuse and social & public services. Prior work experience is welcomed and evaluated through portfolio assessment. Internships are also included in this concentration. Persons pursuing this degree typically provide services to those disabled by alcohol and drug abuse, including abusers, families, friends, colleagues, and associates. Wishing to build upon knowledge of and experience in alcohol and drug abuse treatment, persons served by these guidelines will seek careers in Alcohol & Drug Abuse (A&D) Services as providers of social and public services in hospitals, social service agencies, employee assistance programs, churches, etc. Some may wish to continue their education in graduate-level programs.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (30 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php.

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Professional Core (6 hours)

Choose two courses:

  • SWRK 2911 - Soc Response to Human Need
  • COUN 4611 - Intro to Counseling
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions

Alcohol and Drug Core (6 hours)

Choose two courses:

  • ANTH 4531 - Alcohol/Drugs/Culture
  • CJUS 4152 - Drug Misuse and Abuse
  • COUN 4783 - Alcohol/Drug Abuse Services
  • PSYC 3507 - Alcohol/Drugs/Behavior Prerequisites: PSYC 1030, PSYC 3010, PSYC 3020.

Professional Writing (3 hours)

Choose one course:

  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Profess Writing
  • ENGL 3604 - Persuasive Writing
  • MGMT 3510 - Business Communications (Prerequisite - MIS 2749)

Social and Public Services (15 hours)

Choose five courses:

  • CJUS 4533 - Juvenile Delinq Theory/Process
  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis InterventionPOLS 3213 - Intro to Public Policy
  • PSYC 3102 - Abnormal Psychology
  • PSYC 3103 - Child Psychology
  • PSYC 3106 - Social Psychology
  • SOCI 3501 - Sociology of Deviant Behavior
  • SOCI 4851 - Medical Sociology
  • SOCI 4852 - Sociology of Mental Illness
  • SWRK 3902 - Human Behavior/Soc Envrnmnt Prerequisites: SWRK 2911, 2010; BIOL 1010/1011

Guided Electives and Internship (15 hours) 

Guided Electives - Choose any 12 hours from courses in the Coordinated Study that have not already been taken.

Internship 

  • UNIV 4110

Thematic Studies (6 hours)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: 

http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

Electives

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

Asian Studies and International Trade, (B.L.S.)

See University College website for additional information

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (39-51 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php.

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Foreign Language (9-21 hours)

Requirement: 9 hours at the 3000-level or above.

Students with previous background in the chosen language (Chinese or Japanese) must take the placement test to determine in what course they should enroll.

Students with no previous background in the chosen language will enroll in CHIN 1010 or JAPN 1010.

Area Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

Students must complete 6 hours from the following:

  • HIST 3290 - Traditional East Asia
  • HIST 3291 - Modern Asia
  • HIST 4292 - Modern China 1800-Present
  • HIST 4294 - Modern Japan 1800-Present

International Economics and Business Studies (24 hours; pick 8) 

  • ECON 2010 - Intro to Macroeconomics (Required)
  • ECON 2020 - Intro to Microeconomics (Required)
  • FIR 3410 - Financial Management
  • FIR 4550 - International Finance
  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • MGMT 4810 - International Management
  • MKTG 3010 - Principles of Marketing
  • MKTG 4530 - International Marketing

College Requirements (9 hours)


Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of coursesat:  http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Recommended choices:

  • ESCI 4307 - Thematic Studies/China
  • UNIV 4506 - The Chinese
  • UNIV 3550 - Clash of Cultures

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

• UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

Recommended Electives (hours vary)

  • ANTH 3200/ESCI 3200 - Peoples/Cultures World
  • ANTH 3511 - Culture/Kin/Family
  • ANTH 4413 - Anth of Tourism/Environment
  • COMM 4373 - Interracial Communication
  • COMM 4375 - Intercultural Communication
  • CDFS 2101 - Family/Global Perspective
  • ESCI 1301 - Survey of World Regions
  • ESCI 1401 - Intro/Cultural Geography
  • INTL 4601 - Seminar International Studies
  • JOUR 4712 - Media and Cultures
  • PADM 4401 - Comparative Public Adm
  • POLS 1301 - Intro to Comparative Politics
  • POLS 1501 - International Relations
  • POLS 3310 - Politics/Developed World
  • POLS 3320 - Human Rights/World Politics
  • POLS 3325 - Politics/Developing World
  • POLS 3330 - Politics/Globalization
  • POLS 3505 - International Organizations
  • POLS 3506 - American Foreign Policy
  • POLS 3509 - Contmp Prblm Intl Relation
  • POLS 4307 - Govt and Pol Communist China
  • POLS 4504 - International Law
  • POLS 4506 - Prob American Foreign Policy
  • POLS 4508 - Theories Internatl Relations
  • POLS 4510 - Politics of Global Economy
  • POLS 4511 - International Security
  • SOCI 2100 - Sociology of Globalization
  • SOCI 4413 - Global Info Tech & Soc of Work

 

Baccalaureate Contract Program (Design Your Own Degree)

Undergraduate students admitted to University College may design either of two degrees through the Baccalaureate Contract Program: the Bachelor of Liberal Studies (B.L.S.) or the Bachelor of Professional Studies (B.P.S.). To be eligible for this program, a student must have a cumulative undergraduate grade point average of 2.50. Upper-division courses within the student’s Coordinated Study (i.e., major) must be from two or more departments on campus. In addition, the proposed degree must be unlike any other degree offered by the University of Memphis. All baccalaureate contracts will be reviewed and approved by a baccalaurate contract advisor and by the assistant dean of University College. The baccalaureate contract must include work to be completed in the following areas: (1) General Education, (2) Coordinated Study, (3) Thematic Studies, (4) a Senior Project, and (5) General Electives.

Additional information may be found on the University College website.

Child Development and Family Studies, (B.P.S.)

The Bachelor of Professional Studies in Child Development and Family Studies focuses on recognizing and enhancing important developmental milestones for children from birth through adolescence. Students will learn how to create effective learning environments to promote children’s healthy development as well as assist parents in creating positive relationships and environments for the development of their children. In addition, students study the stages of development from infancy through adolescence and the ways that family, culture, peers, and schools influence the growth of children. Students will also explore the importance of advocacy for children and their families whether it be in the classroom, hospital, or justice system.

The B.P.S. in Child Development and Family Studies courses are designed to reflect professional standards set forth by the National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC). These standards are critical indicators of program quality.

In addition to core courses based on early childhood development, these guidelines contain course work designed to develop skills and knowledge of the historical, social, cultural, and educational contexts of the field.

This program DOES NOT lead to teacher licensure. Students interested in gaining a teaching license should contact the College of Education, Health and Human Sciences at 678-2728.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  Undergraduate Catalog

Coordinated Study (48 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Child Development & Family Studies Core (18 hours)

  • EDPR 2111 - Development Across Lifespan
  • CDFS 2100 - Intro Fld of Chld Dev& Fam St
  • CDFS 2101 - Family/Global Perspective
  • CDFS 3401 - Parent Child Relations
  • CDFS 4220 - Understand Chldn/Behv/Guide
  • CDFS 4223 - Home/School/Comm Engage

Family and Society (6 hours; take 2)

  • ANTH 3511 - Culture/Kin/Family
  • PSYC 4034 - Children Soc Relationships
  • SOCI 3422 - Racial/Ethnc Minorities
  • SOCI 3432 - Sociology of Gender
  • SOCI 4442 - Sociology of Poverty
  • MRCH 4300 - Family Resource Management

Counseling (3 hours; take 1)

  • COMM 4341 - Interpersonal Communication
  • COUN 4611 - Intro to Counseling
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions
  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis Intervention
  • COUN 4783 - Alcohol/Drug Abuse Services

Historical Context (3 hours; take 1)

  • ANTH 3282 - American Communities
  • HIST 3881 - African American History
  • HIST 4831 - History American Family
  • HIST 4851 - History of Women in America
  • HIST 4853 - African American Women
  • HIST 4863 - History/Childhood in America

Social Services and Public Policy (6 hours; take 2)

• PADM 3601 - Public Admin

• PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations

• POLS 3213 - Intro to Public Policy

All SWRK courses require permit from the department.

• SWRK 2911 - Soc Response to Human Need

• SWRK 3902 - Human Behavior/Soc Envrnmnt

• SWRK 4934 - Child Welfare Policy/Services

Educational Context (9 hours; take 3)

*University College students MUST be Junior standing in order to enroll in ECED courses*

  • ART 3411 - Art for Children
  • CDFS 4101 - Int Curr for Early Learners
  • ECED 3555 - Obsrv/Assmnt Infant/Erly Ch *
  • HLSC 3306 - Elementary School Health and Wellness
  • ENGL 3401 - Children’s Literature
  • SPED 2000 - Foundation/Exceptional Learn

Internship (3 hours)

  • UNIV 4110 – Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (22-28 hours)

Electives will be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

Child Life Specialist (B.P.S.)

These guidelines are designed for persons seeking careers as child life specialists. Child life specialists are professionals who work closely with children and their families in hospitals and other settings to help them cope with the challenges of hospitalization, illness, and disability. Child life specialists provide children with age-appropriate preparation for medical procedures, pain management and coping strategies through a variety of different activities. Students must complete the application process as the field is highly selective.

This program DOES NOT lead to teacher licensure. Students interested in gaining a teaching license should contact the College of Education at 678-2728 or visit their website at: http://www.memphis.edu/tep/

University General Education (35-41 hrs)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (56 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Child Development & Family Studies Core (18 hours)

  • EDPR 2111 - Development Across Lifespan
  • CDFS 2100 - Intro Fld of Chld Dev& Fam St
  • CDFS 2101 - Family/Global Perspective
  • CDFS 3401 - Parent Child Relations
  • CDFS 4220 - Understand Chldn/Behv/Guide
  • CDFS 4223 - Home/School/Comm Engage

Child Life Specialist Concentration (22 hours)

  • CDFS 4240 - Hospitalized Children and Their Families
  • CDFS 4260 - Child Life: Theory and Practice
  • CDFS 4300 - Play/Therapeutic Interventions
  • PSYC 4513 - Psychology of Grief/Loss
  • HIST 4863 - History/Childhood in America
  • CLAS 3021 - Medical Terminology

Pick 1 of the following:

  • SOCI 3311 - Social Statistics
  • EDPR 4541 - Fundmntl/Applied Stat Method
  • HCL 4010 - Healthcare Stats/Research

Guided Electives & Practicum (16 hours)

Group A: Family Dynamics (Pick 1)

  • ANTH 3511 - Culture/Kin/Family
  • SOCI 3831 - Marriage and Family
  • UNIV 3535 - Family Communication

Group B: Diverse Interactions (Pick 1)

  • SPED 2000 - Foundation/Exceptional Learn
  • SOCI 3422 - Racial/Ethnc Minorities
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions

Group C: Early Childhood (Pick 1)

  • ECED 3555 - Obsrv/Assmnt Infant/Erly Ch
  • ECED 4540 - Pln/Fclt Infant/Toddler Dev
  • EDPR 4301 - Early Child Dev/Begin Teacher

Group D: Educational Context (Pick 1)

  • ENGL 3401 - Children’s Literature
  • ART 3411 - Art for Children
  • CDFS 4101 - Int Curr for Early Learners

Group E: Field Experience (4 hours)

  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (25-31 hours)

Electives will be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

Disability Studies and Rehabilitation Services, (B.P.S.)

Advising guidelines for the Bachelor of Professional Studies (B.P.S.) degree with a concentration in Disability Studies and Rehabilitation Services are designed for students seeking to be academically and professionally grounded in issues faced by individuals seeking disability services. Students will also be exposed to the theme of employment – including vocational adjustment and appropriate job placement – and independent living outcomes as reaffirmed in the Rehabilitation Act Amendments of 1992. Rehabilitation depends heavily upon communication between both the consumer and professional and among various professionals; consequently, communication will be stressed, as well as an understanding of the potential influence of cultural diversity and individual lifestyle choices. Courses will also enable students to understand the methods used in disability services to solve consumer problems and utilize available resources. Finally, a well-supervised field experience component will provide students the opportunity to integrate classroom principles and develop entry-level skills in a work setting.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (58 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php.

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Professional Core (19 hours)

  • COUN 4901 - Princ/Tech/Rehab Counseling
  • COUN 4913 - Medical/Psyc Aspects/Rehab
  • COUN 4921 - Vocational Dev/Occupation Info
  • SWRK 3902 - Human Behavior/Soc Envrnmnt
  • SWRK 3903 - Social Work Practice I

Pick 1 of the following:

  • SWRK 2010 - Introduction to Social Work
  • SWRK 2911 - Soc Response to Human Need
  • Statistics and Research Methods (3 hours; pick 1)
  • PSYC 3010 - Research and Statistics I
  • SOCI 3311 - Social Statistics
  • SOCI 3322 - Methods of Social Research

Rehabilitation Delivery (12 hours; pick 4)

  • COUN 4611 - Intro to Counseling
  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis Intervention
  • COUN 4783 - Alcohol/Drug Abuse Services
  • PADM 4207 - Health Politics/Policy
  • PETE 3308 - Exceptional Learner Phys Ed
  • PSYC 3512 - Health Psychology
  • SLS 3905 - Leisure/Recr Disabilities

Management Services (9 hours; pick 3)

  • ACCT 2010 - Fundamentals of Acct I
  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • MGMT 3215 - Management of Human Resources
  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations
  • PADM 4227 - Issues/Nonprofit Admin

Communications (6 hours)

Group A: Professional Communications (pick 1)

  • MGMT 3510 - Business Communications
  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Profess Writing
  • ENGL 3604 - Persuasive Writing
  • COMM 4011 - Communication in Organizations

Group B: Interpersonal Communications (pick 1)

  • COMM 4373 - Interracial Communication
  • COMM 4375 - Intercultural Communication
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions

Development and Aging (6 hours; pick 2)

  • EDPR 2111 - Development Across Lifespan
  • HMSE 4305 - Problems/Health Sport Science
  • LEAD 3350 - The Adult Learner
  • SOCI 3112 - Contemporary Social Problems
  • SOCI 4541 - Sociology of Aging
  • SOCI 4851 - Medical Sociology
  • SOCI 4852 - Sociology of Mental Illness
  • UNIV 4527 - The Developing Adult

Internship (3 hours)

  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (12-18 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Early Care and Learning, (B.P.S)

The Early Care and Learning (ECL) emphasis provides a foundation for a career in working with young children (0-4) in early care and education and other applied settings.

Students who choose the ECL emphasis are expected to develop knowledge and skills in child development and learning, observation and assessment, pedagogy and research through classroom and field experiences. Students will be prepared for employment in a discipline working with children and families, and may pursue graduate training that leads to careers in education, academia, research, health professions, or social work.

For information on careers in this and other disciplines students should consult the Career Services Office located on the 4th Wilder Tower, 678-2239.

This Program DOES NOT lead to teacher licensure. Students interested in gaining a teaching license should contact the College of Education at 678-2728 or visit their website at: http://www.memphis.edu/tep/

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (51 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Child Development & Family Studies Core (18 hours)

  • EDPR 2111 - Development Across Lifespan
  • CDFS 2100 - Intro Fld of Chld Dev& Fam St
  • CDFS 2101 - Family/Global Perspective
  • CDFS 3401 - Parent Child Relations
  • CDFS 4220 - Understand Chldn/Behv/Guide
  • CDFS 4223 - Home/School/Comm Engage

Early Care and Learning Core (30 hours)

  • CDFS 3410 - Soc Emotion Lrng Early Child
  • CDFS 4101 - Int Curr for Early Learners
  • CDFS 4230 - Math/Science Early Learning
  • ICL 4001 - Teaching/Diverse Environment
  • SPED 2000 - Foundation/Exceptional Learn
  • ECED 3555 - Obsrv/Assmnt Infant/Erly Ch
  • ECED 4500 - Emergent Literacy/Lang Dev*
  • ECED 4540 - Pln/Fclt Infant/Toddler Dev*
  • ECED 4515 - Teach/Lrng Erly Chld Ed*
  • UNIV 4110 – Internship

*University college students MUST be at Junior standing (60 credits) in order to enroll in these College of Education courses.

Working with Families Core (3 hours)

  • CDFS 4910 - Ethics in Early Care and Learning

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: 

http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (19-25 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Early Intervention Specialist, (B.P.S.)

The Bachelor of Professional Studies in Early Intervention (ages 0-2) focuses on recognizing the uniqueness of the provision of instruction and/or service coordination in the field of Part C the Federal IDEA legislation for early intervention (ages 0-2). Students will learn how to promote caregiver-child interaction by assisting families to adapt routines and activities to support children’s (ages 0-2) learning and interaction. In addition, students will be introduced to adult learning approaches to support caregivers and understand how cultural diversity affects family interactions and practices. 

This program is designed to reflect professional standards set forth by the Council for Exceptional Children Division of Early Childhood. These standards are critical indicators of program quality and include: 

· Federal IDEA Part C Requirements;

· Typical and atypical patterns of infant and toddler development and learning in all areas;

· Functional assessment of development across domains;

· Developmental disabilities in the birth-to-three population; and

· Specialized instructional strategies to help young children (ages 0-2) learn.  

This program prepares students to take the Tennessee Early Intervention Credential exams required to provide Developmental Therapy in the State of Tennessee. 

This program DOES NOT lead to teacher licensure. Students interested in gaining a teaching license should contact the College of Education at 678-2728 or visit their website at: http://www.memphis.edu/tep/

University General Education (35-41 hrs)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (55 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Child Development & Family Studies Core (18 hours)

  • EDPR 2111 - Development Across Lifespan
  • CDFS 2100 - Intro Fld of Chld Dev& Fam St
  • CDFS 2101 - Family/Global Perspective
  • CDFS 3401 - Parent Child Relations
  • CDFS 4220 - Understand Chldn/Behv/Guide
  • CDFS 4223 - Home/School/Comm Engage

Early Intervention Specialist (12 hours)

  • SPED 2000 - Foundation/Exceptional Learn
  • SPED 4111 - Intro/Appl Behav Analysis
  • SWRK 2010 - Introduction to Social Work
  • SWRK 2911 - Soc Response to Human Need

Early Intervention Specialist Core Supportive Competencies (12 hours)

  • ECED 4540 - Pln/Fclt Infant/Toddler Dev
  • ECED 3555 - Obsrv/Assmnt Infant/Erly Ch
  • SWRK 3902 - Human Behavior/Soc Envrnmnt (requires dept. permit, SWRK 2010 or SWRK 2911 and BIOL 1010/BIOL 1011)
  • UNIV 3535 - Family Communication

Guided Electives & Field Experience (13 hours)

Group A: Family Dynamics (pick 1)

  • ANTH 3511 - Culture/Kin/Family
  • LEAD 3350 - The Adult Learner
  • SOCI 3831 - Marriage and Family
  • SWRK 3903 - Social Work Practice I
  • SWRK 3904 - Social Work Practice II

Group B: Diverse Interactions (pick 1) 

  • SOCI 3422 - Racial/Ethnc Minorities
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions
  • SOCI 4442 - Sociology of Poverty

Group C: Educational Context (pick 1)

  • CDFS 4101 - Int Curr for Early Learners
  • ENGL 3401 - Children’s Literature
  • SPED 3410 - Disorders of Language
  • SWRK 4937 - School Social Work

Group D: Field Experience (4 hours)

  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

 Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (completed during the final semester)

General Electives (19-25 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

Emergency Management, (B.P.S.)

The interdisciplinary Emergency Management concentration is designed for students with a diversity of backgrounds and interest in applying that background to emergency management, community resilience to disaster, environmental hazards mitigation, emergency management response, and business continuity/disaster recovery. It will address the following critical knowledge elements: a) the physical and social dimensions of disasters through combining knowledge from various physical, social, and applied disciplines, b) the intersection of public policy to disaster risk, response, and mitigation, c) the intersection of the private, nonprofit, and governmental sectors and how this effects emergency preparedness, mitigation, and recovery, d) sustainable development, planning for and response to extreme events and change in our physical and human landscapes; and e) communication dynamics and persuasive communication in emergencies.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (33 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php.

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Professional Core (12 hours)

•EMGT 3100 Seminar on Emergency Management 

Pick 1 of the following:

  • EMGT 4000 - Internship*
  • CJUS 4100 - Ind Dir Studies
  • ESCI 4621 - Investigations In GEOG

Pick 2 of the following:

  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin
  • CJUS 4126 - CJUS Admin and Mgmt
  • PADM 3611 - Disaster Planning/Control
  • PADM 3615 - Community Risk Reduction
  • ESCI 4261 - Plan Sustainable Cities/Region
  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • MGMT 4710 - Strategic Management
    *NOTE: Junior level status required

Hazard/Risk Management (9 hours; pick 3)

  • ESCI 4251 - Environmental Hazards
  • CJUS 4190 - Terrorism Soc/Legl Prsp
  • ESCI 3131 - Severe Weather
  • COMM 4211 - Public Health Campaigns
  • ARCH 4451 - Site/Environmental Planning

Human Systems (9 hours; pick 3)

  • ANTH 4510 - Health/Culture/Environ Justice
  • ANTH 4511 - Medical Anthropology
  • COMM 3322 - Theories of Persuasion
  • COMM 4410 - Conflict Resolution and Negotiations* Or COMM 4380 - Communication and Conflict*
  • SOCI 3401 - Social Inequality
  • SOCI 3701 - Individual and Society
  • PADM 4221 - Issues/Urban Admin
  • PADM 4207 - Health Politics/Policy

*NOTE: Courses are equivalent

Analysis (3 hours; pick 1)

  • CJUS 3129 - Statistical Methods/CJUS (4)
  • ESCI 4521 - Quantitative Methods
  • ESCI 4525 - Adv Geographic Info Science
  • PADM 4101 - Political Statistics
  • POLS 4101 - Political Statistics
  • SOCI 3311 - Social Statistics

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

General Electives (37-43 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

Fashion Design, (B.P.S)

The Fashion Design program prepares students for careers in Fashion Design for the Apparel Industry. The curriculum fosters creative expression in all aspects of Fashion Design, including fashion sketching, creative design, computer applications, draping, and pattern drafting. With this, students learn to balance hand-making and digital skills with an integrated approach to design. The program is structured to challenge and inspire students by incorporating artistic, technical, and theoretical elements into a realistic approach to the Fashion Design Industry.

University General Education (35-41 hrs)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (36 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Visual Merchandising and Design Core (12 hours)

  • MRCH 2000 - Visual Imaging for Fashion and Merchandising
  • MRCH 2010 - Textiles
  • MRCH 3215 - Textiles Applications
  • MRCH 3000 - Color and Basic Design Studies and Applications

Fashion Design Concentration (24 hours; pick 8)

  • MRCH 2005 - Introd to the Fashion Industry
  • MRCH 2200 - Fashion Sketching and Illustration for Design
  • MRCH 3075 - Basic Industry Sewing and Construction
  • MRCH 3100 - Pattern Drafting I
  • MRCH 3300 - Draping Techniques
  • MRCH 3400 - Computer Aided Fashion Drawing and Design
  • MRCH 3450 - Computer Patternmaking
  • MRCH 4000 - Advanced Sewing Techniques
  • MRCH 4400 - Pattern Drafting II
  • MRCH 4500 - Advanced Computer Patternmaking
  • MRCH 4550 - Design and Fit Analysis
  • MRCH 4575 - Sourcing and Technical Design

Guided Electives (18 hours)

Choose any remaining courses not taken from Fashion Design Concentration or appropriate upper division courses from Art, Theater, etc. Courses from other departments should be discussed with your advisor/program coordinator before registering to determine appropriateness.

Senior Year Requirements (6 hours)

  • MRCH 4600 - Senior Seminar

The senior collection is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior collection is intended to fuse all the academic areas that comprise the student’s understanding of developing a fashion collection into a relevant example of scholarship to be showcased down the runway. Students will complete a collection of their choice with approval of their senior collection instructor. The senior collection is completed during a student’s final semester.

  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses at: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

REQUIRED FOR CONCENTRATION:

  • MRCH 4205 - Behavioral Sci Aspects of Clothng
  • MRCH 3050 - Costume History

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (10-16 hours)

Electives will be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Fashion Merchandising (B.P.S.)

Industry overview, financial planning and purchasing, visual presentation, color selection and coordination, textile identification, clothing characteristics, entrepreneurship and personal and professional development are all program components in this concentration.

University General Education (35-41 hrs)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (36 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Visual Merchandising and Design Core (12 hours)

  • MRCH 2000 - Visual Imaging for Fashion and Merchandising
  • MRCH 2010 - Textiles
  • MRCH 3215 - Textiles Applications
  • MRCH 3000 - Color and Basic Design Studies and Applications

Fashion Merchandising Concentration (24 hours)

  • MRCH 2004 - Tech Skills for Merchandising
  • MRCH 2005 - Introd to the Fashion Industry
  • MRCH 2106 - 3D Visual Merchandising
  • MRCH 3206 - Merchandising Systems and Applications
  • MRCH 3600 - Consumer Engagement in the Digital Era
  • MRCH 3650 - Merchandise Buying
  • MRCH 4560 - Trend Analysis and Styling Concepts
  • MRCH 4575 - Sourcing and Technical Design

Required Minor (18 hours)

  • MKTG 3010 - Principles of Marketing 
  • MKTG 3140 - Advertising and Sale Promotion
  • Additional 12 hours in Marketing for the Marketing Management Minor.

Senior Year Requirements (6 hours)

  • MRCH 4600 - Senior Seminar

The senior collection is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior collection is intended to fuse all the academic areas that comprise the student’s understanding of developing a fashion collection into a relevant example of scholarship to be showcased down the runway. Students will complete a collection of their choice with approval of their senior collection instructor. The senior collection is completed during a student’s final semester.

  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

Thematic Studies (6 hours)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

REQUIRED FOR CONCENTRATION:

  • MRCH 4205 - Behavioral Sci Aspects of Clothng
  • MRCH 3050 - Costume History

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (10-16 hours)

Electives will be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Health Services (B.P.S.)

Students following guidelines for Health Services are interested in the helping professions. This curriculum will prepare students for a wide range of health care positions in hospitals, health departments, health agencies, research facilities, schools and industry. This program is also for experienced health care professionals who have completed non-baccalaureate programs in health care specialties such as medical laboratory technology, respiratory therapy, radiological technology, and nursing who will build upon their training and experience by taking courses in such areas

University General Education (35-41 hrs)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (48 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php.

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Professional Core (27 hours)

Group A: Professional Core

  • ACCT 2010 - Fundamentals of Acct I

Pick 1 of the following:

  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • HCL 3000 - Healthcare Leadership
  • HETH 4211 - Comm Healtcare Lead/Mgmt

Group B: Human Resources Management (Pick 1)

  • MGMT 3215 - Management of Human Resources
  • HCL 4030 - Healthcare Human Resources

Group C: Financial (Pick 1)

  • ACCT 2020 - Fundamentals of Acct II
  • ACCT 3011 – Business Law
  • ACCT 3130 - Legal/Social/Political Environment 
  • FIR 1220 – Personal Financial Management
  • FIR 3410 - Financial Management
  • MRCH 4300 - Family Resource Management
  • HCL 3010 - Healthcare Financial Mgmt

Group D: Professional Writing (Pick 1)

  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Profess Writing
  • PBRL 3421 - Public Relations Writing
  • MGMT 3510 - Business Communications
  • HCL 3050 - Prof Writing Healthcare

Group E: Research Methods (Pick 1)

  • SOCI 3311 - Social Statistics
  • HCL 4010 - Healthcare Stats/Research
  • HETH 4210 - Healthcare Research Methods​

Group F: Health Communication (Pick 1)

  • COMM 3012 - Health Communication
  • HCL 3020 - Healthcare Informatics
  • COMM 4211 - Public Health Campaigns

Group G: Policy and Social Context (Pick 1)

  • HCL 4000 - Health Policy Issues
  • HETH 4212 - Trends/Issues in Healthcare
  • HLSC 4530 - Epidemiology
  • HCL 4020 - Law/Ethics of Healthcare
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations

Health Care Systems (Pick 1)

  • HCL 3040 - U S Health System
  • HETH 4213 - Community Health/Iss/Serv
  • HLSC 2200 - Introduction to Public Health & Health Sciences

Health Care Specialty Guided Elective (21 hours; pick 7)

NOTE: Must have 12 hours of Upper Division courses from this section.

  • CDFS 2101 - Family/Global Perspective
  • COBH 4707 - International Health/Prob/Iss
  • HCL 3020 - Healthcare Informatics
  • HCL 3040 - U S Health System
  • HCL 4020 - Law/Ethics of Healthcare
  • HCL 4040 - Business Principles/Healthcare
  • HMSE 2102 - ARC First Aid and CPR
  • HLSC 2100 - Wellness Concepts Practice
  • HLSC 2200 - Introduction to Public Health/Health Studies
  • PHIL 3514 - Biomedical Ethics
  • NUTR 2202 - Nutrition
  • PSYC 3507 - Alcohol/Drugs/Behavior
  • PSYC 3512 - Health Psychology
  • SOCI 4442 - Sociology of Poverty
  • SOCI 4851 - Medical Sociology
  • SW 3170 - Family Caregiving
  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (22-28 hours)

Electives may be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

Human Services, (B.P.S.)

Students in Human Services are expected to develop a philosophical orientation to the human condition; to enlarge their understanding of social structures, values and norms; to study human growth and development; and to become informed about social change and social and bureaucratic organizations. Students in Human Services will take courses from such departments as Counseling and Personnel Services, Sociology and Social Work, Psychology, Management, and Special Education.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (45 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Basic Core (12 hours)

  • COUN 4611 - Intro to Counseling
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions
  • SWRK 2010 - Introduction to Social Work
  • SWRK 2911 - Soc Response to Human Need

Professional Writing (3 hours; pick 1)

  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Professional Writing
  • ENGL 3604 - Persuasive Writing
  • MGMT 3510 - Business Communications* (Prerequisite: MIS 2749 or equivalent course)

Rehabilitation/Social Intervention (6 hours; pick 2)

  • CJUS 4152 - Drug Misuse and Abuse
  • COBH 4707 - International Health/Prob/Iss
  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis Intervention
  • COUN 4783 - Alcohol/Drug Abuse Services
  • COUN 4901 - Princ/Tech/Rehab Counseling
  • COUN 4913 - Medical/Psyc Aspects/Rehab
  • COUN 4921 - Vocational Dev/Occupation Info
  • HETH 4212 - Trends/Issues in Healthcare
  • HETH 4213 - Community Health/Iss/Serv
  • SLS 3905 - Leisure/Recr Disabilities
  • SOCI 4852 - Sociology of Mental Illness
  • SW 3170 - Family Caregiving
  • SWRK 3920 - Soc Welfare Policy/Programs* (Prerequisite: SWRK 2010, 2911)
  • UNIV 3534 - Theatre & Therapy

Support Courses (21 hours; pick 7)

NOTE: Take no more than six hours in any one discipline.

  • ANTH 4531 - Alcohol/Drugs/Culture
  • COMM 4373 - Interracial Communication
  • COMM 4410 - Conflict Resolution and Negot
  • CRMJ 4520 - Patterns of Domestic Abuse
  • CRMJ 4530 - Sociology of Murder
  • EDPR 3302 - Child/Adolescent Development
  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin* (Prerequisite: Junior/Senior Status, ENGL 1010)
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations
  • PSYC 3102 - Abnormal Psychology* (Prerequisite: PSYC 1030)
  • PSYC 3103 - Child Psychology* (Prerequisite: PSYC 1030)
  • SOCI 3401 - Social Inequality
  • SOCI 3501 - Sociology of Deviant Behavior
  • SOCI 4420 - Racial Inequality
  • SOCI 4442 - Sociology of Poverty
  • SOCI 4541 - Sociology of Aging
  • SOCI 4852 - Sociology of Mental Illness 
  • UNIV 4527 - The Developing Adult

Internship (3 hours)

  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (25-31 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

Information Technology (B.P.S.)

The Bachelor of Professional Studies with a major in Professional Studies and a concentration in Information Technology can be gained completely online through the State of Tennessee’s TN eCampus Program. The program is designed (1) to promote understanding of the nature of and fundamentals of administrative leadership in the technological fields; (2) to allow students to reflect upon national and international technological development and communication and the significant social and cultural issues raised in those contexts; and (3) to promote skills in information systems, statistical methods, formal and interpersonal communication, including team and organizational relations.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (36 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Professional Core (21 hours)

Group A: Administration and Supervision (Pick 1)

  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin
  • TECH 4381 - Principles of Supervision
  • MGMT 3610 - Princ Mgmt/Organ Behav
  • LIST 4093 - Special Topics/Leadership

Group B: Organizational Systems (Pick 1)

  • PM 4120 - Organization Theory and Behav
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations

Group C: Statistical Methods (Pick 1) 

  • PBRL 4410 - Public Relations Research
  • SOAA 3350 - Social Statistics
  • SOCI 4510 - Intro to Social Research

Group D: Written Communications (Pick 2) 

  • ENGL 3134 - Computer/Writing/Lit
  • ENGL 3250 - Professional Comm
  • PBRL 3421 - Public Relations Writing

Group E: Team & Organizational Relations (Pick 1) 

  • COMM 3010 - Integrated Corp Comm
  • COMM 4410 - Conflict Resolution and Negot

Group F: International Context (Pick 1) 

  • JOUR 4712 - Media and Cultures
  • POLI 4350 - International Law
  • PS 3510 - Internl Political Economy
  • POLS 3010 - Comparative Politics
  • SPAN 3550 - Latin America Country& People

Information Technology Concentration (15 hours)

Group A: Management Information Systems Overview (Pick 1) 

  • PTMA 3020 - Managing Information Tech
  • MGMT 3220 - Mgmt of Info Systems

Group B: Software

  • UNIV 4706 - Managing Software Development

Group C: Files/Operativng Systems (Pick 1) 

  • INFS 3700 - Systems Analysis and Design
  • COMP 3050 - Programming Languages

Group D: Database Management (Pick 1) 

  • CSCI 3222 - Database Mgmt System
  • UNIV 4708 - Business Intelligence

Group E: Networks (Pick 1) 

  • CSCI 4017 - Intro to Information Assurance
  • INFS 4900 - Business Data Communications

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

 Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Elective (34-40 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

International Organizational Leadership (B.P.S.)

The Bachelor of Professional Studies with a major in Professional Studies and a concentration in International Organizational Leadership can be gained completely online through the State of Tennessee’s TN eCampus Program. The program is designed (1) to promote understanding of the nature of bureaucratic organizations and the fundamentals of administrative leadership; (2) to allow students to reflect upon national and international organizational context and upon significant social and cultural issues raised in those contexts; and (3) to promote skills in formal and interpersonal communication, including sensitivity to international issues and cultural diversity that have an impact upon the quality of work.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (36 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at:  https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

Professional Core (21 hours)

Group A: Administration and Supervision (Pick 1)

  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin
  • TECH 4381 - Principles of Supervision
  • MGMT 3610 - Princ Mgmt/Organ Behav
  • LIST 4093 - Special Topics/Leadership

Group B: Organizational Systems (Pick 1) 

  • PM 4120 - Organization Theory and Behav
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations

Group C: Statistical Methods (Pick 1) 

  • PBRL 4410 - Public Relations Research
  • SOAA 3350 - Social Statistics
  • SOCI 4510 - Intro to Social Research

Group D: Written Communications (Pick 2) 

  • ENGL 3134 - Computer/Writing/Lit
  • ENGL 3250 - Professional Comm
  • PBRL 3421 - Public Relations Writing

Group E: Team & Organizational Relations (Pick 1) 

  • COMM 3010 - Integrated Corp Comm
  • COMM 4410 – Conflict Resolution and Negot
  • ORCO 3240 - Organizational Comm

Group F: International Context (Pick 1) 

  • JOUR 4712 - Media and Cultures
  • POLI 4350 - International Law
  • PS 3510 - Internl Political Economy
  • POLS 3010 - Comparative Politics
  • SPAN 3550 - Latin America Country& People

International Organizational Leadership Concentration (15 hours) 

  • BMGT 3600 - International Mgmt
  • POLI 4350 International Law
  • PS 3510 International Political Economy
  • POLS 4508 - Theories Internatl Relations
  • COMM 3560 - Intercultural Communtn

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

 General Electives (34-40 hrs)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

Judaic Studies (B.L.S.)

Bornblum Judaic Studies explores the experience of the Jewish people within the contexts of world cultures. Non-theological in its orientation, it provides students the opportunity to study related areas, including the history of the Jewish people, the structures and politics of Jewish communities, the Hebrew and Arabic languages, and the religious, intellectual, and aesthetic traditions of the Jewish people.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See Graduation from the University for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempted from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.

Coordinated Study (45 hours)

Lower Division Core (15 hours)

Group A: Hebrew Language Core 

  • HEBR 1010 - Elementary Hebrew I
  • HEBR 1020 - Elementary Hebrew II
  • HEBR 2010 - Intermediate Hebrew I
  • HEBR 2020 - Intermediate Hebrew II

Group B: Religious Studies Core

  • JDST 2850 - Religions of Abraham

Upper Division Core (6 hours; pick 2)

  • HIST 3275 - History of Jewish People
  • JDST 3601 - Judaism
  • JDST 3801 - Ancient & Medieval Jewish Thought

Upper Division Electives (15 hours)

Group A: Jewish Heritage (pick 2 or 3)

  • ENGL 4461 - Bible as Literature
  • HIST 3275 - History of Jewish People
  • JDST 3661 - Old Testament
  • JDST 3802 - Modern Jewish Thought
  • JDST 4671 - Jewish Literary Texts
  • JDST 4801 - Jewish Mysticism
  • JDST 4841 - Biblical Archaeology

Group B: Israel (pick 1 or 2)

  • JDST 4820 - Political History of Israel
  • JDST 4830 - Israeli/Arab Conflict
  • JDST 4840 - Israel/Antiquity in Modernity

With the permission of the Director of Bornblum Judaic Studies, students may substitute the following courses: JDST 4700-4799 Special Topics and/or JDST 4990 Independent Study for two courses listed under C, OR they may be used to satisfy hours in Group D below.

Interdisciplinary Electives (9 hours; pick 3)

  • ARTH 4121 - Ancient Art Near East
  • HIST 4272 - Modern Middle East
  • HIST 4320 - Ancient Near East
  • PHIL 3701 - Human and the Divine
  • POLS 3102 - Religion and Politics
  • SOCI 3860 - Sociology of Religion

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

 Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (25-31 hrs)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Law Enforcement Administration, (B.P.S)

Advising guidelines for the Bachelor of Professional Studies (B.P.S.) degree with a concentration in Law Enforcement Administration are designed for experienced law enforcement professionals who wish to further their careers by completing a program of study designed to increase their skills in management, organizational relations, and communication; their knowledge of the contexts within which law enforcement administration fits; their understanding of workplace issues that can affect productivity; and their ability to manage diversity in the workforce. In most cases, candidates for this degree program will be active duty or retired law enforcement officers at the municipal, county, or state levels, though military police and, in certain circumstances, those whose experience is in private security are eligible as well.

General Education (35-41 hours)

 See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (58 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at:  https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits/

CJUS 100 is a prerequisite for all other CJUS classes.

Organization and Administration Required Core (12 hours)

  • ACCT 2010 - Fundamentals of Acct I
  • MGMT 3215 - Management of Human Resources
  • PBRL 3400 - Survey of Public Relations 

Pick 1:

  • CJUS 4126 - CJUS Admin and Mgmt
  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin
  • TECH 4381 - Principles of Supervision

Team Work and Organizational Relations (6 hours; pick 2)

  • COMM 3342 - Communication and Leadership
  • COMM 4011 - Communication in Organizations
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions
  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis Intervention
  • LEGL 3482 - Labor Law
  • MGMT 4420 - Organizational Behavior in Business

Written Communication (3 hours; pick 1)

  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Profess Writing
  • ENGL 3604 - Persuasive Writing
  • MGMT 3510 - Business Communications

Decision-Making (6 hours)

Group A (pick 1)

  • CJUS 3129 - Statistical Methods/CJUS
  • POLS 4101 - Political Statistics
  • SOCI 3311 - Social Statistics

Group B (pick 1)

  • CJA 3230 - Police Org/Admin
  • CJUS 3130 - Research Methods CJUS
  • SOCI 3322 - Methods of Social Research

Professional Ethics (3 hours; pick 1)

  • CJUS 4130 - Ethical Dilemmas/CJUS
  • LEGL 2400 - Legal Ethics
  • PHIL 3511 - Ethical Theory
  • UNIV 3540 - Ethics & Professionalism

Urban Issues (6 hours; pick 2)

  • ANTH 4411 - Urban Anthropology
  • ANTH 4412 - Neighborhood Development
  • ESCI 3451 - Intro/Urban Planning
  • POLS 4222 - Urban Politics
  • SOCI 3112 - Contemporary Social Problems
  • SOCI 4631 - Cities in Change

Public Policy Issues (6 hours; pick 2)

  • CJUS 3226 - Police in America
  • LEGL 3487 - Admin Law/Procedure
  • POLS 3213 - Intro to Public Policy
  • SOCI 4842 - Sociology/Occup/Professions

Social Issues (3 Hours; pick 1)

  • COMM 4373 - Interracial Communication
  • SOCI 3422 - Racial/Ethnc Minorities
  • SOCI 3432 - Sociology of Gender
  • SOCI 4460 - Black/White Women in South

Behavioral Issues (3 hours; pick 1)

  • CJUS 3540 - Criminology
  • PSYC 3102 - Abnormal Psychology
  • PSYC 3106 - Social Psychology
  • PSYC 3507 - Alcohol/Drugs/Behavior
  • SOCI 3701 - Individual and Society

Pre Assessed Credit (10 hours)

A minimum of 10 hours of pre assessed experiential learning work from a POST certified training academy or Military MP training will be accepted with proper documentation. The 10 hours will be applied to the Coordinated Study.

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (12-17 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Legal Studies, (B.P.S.)

The Legal Studies concentration teaches theoretical and practical aspects of the field of law as a profession. Students are equipped to offer substantive legal support services to firms and agencies or to continue their education in law school. The core curriculum emphasizes four correlated disciplines: (1) theory, process, application, and ethics of law; (2) legal and administrative research and investigation; (3) law-related technologies, and (4) professional decorum and communication skills. Only licensed attorneys are permitted to practice law, but well-trained paralegals and support staff are indispensable to any office that faces critical issues in law, regulatory compliance, or policy. The unique skill sets of Legal Studies graduates are vital not only to law firms but also to corporations, government agencies, courts, law enforcement, health care organizations, non-profits, educational institutions, and a wide range of other professional settings.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found here:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (54 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

No more than 15 hours of the Legal Studies Professional Core may be satisfied through transfer credit.

Legal Studies Professional Core (30 hours)

  • LEGL 2400 - Legal Ethics*
  • LEGL 2410 - Intro to Law*
  • LEGL 3150 - Legal Research/Writing I*
  • LEGL 3410 - Contracts Commercial Law
  • LEGL 3420 - Torts
  • LEGL 3440 - Civil Procedure
  • LEGL 3484 - Bankruptcy Practices
  • LEGL 3486 - Criminal Law & Procedure
  • LEGL 4150 - Legal Research Writing II
  • UNIV 4110 - Internship**

* Students must complete LEGL 2400, LEGL 2410, and LEGL 3150 with a grade of C- or better before enrolling in any upper division (3000-4000 level) LEGL courses.

** A permit is required to enroll in UNIV 4110 (Legal Studies Internship). The program director approves internships and issues permits. In order to be eligible, students must have earned (1) ninety credit-hours and (2) a grade of C- (70%) or better in both LEGL 3150 (Legal Research & Writing I) and LEGL 4150 (Legal Research & Writing II). The internship requires students to perform 150 clock-hours of substantive legal work within a professional legal environment. Although the academic advisors and the program coordinator are available to assist however possible, it is each student’s responsibility to find, apply for, and secure his/her own internship prior to seeking a permit for UNIV 4110. Students cannot transfer credit for internships from other schools or programs unless the student and the internship both meet UM’s Legal Studies Internship standards, as determined by the program coordinator. For more information and related forms and documents, please visit:  http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/legalstudies/legalstudiesinternship.php

Law-Related Electives (12 hours)

  • LEGL 3400 - Estates and Probates
  • LEGL 3430 - Business Associations
  • LEGL 3481 - Family Law
  • LEGL 3482 - Labor Law
  • LEGL 3485 - Real Estate Practices
  • LEGL 3487 - Admin Law/Procedure
  • LEGL 4200 - Healthcare Liability
  • LEGL 4300 - Immigration Law
  • POLS 4709 - Mock Trial*

*Mock trial is a specialty course offered by the Political Science Department. It is limited to students who audition and are selected for the UM Mock Trial team, which sometimes travels for regional competitions. Eligible students may take the course twice for a total of six credit hours, but only in consecutive semesters (fall and then spring). For more information on permits, auditions, requirements, and offerings, please contact the Political Science Department or visit http://www.memphis.edu/polisci/mock_trial.htm

Interdisciplinary Electives (12 hours)

Legal Studies students must also take at least 12 hours (four classes) of Interdisciplinary Electives. This course group is meant to offer students the freedom to shape their own learning experience while still adhering to a central theme of modern legal systems in society.

Students seeking to enroll in courses outside of University College must obtain the appropriate permits from the department offering the course. Note that all upper-division courses offered by the Fogelman College of Business and Economics require a permit (3000 or 4000-level ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG). To request a permit for courses at Fogelman College, please visit fcbeacad.memphis.edu/ugad/permits. Many upper-division courses in other departments also have prerequisites or permit restrictions. Students are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course requirements prior to enrollment. For specific information about course descriptions and prerequisites, please see the Undergraduate Catalog, which is available online at:  www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

  • ACCT 3011 - Business Law
  • CJUS 3426 - Corrections in America
  • CJUS 3510 - Law and Society
  • CJUS 3521 - Constitutional Crmnl Procedure
  • CJUS 4130 - Ethical Dilemmas/CJUS
  • CJUS 4170 - Prevention/Deterrence Crime
  • CJUS 4520 - Substantive Criminal Law
  • CJUS 4531 - Issues/Constitutional Rights
  • FIR 3310 - Real Estate Principles
  • FIR 4011 - Retirement and Estate Planning
  • FIR 4310 - Real Estate Law*
  • HIST 3840 - U S Constitutional History
  • JRSM 4700 - Media Law
  • MGMT 3215 - Management of Human Resources
  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin
  • PADM 4221 - Issues/Urban Admin
  • PHIL 3411 - Contemporary Moral Problems
  • PHIL 3511 - Ethical Theory
  • PHIL 3514 - Biomedical Ethics
  • PHIL 4551 - Social and Political Philosophy
  • POLS 3402 - Legal/Political Thght Modern
  • POLS 4200 - Envrnmntl Law/Policy/Regulatn
  • POLS 4211 - Const Law/National Powers
  • POLS 4212 - Const Law Civil Liberty
  • POLS 4222 - Urban Politics
  • POLS 4405 - Origin/Dev Amer Pol Thought
  • POLS 4415 - African-Am Pol Thght to 1900
  • POLS 4416 - African-Am Pol Tht from 1900
  • POLS 4504 - International Law
  • SOCI 3541 - Criminology

*Legal Studies Students may receive degree credit for either LEGL 3485 - Real Estate Law or FIR 4310 - Real Estate Law, but not both.

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

Please note that the Legal Studies Senior Project does not involve the same materials and assignments as the Senior Project for students in other fields of study. Instead of an academic research paper, Legal Studies students analyze a case file and conduct independent legal research to draft a full-length trial brief that is suitable for attorney signature and filing with the court. For more information about the Legal Studies section of Senior Project, please email legalstudies@memphis.edu. For permit and registration information, please contact your academic advisor or the Senior Project Coordinator.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (completed during the final semester)

General Electives (16-22 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Manufacturing Technology Management, (Lambuth Campus Only) (B.P.S)

The Bachelor of Professional Studies degree (BPS) with a concentration in Manufacturing Technology Management offers career and advancement opportunities in the manufacturing industry.

The interdisciplinary focus on manufacturing supervisory skills will assist students in advancing their manufacturing careers for those already working in the industry.

Students will learn skills in project planning and evaluation, work design improvement, production control, facility design, occupational safety, and statistical quality control. In addition, they will learn principles of supervision and other management skills.

Those currently in the industry also have the opportunity to use existing work experience for college credit through Experiential Learning Credit.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (54 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

Manufacturing Technology Concentration (27 hours)

  • TECH 3386 - Occupational Safety
  • TECH 3440 - Project Plan/Cost Evaluation
  • TECH 4381 - Principles of Supervision
  • TECH 4460 - Work Design/Improvement
  • TECH 4462 - Quality Improvement
  • TECH 4464 - Production Control Systems
  • TECH 4466 - Facility Design
  • UNIV 4110 – Internship (6)

Management Services (27 hours)

Administration and Supervision (3 hours; pick 1)

  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin

Organizational Systems (3 hours; pick 1) 

  • MGMT 3215 - Management of Human Resources
  • MGMT 4420 - Organizational Behavior in Business
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations
  • PSYC 3508 - Indust/Organizatnl Psyc

Marketing and Public Relations (3 hours; pick 1) 

  • MKTG 3010 - Principles of Marketing
  • PBRL 3400 - Survey of Public Relations

Team and Organizational Relations (3 hours; pick 1) 

  • COMM 4011 - Communication in Organizations
  • COMM 4342 - Small Group Communication
  • COMM 4373 - Interracial Communication
  • COMM 4375 - Intercultural Communication
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions
  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis Intervention

Written Communication (3 hours; pick 1) 

  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Profess Writing
  • ENGL 3602 - Professional Editing
  • ENGL 3603 - Engineering Communications
  • ENGL 3604 - Persuasive Writing
  • MGMT 3510 - Business Communications
  • PBRL 3421 - Public Relations Writing

Social & Cultural Context (3 hours; pick 1) 

  • CJUS 4180 - Corporate/White Collar Crime
  • CJUS 4235 - Security Management
  • COMM 3003 - Television and Culture
  • SOCI 3422 - Racial/Ethnc Minorities
  • SOCI 3432 - Sociology of Gender
  • SOCI 3831 - Marriage and Family

Political & Economic Context (3 hours; pick 1) 

  • ACCT 3130 - Legal/Social/Political Environ
  • HIST 4824 - Business History
  • POLS 4508 - Theories Internatl Relations
  • POLS 4510 - Politics of Global Economy

Technology & Culture (3 hours; pick 1) 

  • COMM 4014 - Communication on the Internet
  • HIST 3035 - Technology/Culture Am History
  • JRSM 3900 - Visual Media
  • PHIL 3512 - Science/Technology/Human Values
  • PHIL 3514 - Biomedical Ethics

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

Electives (16-22 Hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Music & Entertainment (Lambuth Campus Only), (B.P.S)

The Music and Entertainment (ME) degree is an interdisciplinary program fusing three areas of study: music, business, and technology. This concentration will provide students an understanding of fundamentals in commercial music and will provide them the knowledge to gain employment in the entertainment field.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (55 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

Music Core (19 hours)

  • MUTC 3701 - Theory/Musicianship I*
  • MUTC 3702 - Theory/Musicianship II*
  • MUS 1030 - Introduction to Music
  • MUHL 3303 - Western Music History
  • MUHL 4805 - History of Rock and Roll
  • MUAP elective - Ensemble or Applied (4 hours)

*These courses have been approved only for Lambuth Campus

Entertainment Core (18 hours)

  • MUID 3704 - Recording Studio Tech/Practice
  • MUID 3705 - Cont Sngwrting/Prod Techniques
  • MUID 4201 - Studies in Commercial Music*
  • MUID 4701 - Music Licensing/Publishing*
  • COMM/MUID/UNIV Elective in Entertainment
  • UNIV 4110 - Internship (1-6 hours)

*These courses have been approved only for Lambuth Campus

Business Core (18 hours)

  • ACCT 2010 - Fundamentals of Acct I
  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • MKTG 3010 - Principles of Marketing
  • PBRL 3400 - Survey of Public Relations
  • Elective- 3 hours Business/Marketing/Mgmt Elective (Upper Division)

Pick 1:

  • PBRL 3421 - Public Relations Writing
  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Profess Writing

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (15-21 hours)

Electives will be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Non-Profit Development and Administration, (B.P.S.)

The goal of this interdisciplinary curriculum is to help persons understand the role of nonprofit in society and to prepare them to organize, develop, and administer nonprofit organizations. Nonprofit organizations include educational, scientific, religious, and other charitable organizations as well as private foundations, community-based organizations, professional and fraternal associations, and civic and social organizations. The guidelines are designed to serve persons who have worked, or who want to work, within the nonprofit sector as employees, or have served in the community as volunteers. They will want to learn how nonprofit organizations serve the community, to learn about their operation, and their constituencies, and to improve or develop administrative skills in order to work in the nonprofit sector. Persons who wish to enter the nonprofit sector or make a career change will also be served by these guidelines. Graduates of the program will likely enter such careers as communications director, volunteer director, or program director for a nonprofit agency. This curriculum can also prepare for graduate study in master’s degree programs in the fields of public administration, applied anthropology, business administration and social work.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (60 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

Core Courses (15 hours)

  • ANTH 4412 - Neighborhood Development or ANTH 3282 - American Communities
  • ECON 3411 - Economics of Social Issues
  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations

Historical Context (3 hours, pick 1)

  • HIST 3274 - Islamic History since 1405
  • HIST 3275 - History of Jewish People
  • HIST 3881 - African American History
  • HIST 4831 - History American Family
  • HIST 4851 - History of Women in America
  • HIST 4863 - History/Childhood in America
  • HIST 4871 - U S Urban History

Social, Political, Economic Context (6 hours, pick 2)

Pick 2 courses from at least two different disciplines:

  • ANTH 4411 - Urban Anthropology
  • CJUS 1100 - Intro/Criminal Justice
  • COMM 4381 - Senior Capstone
  • COUN 4611 - Intro to Counseling
  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis Intervention
  • COUN 4783 - Alcohol/Drug Abuse Services
  • ECON 2010 - Intro to Macroeconomics
  • PHIL 3511 - Ethical Theory
  • POLS 3211 - State/Local Government
  • POLS 3213 - Intro to Public Policy
  • POLS 4222 - Urban Politics
  • POLS 4223 - Issues/Urban Politics
  • SOCI 3401 - Social Inequality
  • SOCI 3422 - Racial/Ethnc Minorities
  • SOCI 4442 - Sociology of Poverty
  • SOCI 4541 - Sociology of Aging

Nonprofit Work Setting (3 hours, pick 1)

  • ESCI 3451 - Intro/Urban Planning
  • PADM 4221 - Issues/Urban Admin
  • SLS 3103 - Outdoor Rec/Ed Urban America
  • SLS 3205 - Venue Planning and Management
  • SLS 3905 - Leisure/Recr Disabilities
  • SOCI 3860 - Sociology of Religion

Skills for Administration & Community Development (21 Hours)

Marketing & Fund-raising (3 hours; pick 1)

  • FIR 4011 - Retirement and Estate Planning
  • PBRL 3400 - Survey of Public Relations
  • MKTG 3010 - Principles of Marketing
  • MKTG 4230 - Services Marketing

Human Resources (3 hours; pick 1)

  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions
  • MGMT 3215 - Management of Human Resources
  • SLS 3204 - Org Analysis Sport/Leisure

Program Evaluation (3 hours; pick 1)

  • ANTH 4010 - Ethnographic Methods
  • COMM 3330 - Communication Research Methods
  • PADM 4101 - Political Statistics
  • SLS 3305 - Leisure/Recreation Prog Devlp
  • SOCI 3311 - Social Statistics
  • SOCI 3322 - Methods of Social Research

Accounting (3 hours; pick 1)

  • ACCT 2010 - Fundamentals of Acct I
  • ACCT 2020 - Fundamentals of Acct II
  • ACCT 3310 - Cost Accounting
  • ACCT 4540 - Govt/Health/Non-Profit
  • PADM 4227 - Issues/Nonprofit Admin
  • SLS 3605 - Financial Management SLS

Legal Environment (3 hours; pick 1)

  • ACCT 3011 - Business Law
  • LEGL 2410 - Intro to Law
  • POLS 3405 - Intro Law/Jurisprudence
  • SLS 4205 - Legal Aspects SLM

Communication (3 hours; pick 1)

  • COMM 4011 - Communication in Organizations
  • COMM 4342 - Small Group Communication
  • COMM 4373 - Interracial Communication
  • COMM 4375 - Intercultural Communication
  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Profess Writing
  • ENGL 3604 - Persuasive Writing
  • MGMT 3510 - Business Communications

Computer Use & Technology (3 hours; pick 1)

  • JRSM 3900 - Visual Media
  • MIS 2749 - Foundation/Information Systems
  • SLS 3005 - Computer Applctn Sport/Leisure

Internship (6 Hours)

  • PADM 4231 - Admin Internship
  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (6-12 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Organizational Leadership, (B.P.S.)

Organizational Leadership is designed to (1) promote understanding of the nature of organizations and the fundamentals of administrative leadership; (2) allow students to reflect upon national and international organizational contexts and upon significant social and cultural issues raised in those contexts; and (3) promote skills in formal and interpersonal communication, including sensitivity to personal issues having an impact upon the quality of accomplishment in the work place.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (33 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

A course taken in one group will not be counted in another group of the Professional Core.

Administration and Supervision (3 hours; pick 1)

  • TECH 4381 - Principles of Supervision*
  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt*
  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin*

Organizational Systems (3 hours; pick 1)

  • MGMT 3215 - Management of Human Resources
  • MGMT 4420 - Organizational Behavior in Business
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations*

Statistical and Research Methods (3 hours; pick 1)

  • EDPR 4541 - Fundmntl/Applied Stat Method
  • PADM 4101 - Political Statistics
  • SOCI 3311 - Social Statistics
  • MATH 1530 - Prob/Statistics/Non Calculus

Written Communications (3 hours; pick 1)

  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Profess Writing
  • ENGL 3604 - Persuasive Writing
  • PBRL 3421 - Public Relations Writing
  • MGMT 3510 - Business Communications

Team and Organizational Relations (3 hours; pick 1)

  • COMM 4011 - Communication in Organizations
  • COMM 4342 - Small Group Communication
  • COMM 4373 - Interracial Communication
  • COMM 4375 - Intercultural Communication
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions*
  • COMM 4341 - Interpersonal Communication
  • COMM 4380 - Communication and Conflict

Political and International Context (3 hours; pick 1)

  • ACCT 3130 - Legal/Social/Political Environ
  • ACCT 3011 - Business Law
  • HIST 3212 - Latin American Nations
  • HIST 3274 - Islamic History since 1405
  • HIST 3291 - Modern Asia
  • HIST 3302 - Modern Europe 1800-Present
  • HIST 3881 - African American History
  • POLS 3213 - Intro to Public Policy
  • POLS 3302 - West Europe Govt/Politics
  • POLS 3306 - Latin American Govt/Politics
  • POLS 3309 - Govt/Politics of Mid East
  • POLS 3509 - Contmp Prblm Intl Relation
  • POLS 4307 - Govt and Pol Communist China

Organizational Leadership Concentration (15 hours; pick 5)

NOTE: No more than 3 courses from any one area

  • ACCT 3130 - Legal/Social/Political Environ *
  • COUN 4611 - Intro to Counseling
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions *
  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis Intervention
  • PBRL 3400 - Survey of Public Relations
  • LEAD 3350 - The Adult Learner
  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt *
  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin *
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations *
  • PSYC 3101 - Psychology of Personality
  • PSYC 3106 - Social Psychology
  • TECH 4381 - Principles of Supervision
  • UNIV 4110 - Internship
  • SOCI 3422 - Racial/Ethnc Minorities
  • SOCI 3432 - Sociology of Gender

*Course is listed in multiple groups, but can only be used to meet ONE degree requirement.

**3 hours may be used toward leadership concentration. An additional 3 hours could be used as elective.

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (37-43 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Preschool & Child Care Administration, (B.P.S.)

These guidelines are designed for persons seeking careers in the administration of early childhood programs including childcare centers, both for-profit and non-profit; private and public pre-kindergarten programs; Head Start; pre-schools; parents’ day out programs; before and after school care; and centers for children with special needs. Also served by these guidelines are persons with experience in childcare settings from a wide variety of backgrounds, including childcare volunteers and aides, as well as teachers and directors. In addition to core content in early childhood professional knowledge, there is course work to develop skills in fiscal management, recruiting and hiring personnel, health and safety management, board relations, marketing and public relations, and liaison with professional associations and regulatory agencies.

NOTE: This Program DOES NOT lead to teacher licensure. Students interested in gaining a teaching license should contact the College of Education at 678-2728 or visit their website at: http://www.memphis.edu/tep/

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found here:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (60 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

Students must earn a grade of “C-” or better in all Coordinated Study courses.

Child Development and Family Studies (18 hours)

NOTE: No more than 6 hours may be substituted in this section

  • EDPR 2111 - Development Across Lifespan
  • CDFS 2100 - Intro Fld of Chld Dev& Fam St
  • CDFS 2101 - Family/Global Perspective
  • CDFS 3401 - Parent Child Relations
  • CDFS 4220 - Understand Chldn/Behv/Guide
  • CDFS 4223 - Home/School/Comm Engage

Educational Context (9 hours; pick 3)

  • SPED 2000 - Foundation/Exceptional Learn
  • ECED 3555 - Obsrv/Assmnt Infant/Erly Ch*
  • ECED 4500 - Emergent Literacy/Lang Dev*
  • CDFS 4101 - Int Curr for Early Learners
  • EDPR 4301 - Early Child Dev/Begin Teacher

Families and Culture (9 hours)

Group A: (Pick 1)

  • SOCI 3401 - Social Inequality
  • SOCI 3422 - Racial/Ethnc Minorities
  • SOCI 4420 - Racial Inequality
  • SOCI 4442 - Sociology of Poverty

Group B: (Pick 1) 

  • ANTH 3511 - Culture/Kin/Family
  • ANTH 4411 - Urban Anthropology
  • HIST 4831 - History American Family
  • HIST 4863 - History/Childhood in America
  • SOCI 3831 - Marriage and Family

Group C: (Pick 1)

HIST 4851 - History of Women in America

SOCI 3432 - Sociology of Gender

• SOCI 4460 - Black/White Women in South

Program Administration (21 hours)

Fiscal Management (6 hours)

  • ACCT 2010 - Fundamentals of Acct I
  • ACCT 2020 - Fundamentals of Acct II

Human Resource Management (6 hours)

  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • MGMT 3215 - Management of Human Resources

Health and Safety Management (6 hours)

  • NUTR 2202 - Nutrition
  • HMSE 2102 - ARC First Aid and CPR

Marketing and Public Relations (3 hours; pick 1)

  • MKTG 3010 - Principles of Marketing
  • PBRL 3400 - Survey of Public Relations

Internship (3 hours)

  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (13-19 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Religious Studies, (B.L.S.)

The concentration in Religious Studies is designed for students with a diversity of backgrounds and interests in religion. Students who are enrolled in the concentration may be considering employment in fields where a knowledge of different religious traditions would be an asset, such as counseling or social work, or they may be contemplating further study of religion in a theological seminary or religious studies graduate program. Religious Studies is a traditional liberal arts field that helps students to develop skills in critical thinking, the analysis of complex issues, and oral and written expression.

General Education (35-41 Hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.Catalog can be found at: http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (36 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

Religious Studies Core (12 Hours)

  • RLGN 1100 - Introduction to Religion
  • RLGN 3100 - Perspectives on Religion
  • UNIV 3580 - Hebrew and Greek Legacy
  • UNIV 3581 - Faith/Reason/Imagination

Religious Context Courses (24 Hours; pick 8)

  • AAAS 4251 - African Religions/Diaspora
  • ENGL 4461 - Bible as Literature
  • HIST 3275 - History of Jewish People
  • JDST 3601 - Judaism
  • JDST 3661 - Old Testament
  • JDST 4511 - Holocaust Studies
  • JDST 4841 - Biblical Archaeology
  • PHIL 3701 - Human and the Divine
  • PHIL 3702 - Philosophy of Religion
  • PHIL 3721 - Chinese Philosophy
  • POLS 3102 - Religion and Politics
  • SOCI 3860 - Sociology of Religion
  • UNIV 3565 - Comparative Christianity
  • UNIV 3585 - Critical Themes Old Testament
  • UNIV 3590 - New Testament

College Requirements (9 Hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (29-34 Hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Technology Management Services - (B.P.S)

Technology Management Services is designed for experienced technicians who wish to enhance their technical expertise while at the same time increasing their skills in management, organizational relations, and communication; their knowledge of contexts within which the management of technology fits; their understanding of workplace issues that can affect productivity; and their ability to manage diversity in the workforce.

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened.

Coordinated Study (54 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php.

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

Technology Concentration: 24 hours 

NOTE: 12 hours must be upper division

This includes courses taken from such departments as:

  • Engineering
  • Engineering Technology
  • Manufacturing Engineering
  • Architecture
  • Mathematics
  • Computer Science
  • Biology
  • Chemistry
  • Physics
  • Earth Sciences
  • and other approved courses.

It is assumed that students will take all technology concentration courses from one area. Students wishing to take a combination of classes from the above areas need permission of the University College Dean. A limited number of classes from Management Information Systems (MIS/ISDS) is allowed but cannot make up the entire content of the technology concentration. Students wishing to pursue a career in information technology or management information systems should major in these areas.

Management Services (30 hours)

Administration and Supervision (3 hours; pick 1)

  • MGMT 3110 - Organization and Mgmt
  • TECH 4381 - Principles of Supervision
  • PADM 3601 - Public Admin

Organizational Systems (3 hours; pick 1)

  • MGMT 3215 - Management of Human Resources
  • MGMT 4420 - Organizational Behavior in Business
  • PADM 4226 - Intro Nonprofit Organizations
  • PSYC 3508 - Indust/Organizatnl Psyc

Marketing and Public Relations (3 Hours; pick 1)

  • MKTG 3010 - Principles of Marketing
  • PBRL 3400 - Survey of Public Relations

Administrative Skills (3 Hours; pick 1) 

  • ACCT 2010 - Fundamentals of Acct I
  • MIS 2749 - Foundation/Information Systems

Statistical & Research Methods (3 Hours; pick 1) 

  • SOCI 3311 - Social Statistics
  • EDPR 4541 - Fundmntl/Applied Stat Method
  • SCMS 3711 - Business Analytics - Tools
  • MATH 1530 - Prob/Statistics/Non Calculus
  • MATH 4611 - Intro Applied Statistics

Team and Organizational Relations (3 Hours; pick 1)

  • COMM 4011 - Communication in Organizations
  • COMM 4342 - Small Group Communication
  • COMM 4373 - Interracial Communication
  • COMM 4375 - Intercultural Communication
  • COUN 4621 - Human Interactions
  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis Intervention

Written Communication (3 Hours; pick 1) 

  • ENGL 3601 - Technical and Profess Writing
  • ENGL 3602 - Professional Editing
  • ENGL 3603 - Engineering Communications
  • ENGL 3604 - Persuasive Writing
  • MGMT 3510 - Business Communications

Social & Cultural Context (3 Hours; pick 1) 

  • ANTH 3511 - Culture/Kin/Family
  • ANTH 4412 - Neighborhood Development
  • CJUS 4180 - Corporate/White Collar Crime
  • CJUS 4235 - Security Management
  • COMM 3003 - Television and Culture
  • SLS 3105 - Sport/Leisure as Pop Culture
  • SOCI 3422 - Racial/Ethnc Minorities
  • SOCI 3432 - Sociology of Gender
  • SOCI 3831 - Marriage and Family
  • SOCI 4631 - Cities in Change

Political & Economic Context (3 Hours; pick 1) 

  • ACCT 3130 - Legal/Social/Political Environ
  • HIST 4824 - Business History
  • POLS 4510 - Politics of Global Economy
  • ESCI 4430 - Economic Geography

Technology & Culture (3 Hours; pick 1) 

  • COMM 4014 - Communication on the Internet
  • HIST 3035 - Technology/Culture Am History
  • PHIL 3512 - Science/Technology/Human Values
  • PHIL 3514 - Biomedical Ethics

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Electives (6-22 hours)

May be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper-division hours.

 

Urban Studies (B.P.S.)

This program provides a structure of study for students interested in the origin, evolution, and function of cities and metropolitan areas. Courses have been chosen to allow exploration of multiple perspectives on the dynamics of urban change, the causes of urban problems, and the sources of urban innovation. Special emphasis is given to the physical development of communities, and the interaction of that development with the social, economic, and environmental wellbeing of communities. The curriculum considers theories, ideologies, and practices to support solutions to urban and regional problems and offers students opportunities to engage in addressing local challenges with community partners. This course of study prepares students for pursuit of a professional master’s degree in a related discipline (e.g., City Planning, Public Policy, Public Administration, etc).

General Education (35-41 hours)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (45 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at: http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php.

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

Urban Studies Foundations (15 hours)

  • PLAN 3451 - Introduction to Planning (Crosslisted with ESCI 3451)
  • PLAN 4003 - Community Economic Development
  • PLAN 4201 - Urbanization and Environment (Crosslisted with ESCI 4201)
  • PLAN 4551 - Urban Planning Studio (Crosslisted with ESCI 4551)
  • ANTH 4010 - Ethnographic Methods

Urban Studies Support (15 hours; pick 5)

  • PLAN 4261 - Plan Sustainable CitiesRegions (Crosslisted with ESCI 4261)
  • PLAN 4004 - Community Organizing
  • ARCH 1211 - History of Architecture 1
  • ARCH 2212 - History of Architecture 2
  • ESCI 4515 - Geographic Info Science
  • ESCI 4443 - Transportation Planning
  • ANTH 4412 - Neighborhood Development
  • ECON 4220 - Urban Economics
  • POLS 3211 - State/Local Government

Urban Studies Exploration (15 hours; pick 5) 

NOTE: May use any of the courses not used toward the Urban Studies Support requirement to satisfy Urban Studies Explorations

  • PLAN 4002 - Urban Food Security
  • ANTH 3282 - American Communities
  • ANTH 4411 - Urban Anthropology
  • ARCH 1120 - Intro to Architecture + Design
  • ARCH 3221 - Determinants of Modern Design
  • ARCH 3222 - Contemporary Architecture 1
  • ARCH 4022 - Architecture+Urbanism Seminar
  • ARCH 4023 - Urban Design Seminar
  • ARCH 4231 - Issues in City Building
  • ARCH 4421 - Sustainable Design
  • ESCI 4431 - Urban Geography
  • POLS 3213 - Intro to Public Policy
  • SOCI 4442 - Sociology of Poverty
  • SOCI 4631 - Cities in Change
  • SWRK 2010 - Introduction to Social Work

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours; pick 2)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

General Elective (25-31 hours)

Electives may be chosen to bring the total number of hours to 120 with a minimum of 42 upper division hours.

 

Visual Merchandising and Exhibition Design (B.P.S.)

The Visual Merchandising and Exhibition Design concentration is an interdisciplinary program and comprises developing environments such as homes, stores, display windows and other merchandise displays; as well Exhibition Design, including trade shows and installations at large scale events, like pop-up stores.

University General Education (35-41 hrs)

See University Undergraduate Catalog for the University General Education Program requirements. Students who have completed one year of American History in high school are exempt from the six credit-hour History General Education Program requirement; otherwise, students will have to meet the History requirement.  Catalog can be found at:  http://catalog.memphis.edu/content.php?catoid=3&navoid=88#gened

Coordinated Study (36 hours)

Many upper-division (3000/4000-level) courses have prerequisites that must be met prior to being permitted to register for those courses. You are responsible for knowing and satisfying all course prerequisites. Some (not all) prerequisites are listed below. For specific information about courses and the prerequisites they may have, please view course descriptions at:  http://www.memphis.edu/ugcatalog/coursedescrip/index.php.

Many courses also require permits from the department that teaches the course. For example, SWRK and CJUS courses will always need permits from those respective departments. University College staff cannot issue permits for courses taught in other departments. ALL 3000/4000 level classes taught by the College of Business (ACCT, ECON, FIR, MGMT, MKTG) require a permit; students must request a permit online at: https://fcbeacad.memphis.edu/permits/

Visual Merchandising and Design Core (12 hours)

  • MRCH 2000 - Visual Imaging for Fashion and Merchandising
  • MRCH 2010 - Textiles
  • MRCH 3215 - Textiles Applications
  • MRCH 3000 - Color and Basic Design Studies and Applications

Visual Merchandising & Exhibition Design Concentration (24 hours)

  • MRCH 2004 - Tech Skills for Merchandising
  • MRCH 2050 - Computer Applications for VMED
  • MRCH 2106 - 3D Visual Merchandising
  • MRCH 3204 - Residential Kitchen Planning
  • MRCH 3600 - Consumer Engagement in the Digital Era
  • MRCH 4204 - Furnishing Prblms/Presentatns
  • MRCH 4304 - Trends Housing Home Furnishing

Choose one course from any appropriate upper division courses from Art, Theater, etc. for the remaining 3 hours. Courses from other departments should be discussed with your advisor/program coordinator before registering to determine appropriateness for concentration

Senior Year Requirements (6 hours)

MRCH 4600 - Senior Seminar

The senior collection is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior collection is intended to fuse all the academic areas that comprise the student’s understanding of developing a fashion collection into a relevant example of scholarship to be showcased down the runway. Students will complete a collection of their choice with approval of their senior collection instructor. The senior collection is completed during a student’s final semester.

  • UNIV 4110 - Internship

College Requirements (9 hours)

Thematic Studies (6 hours)

University College thematic studies course(s) are designed to broaden a student’s knowledge of significant themes in social, political, and religious history. Review a complete list of courses: http://www.memphis.edu/univcoll/resources/thematic_studies.php

REQUIRED FOR CONCENTRATION:

  • MRCH 4205 - Behavioral Sci Aspects of Clothng
  • MRCH 3050 - Costume History

Senior Project (3 hours)

The senior project is a student’s culminating experience or capstone designed to synthesize and integrate the content of a student’s program of study. The senior project is intended to fuse the two or more academic areas that comprise the student’s coordinated study (major) into an academically-relevant example of scholarship. Students will complete a thesis, task-based, or artistic project on a topic of their choice with approval of their senior project instructor. The senior project is completed during a student’s final semester. ALL sections of UNIV 4995 are taught online. Students will be assigned to a specific section based on his or her concentration.

  • UNIV 4995 - Senior Project (Completed during the final semester)

Minor

Alcohol and Drug Abuse Services Minor

This interdisciplinary minor examines societal alcohol and drug abuse from the perspectives of anthropology, counseling, criminal justice, psychology, and sociology. The minor is open to students majoring in any area within any undergraduate college at The University of Memphis or to special students who wish to enroll in order to take such a program.

Required Core Courses (6 hours)

  • COUN 4783 - Alcohol/Drug Abuse Services (Required)

Pick 1

  • ANTH 4531 - Alcohol/Drugs/Culture
  • PSYC 3507 - Alcohol/Drugs/Behavior

Plus 4 Additional Courses from the Following List (12 Hours)

Students may include the second class in the above list as part of the required courses for this section.

  • COUN 4781 - Strategy/Crisis Intervention
  • SOCI 3501 - Sociology of Deviant Behavior
  • SOCI 3112 - Contemporary Social Problems
  • SOCI 4851 - Medical Sociology

American Studies Minor

The American Studies minor engages students in an examination of the culture and society of the United States, with attention paid to the ways in which Americans express their basic values and give meaning to their institutions and everyday social practices. These values, institutions, and practices are a reflection, in part, of the different experiences of a people, according to their race, gender, class, and historical roots. This minor provides an opportunity to explore the commonalities and differences among Americans through an interdisciplinary course of study.

Required Core Courses (6 hours)

Chose two courses from this area; the other two courses may be used in the elective courses if desired.

  • UNIV 3522 - American Cinema
  • UNIV 3526 - War & American Society
  • UNIV 3531 - Am Exp: Image/Narrative
  • UNIV 3542 - Baseball in America

Elective Courses (12 hours)

Select four courses from the following list; may also use the remaining two from the Required Core Courses. No more than two courses from any single department will be accepted.

  • ANTH 3282 - American Communities
  • COMM 4851 - Film History IICOMM 4856 - Gender and Film
  • ENGL 3325 - Af/Am Lit thru Harlem Ren
  • ENGL 3326 - Af/Am Lit since Harlem Ren
  • ENGL 3327 - American Literature to 1865
  • ENGL 3328 - American Literature since 1865
  • HIST 3035 - Technology/Culture Am History
  • HIST 3863 - Social/Intellct History of U S
  • HIST 4851 - History of Women in America
  • MUHL 4801 - American Folk/Popular Music
  • MUHL 4804 - Blues
  • MUHL 4805 - History of Rock and Roll
  • MUHL 4806 - History of Jazz
  • MUHL 4807 - Memphis Music
  • SOCI 3420 - Sociology of the South
  • SOCI 4420 - Racial Inequality

Child Development Minor

This interdisciplinary minor will attract students with majors in education, family and consumer studies, human services, nonprofit administration, psychology, social work, and related areas.

NOTE: Students who are pursuing concentrations in Child Development & Family Studies, Early Care & Learning and Preschool & Childcare Administration will not be allowed to pursue this minor as the courses are included in your concentration.

Required Courses (9 hours)

  • EDPR 2111 - Development Across Lifespan
  • CDFS 3401 - Parent Child Relations
  • PSYC 3103 - Child Psychology

Plus 9 Additional Upper Division Hours From:

  • ANTH 3511 - Culture/Kin/Family
  • CDFS 3410 - Soc Emotion Lrng Early Child
  • CDFS 4220 - Understand Chldn/Behv/Guide
  • HIST 4863 - History/Childhood in America
  • PSYC 3305 - Psyc Learning/Memory
  • PSYC 4034 - Children Soc Relationships
  • PSYC 4102 – Abnormal Child Psych
  • SWRK 4934 - Child Welfare Policy/Services

Religion in Society Minor

This minor examines the role of religion in society throughout history. The minor is open to students majoring in any area within any undergraduate college at The University of Memphis or to special students who wish to enroll in order to take such a program.

Required Courses (6 Hours)

  • RLGN 1100 - Introduction to Religion
  • RLGN 3100 - Perspectives on Religion

Additional Courses (12 Hours)

  • ANTH 4253 - Anthropology of Religion
  • ENGL 4461 - Bible as Literature
  • HIST 3275 - History of Jewish People
  • JDST 2850 - Religions of Abraham
  • JDST 3661 - Old Testament
  • JDST 4511 - Holocaust Studies
  • PHIL 3701 - Human and the Divine
  • UNIV 3565 - Comparative Christianity
  • UNIV 3585 - Critical Themes Old Testament
  • UNIV 3590 - New Testament