The Emergency Management Certificate is designed to give students both theoretical and practical knowledge in Homeland Security and Emergency Management that will prepare them to pursue careers at the local, state, and federal levels of government or in the private sector.
Graduates will be able to:
Depending upon a student's placement or for transfer purposes, this program may have pre-requisite(s). See a pathway coordinator or student development specialist for advisement.
This course focuses on the stages of the writing process and includes a formal research paper. A variety of writing and reading assignments are designed to develop analytical and critical-thinking skills.
- General Education Course
College Level or with applicable co-requisite
Fall, Spring, Summer
This course provides the knowledge necessary to function as a fluent computer user in today’s technological society. Topics include computer terminology, computer hardware and software
capabilities, what makes a computer powerful, the societal impact of computers, ergonomics, ethical computing behavior, information privacy, and computer security. Students complete projects encompassing Microsoft Windows, Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, and PowerPoint), as well as an 0information literacy project focusing on effective use of the Web. Students with no computing experience are encouraged to complete a computing keyboarding course (CIS 103) before taking this course.
Fall, Spring, Summer
Choose two (2) courses from the following categories (6 credits):
Course Code : HI 101
Course Description :
This course surveys Europe to 1600 with a major emphasis on concepts and movements vital to understanding the modern world. It stresses economic and cultural forces. Major topics include ancient civilizations, Greece and Rome, the Middle Ages, and the Renaissance, Enlightenment and the beginnings of the Scientific and Industrial revolutions, Reformation, and voyages of discovery.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : HI 102
Course Description :
This course surveys the evolution of western civilization from 1600 to the present and how we fit into this complex process. Major topics include the Scientific Revolution, the Enlightenment, the French Revolution and the Napoleonic era, the impact of Liberalism, Nationalism, and Socialism, the Industrial Revolution, Imperialism and colonial conflicts of the 19th century, Russian and Chinese Revolutions, World Wars I and II, the Cold War and its aftermath, and the relationship of the United States to the rest of the world.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : HI 201
Course Description :
This course surveys the development of the United States from the founding of Jamestown, Virginia, in 1607, to the War of Independence, to the Civil War and the end of Reconstruction (1877). Topics include the Federalist Period, American and Southern Nationalisms, and westward expansion.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : HI 202
Course Description :
This course surveys the development of the United States from Reconstruction to the present. Topics include the rise of industrial corporations, Populism, Jim Crow, Progressivism, the Jazz Age, World War I, the Depression, the New Deal, World War II, the Civil Rights Movement, the Cold War, Vietnam, and recent political and diplomatic crises. This course is offered in the Spring.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CT 101
Course Description :
This course develops critical thinking skills, with emphasis on practical reasoning, problem solving and the expression of diverse viewpoints on social, political and ethical issues.
- General Education Course
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Winter, Spring, Summer
Course Code : EN 204
Course Description :
This course surveys the writings of African-Americans from the eighteenth century to the present, with emphasis placed on literary, cultural, and historical significance.
- General Education Course
Corequisites :
EN 102 - Composition II
Semesters Offered :
Fall
Course Code : EN 212
Course Description :
This course studies Hispanic-American literature using selected examples of prose, poetry, and drama written in English by Americans of Spanish descent, including writers of Mexican, Cuban, Puerto Rican, South American, Caribbean, and Afro-Hispanic origins. This literature reflects the historic, linguistic, and cultural diversity of the United States.
Corequisites :
EN 102 - Composition II
Semesters Offered :
Spring
Course Code : HI 103
Course Description :
This course focuses on the study of the basic characteristics of Puerto Rico and Caribbean cultures and their role within contemporary U.S. civilization. The consequences of European conquest, Indian explorations, the slave trade, the Spanish-American War, patterns of land ownership, demography, politics, unemployment and industrialization are examined in relation to a multi-ethnic world.
Semesters Offered :
Periodically
Course Code : HI 104
Course Description :
This course surveys Latin-American history from pre-colonial times to the present. It includes an examination of the heritage of pre-Columbian indigenous cultures, Spanish colonialism, and the various patterns of national independence. The present condition of Latin America in the modern world system is analyzed in relation to imperialism and dependency that is blocking further development, as well as the various efforts of Latin-American countries to free themselves from this dependency. A research paper is required.
Semesters Offered :
Periodically
Course Code : HI 106
Course Description :
This course examines the cultural, economic, geographic, historical, political and sociological development of the contemporary Middle East. Emphasis is placed on the relationship of these
facts to the continuing Arab-Israeli situation. A research paper is required.
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : HI 190
Course Description :
This course focuses on African-American history from its African origins to the present. Emphasis is placed on the historical importance of the slavery experience, the outstanding contributions made by Blacks during the Civil War and Reconstruction, and the development of White Supremacy. Special attention is given to 20th century Black contributions to American life and thought and to the legacies of Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X.
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : RL 101
Course Description :
This course surveys our attempt to understand ourselves, nature as a whole, and our social role in the cosmos. All major religions, both Eastern and Western, are examined: Hinduism, Buddhism, Taoism, Christianity, Judaism, and Islam. Topics are discussed as they relate to the religious world view, including the ethical dimension of religion, the philosophical attempt to prove God’s existence by reason alone, and three contemporary challenges to the Religious Weltanschauung from Freud, Marx, and Einstein. Note: This course does not promote religion nor proselytize any religious belief in particular.
- General Education Course
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : SO 102
Course Description :
This course follows an historical approach to the evolution of racism, the identification of racism, and a study of power and control in America’s major institutions.
- General Education Course
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring, Summer
Course Code : SO 202
Course Description :
This course explores the basic concepts of anthropology through a comparative approach to human society and culture focusing on various cultural institutions such as religion, economics, family, kinship, art, and politics.
- General Education Course
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Choose one (1) from the following three courses:
This course focuses on the study of law enforcement agencies, their role, function, history, and development within the field of criminal justice. This course is a pre/co-requisite for all other criminal justice courses.
College level English
or
DE 020, DE 025, ENW 040
Fall, Spring
This course provides an overview to fire protection and emergency services; career opportunities in fire protection and related fields; culture and history of emergency services; fire loss analysis; organization and function of public and private fire protection services; fire departments as part of local government; laws and regulations affecting the fire service; fire service nomenclature; specific fire protection functions; basic fire chemistry and physics; introduction to fire protection systems; introduction to fire strategy and tactics; and life safety initiatives.
DE 020 - Academic English II
DE 025 - Advanced Studies in Academic English
OR
ENW 040 - Advanced Academic ELS Writing I
Fall, Spring
This course is an introduction to the public and private sectordimensions of the theory and practice of Home Security at thenational, regional, state, and local level. An overview of theadministrative, legislative, and operational elements ofhomeland security programs and processes (including areview of homeland security history, policies, and programs) isprovided. Topics include the threat of terrorism andcountermeasures, including intelligence, investigation, andpolicy that support U.S. homeland security objectives.
College Level
Offered periodically
Cross listed as PL 209 Terrorism and Political Violence
This is an introductory course in terrorism. It focuses on studyingterrorist groups and individuals, terrorist origins, goals, dynamics, ideologies, counter-terrorism, and homeland security. Work inthis course involves the examination of the structure anddynamics of terrorism in America, Europe, the Middle East, LatinAmerica, Asia, and Africa. Terrorist weapons, strategies, andtactics, hot spots from which they evolve, ways they operate andreceive funding, use of the media, and theories of counter-terrorismare all covered. The history, present, and future ofterrorism are equally emphasized.
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
OR
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
OR
HLS 104 - Introduction to Homeland Security
OR
PL 101 - Introduction to Political Science
Fall, Spring
Cross listed as HLS 214.
This course examines the theories, principles, and practicesof emergency management. The philosophy of comprehensiveEmergency Management is discussed with the fourattendant steps: mitigation, preparedness, response, andrecovery. In addition, legal issues involving state and federallaws affecting emergency operations are studied.
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
OR
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
OR
HLS 104 - Introduction to Homeland Security
Fall, Spring
Choose two (2) courses from the following categories (6 credits):
Course Code : CJ 102
Course Description :
This course studies the organization and function of law enforcement agencies of various sizes, communication within the agencies and with other agencies, police morals, public relations,and current trends in law enforcement ethics administration.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 103
Course Description :
This course studies the major factors contributing to offensescommitted by juveniles and younger offenders, society’sresponse to the problem of delinquency, and how youth crime istreated. Family Court provisions and criminal procedure lawsrelating to youthful offenders are also addressed.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 105
Course Description :
Cross listed asHLS 105 Criminal Investigation.
This course studies the techniques and procedures of criminal investigation, the methods of crime prevention, and the use and acceptance of informants and electronic surveillance. Topics include information retrieval, recognition, development, and preservation of material evidence, and interview and interrogation techniques.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 106
Course Description :
This course helps students develop the ability to read, interpret, and apply New Jersey state and county statutes.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 109
Course Description :
This course studies the numerous and complex factors in human relations and how they affect policing and police management. It also examines the effects of prejudices and discrimination and the implications for police in a changing and interacting society. Emphasis is also placed on attitudes and impartiality as tools necessary in gaining public support and confidence.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 115
Course Description :
Cross listed as FS 115.
This course providestraining for dispatchers and call-takers in order to effectively direct and manage emergency medical resources. Course focuses on the Emergency Medical Dispatcher (EMD) as the first responder in obtaining information from callers, selecting the proper response protocol, dispatching resources, and providing medical instructions by telephone.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 202
Course Description :
This course is a study of the techniques used for effectively handling social and psychological crisis, family disputes, social disorders, hostage negotiations, and suicide attempts. In addition, a detailed analysis of actual situations requiring police intervention is explored.
Prerequisites :
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 204
Course Description :
This course explores the ways in which judicial interpretation of the U.S. Constitution has created and allocated power to government actors. Using a case study approach, students will build their understanding of judicial perspectives on the operation of public safety agencies by studying major decisions of the Supreme Court and examining basic Constitutional principles controlling the exercise of governmental power. Topics covered will include the Bill of Rights, search and seizure, use of force, confessions and admissions, bail and punishment, and an introduction to the Fourteenth Amendment's equal protection and due process guarantees.
Prerequisites :
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 205
Course Description :
This course allows students to gain actual job experience in criminal justice organizations in which they will have the opportunity to test their own attitudes and abilities to work with people, put classroom learning into practice, grow in selfawareness, and learn and develop helping skills. 90 hours clinical/field experience
Prerequisites :
A minimum of nine (9) credits in Criminal Justice including CJ-101 or HLS 104.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 206
Course Description :
This course allows students to gain actual job experience in criminal justice organizations in which they will have the opportunity to test their own attitudes and abilities to work with people, put classroom learning into practice, grow in self-awareness, and learn and develop helping skills.
Prerequisites :
CJ 205 - Criminal Justice Internship I
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 207
Course Description :
This course will explore the jurisprudence, law and practice of juvenile justice in the United States. The culpability of children for criminal acts, unique criminal laws and procedures that govern the legal responses to children who break the law, and the societal responses of punishment and protection of adolescent offenders will be analyzed. Recent and significant changes in juvenile justice policy will be examined and analyzed, and located in the context of patterns and explanations of juvenile crime and the social construction of adolescence. In addition to analyses of jurisprudence, case law, and practice, the course also will examine contemporary controversies in juvenile justice and recent Supreme Court cases.
Prerequisites :
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 208
Course Description :
This course is a study of the nature of crime, current socialproblems and their relevance to crime, and society’s approachto the rehabilitation of the criminal offender and crimeprevention, along with theories on the causes of crime anddelinquency.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 209
Course Description :
Cross listed as PL 209 Terrorism and Political Violence
This is an introductory course in terrorism. It focuses on studyingterrorist groups and individuals, terrorist origins, goals, dynamics, ideologies, counter-terrorism, and homeland security. Work inthis course involves the examination of the structure anddynamics of terrorism in America, Europe, the Middle East, LatinAmerica, Asia, and Africa. Terrorist weapons, strategies, andtactics, hot spots from which they evolve, ways they operate andreceive funding, use of the media, and theories of counter-terrorismare all covered. The history, present, and future ofterrorism are equally emphasized.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 210
Course Description :
This course provides the opportunity for students to exploresignificant and controversial topics in Criminal Justice and theLaw and to engage in in-depth analysis of current events andimportant legal trends. It presents an opportunity for students tofocus on special issues in criminal justice and to complete aresearch project on a topic of interest.
Prerequisites :
A minimum of nine (9) credits in Criminal Justice including CJ 101
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 214
Course Description :
Cross listed as HLS 214.
This course examines the theories, principles, and practicesof emergency management. The philosophy of comprehensiveEmergency Management is discussed with the fourattendant steps: mitigation, preparedness, response, andrecovery. In addition, legal issues involving state and federallaws affecting emergency operations are studied.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 301
Course Description :
This course is designed to give the student a broad overview and introduction to the criminal courts system. In this course we will examine the criminal court system and processes utilized in the United States. Specifically, we will cover the different types of courts, the various actors that are involved in the court process, and the court process itself. By the conclusion of the course, students should have a basic yet expansive understanding of this system and the reasoning and processes involved.
Prerequisites :
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : CJ 302
Course Description :
This course involves an in-depth, comprehensive look at the relationship between race and crime in the United States. In disentangling the complex relationship between race and crime, this course examines both racialized ideological constructions and perceptions of crime, as well as institutional policies and practices, including seemingly race-neutral ones, which contribute to racially disparate outcomes both within and outside of the criminal justice system. In investigating criminal justice outcomes, this course takes a critical look at a number of taken-for-granted assumptions in both conventional and scholarly explanations of race and crime.
Prerequisites :
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
HLS 104 - Introduction to Homeland Security
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : FS 101
Course Description :
This course provides an overview to fire protection and emergency services; career opportunities in fire protection and related fields; culture and history of emergency services; fire loss analysis; organization and function of public and private fire protection services; fire departments as part of local government; laws and regulations affecting the fire service; fire service nomenclature; specific fire protection functions; basic fire chemistry and physics; introduction to fire protection systems; introduction to fire strategy and tactics; and life safety initiatives.
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : FS 102
Course Description :
This course provides fundamental knowledge relating to the field of fire prevention. Topics include: history and philosophy of fire prevention, organization and operation of a fire prevention bureau, use and application of fire codes and standards, plans review, fire inspections, fire and life safety education, and fire investigation.
Prerequisites :
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : FS 103
Course Description :
This course provides the principles of fire ground control through utilization of personnel, equipment, and extinguishing agents.
Prerequisites :
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : FS 106
Course Description :
This course studies the nature of public and private fire protection with emphasis placed on analysis of systems of fire detection, fire alarm, fire communications, water distribution networks, fire service, hydraulics, and fire suppression.
Prerequisites :
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : FS 107
Course Description :
This course covers the principles of care, maintenance, and operation of fire apparatus and pumps. These principles include pump construction and accessories, pumping techniques, power development, and transmission. Also included are driving, troubleshooting, and producing effective fire streams.
Prerequisites :
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : FS 115
Course Description :
This course provides training for dispatchers and call-takers in order to effectively direct and manage emergency medical resources. Course focuses on the Emergency Medical Dispatcher (EMD) as the first responder in obtaining information from callers, selecting the proper response protocol, dispatching resources, and providing medical instructions by telephone.
Cross-listed as CJ 115 Emergency Medical Dispatch.
Prerequisites :
CJ 114 - Public Safety Telecommunications
FS 114 - Public Safety Telecommunications
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : FS 201
Course Description :
This course introduces the student to the organization and management of a fire and emergency services department and the relationship of government agencies to the fire service. Emphasis is placed on fire and emergency services, ethics, and leadership from the perspective of the company officer.
Prerequisites :
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : FS 202
Course Description :
This course comprehensively studies the physical, chemical, and toxicological characteristics of hazardous materials. It includes the basic methods of recognition and identification based upon the chemical and physical properties of hazardous materials; basic safety procedures when utilizing specific types of protective clothing and equipment; and basic tactical information relating to scene management.
Cross-listed asHLS 202 Hazardous Materials.
Prerequisites :
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
OR
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
OR
HLS 104 - Introduction to Homeland Security
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : FS 204
Course Description :
This course provides the components of building construction related to firefighter and life safety. The elements of construction and design of structures are shown to be key factors when inspecting buildings, pre-planning fire operations, and operating at emergencies.
Prerequisites :
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : FS 205
Course Description :
This in-depth course defines successful methods for conducting fire investigations. Specific topics include basic chemistry of fire, point of origin, fire cause (both accidental and incendiary), motivation of the fire setter, fire scene investigations, evidence collection, photography, follow-up investigation, and court testimony.
Prerequisites :
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : FS 206
Course Description :
This course provides a foundation of theoretical knowledge in order to understand the principles of the use of water in fire protection and to apply hydraulic principles to analyze and to solve water supply problems.
Prerequisites :
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
MA 101 - College Mathematics I
Semesters Offered :
Fall, Spring
Course Code : FS 210
Course Description :
This course is a comprehensive review of the current problems affecting the fire service with particular emphasis placed on resource allocation, planning, and fiscal constraints. The Capstone Experience requires the student to author and present a scholarly research paper on a topic covered in this course.
Prerequisites :
A minimum of 40 credit hours must be successfully completed from the Fire Science Technology Program prior to enrolling in this course.
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : HLS 104
Course Description :
This course is an introduction to the public and private sectordimensions of the theory and practice of Home Security at thenational, regional, state, and local level. An overview of theadministrative, legislative, and operational elements ofhomeland security programs and processes (including areview of homeland security history, policies, and programs) isprovided. Topics include the threat of terrorism andcountermeasures, including intelligence, investigation, andpolicy that support U.S. homeland security objectives.
Prerequisites :
College Level
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : HLS 105
Course Description :
This course studies the techniques and procedures of criminal investigation, the methods of crime prevention, and the use and acceptance of informants and electronic surveillance. Topics include information retrieval, recognition, development, and preservation of material evidence, and interview and interrogation techniques.
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : HLS 202
Course Description :
This course comprehensively studies the physical, chemical, and toxicological characteristics of hazardous materials. It includes the basic methods of recognition and identification based upon the chemical and physical properties of hazardous materials; basic safety procedures when utilizing specific types of protective clothing and equipment; and basic tactical information relating to scene management.
Prerequisites :
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
OR
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
OR
HLS 104 - Introduction to Homeland Security
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : HLS 210
Course Description :
This course provides the opportunity for students to explore significant and controversial topics regarding terrorism and homeland security and to engage in in-depth analyses of current events and important trends in terrorism and Homeland Security. It presents an opportunity for students to focus on special issues such as terrorism and the internet, homeland security, interrogating the CIA, and prosecuting the terrorist. Students will be required to complete a research project on a topic of interest.
Prerequisites :
A minimum of forty (40) credits must be successfully completed from the Homeland Security Program
Semesters Offered :
Offered periodically
Course Code : HLS 214
Course Description :
his course examines the theories, principles, and practices of emergency management.
The philosophy of comprehensive Emergency Management will be discussed with the four attendant steps:
mitigation, preparedness, response, and recovery. In addition, legal issues involving state and federal laws
affecting emergency operations will be studied.
Prerequisites :
CJ 101 - Introduction to Criminal Justice
OR
CJ 105 - Investigative Function
OR
FS 101 - Principles of Emergency Services
Semesters Offered :
Spring