Public Safety Administration
(Concentration no longer available as of Fall 2017, see Public Safety Administration)
The Public Safety Administration program is designed for the public safety professional. It equips the public safety professional with the skills necessary to work with people, manage change in an organization, create innovation in organizations and utilize communication skills to solve social and organizational problems.
Concentration Requirements
PSA 305: Ethics in Public Safety | 3cr |
PSA 315: Human and Community Service Delivery | 3cr |
PSA 330: Cultural Diversity in Public Safety | 3cr |
PSA 335: Group Dynamics | 3cr |
PSA 355: Human Resources in Public Safety | 3cr |
PSA 360: America's Homeland Security | 3cr |
PSA 410: Political and Legal Systems for the Public Safety Professional | 3cr |
PSA 425: Counteracting Terrorism | 3cr |
PSA 440: Research Methodology in Public Safety | 3cr |
PSA 445: Strategic Planning | 3cr |
PSA 465: Global Perspectives on Emergency Management | 3cr |
PSA 499: Capstone: Leadership in Public Safety | 3cr |
Only nine credits can be accepted in transfer. The Capstone course cannot be transferred.
Student Learning Outcomes
Students who graduate with a concentration in Public Safety Administration will be able to:
- discuss current issues, propose solutions, and describe shortcomings in public safety preparation for and response to the threat of terrorism;
- identify and analyze various cultures and their diverse historical, economic and societal variations within the context of public safety;
- apply motivational theory and leadership theory to individual and groups functioning in public safety organizations;
- apply personal and professional ethical accountability in the public safety environment;
- analyze and apply the political and legal systems model for understanding governmental, legal, and operational problems;
- discuss the various models and application of public safety service delivery systems throughout the United States;
- examine how group behavior affects organizational effectiveness, decision-making, conflict resolution, and strategies for efficient group and task management;
- analyze problems and needs within the public safety sector, review literature, collect data, measure objectives, and apply analytical skills in a research project;
- explain the fundamentals and application of strategic analysis and planning in public safety;
- use effective verbal and non-verbal skills and interpret how they affect personal and professional relationships; and
- explain the values and perceptions of groups affecting recruiting, training, and evaluation, and identify the current legal issues in human resources as they pertain to the public safety arena.