2015-2016 Undergraduate Bulletin

Security Management, Bachelor of Science

The major in Security Management concentrates on the analysis of security vulnerabilities and the administration of programs designed to reduce losses in public institutions and private corporations. The program prepares students for careers as managers, consultants and entrepreneurs.

Learning Outcomes. Students will:

  • Critique and evaluate the origins and current structure of security management within corporations, not–for–profit institutions, and the government.
  • Discern and differentiate concepts of situational crime prevention, rational choice theory, and criminological tenets to understanding crime and to evolving countermeasures for the control of loss and disorder.
  • Weigh and assess common areas of occupational proficiency for security executives: data protection, emergency planning and response, homeland defense, and legal liability.
  • Discover and apply tools to be effective in achieving those goals, particularly in areas where current practices are deficient, such as information protection, security technology, legal justice, and safety services.
  • Develop, support, and enhance writing and verbal communications skills through relevant classroom assignments.

Credits required. 39

Prerequisites. ECO 101 and SOC 101. SOC 101 can fulfill the College’s general education requirements in the Flexible Core: Individual and Society area.

Coordinator. Professor Marie Helen Maras, Department of Security, Fire and Emergency Management (212.621.4168, mmaras@jjay.cuny.edu)

Advising resources. Sample Four-year Plan of Study

Additional information. Students enrolled for the first time at the College in September 2013 or thereafter must complete the major in the form presented here. Students who enrolled prior to that date may choose the form shown here or the earlier version of the major. A copy of the earlier version may be obtained in the 2012-13 Undergraduate Bulletin

Part One. Core Courses

Required

SEC 101Introduction to Security

3

SEC 210Methods of Security

3

SEC 211Security Management

3

SEC 270/CSCI 270Security of Computers and Their Data

3

SEC 315Private Security and the Law

3

SEC 320Private Security: Trends and Movements

3

SEC 270/CSCI 270: Formerly SEC 270/MAT 270.

Total Credit Hours: 18

Part Two. Security Applications

Category A. Security and Risk Management

Select three courses.

FIS 104Risk Management

3

FIS 106Safety Engineering

3

SEC 310Emergency Planning

3

SEC 323Private Security and Homeland Defense

3

SEC 327Risk and Vulnerability Analysis

3

SEC 3XX
Security Risk and Technology

3

Category B. Industrial, Commercial, Retail

Select two courses

ENG 235Writing for Management, Business and Public Administration

3

SEC 342Energy Industry Security

3

SEC 344Introduction to Executive and Event Protection

3

SEC 346Retail and Commercial Security

3

SEC 348Security and Safety for Financial Institutions

3

SEC 350Security in Art Museums and Cultural Institutions

3

SEC 352Security Investigations and Consulting

3

Total Credit Hours: 15

Part Three. Internship

Required

SEC 378Security Management Internship

3

Note: Students who are currently employed in law enforcement or security may be exempt from this requirement, contact the major coordinator for evaluation.

Total Credit Hours: 3

Part Four. Senior Seminar

Required

SEC 405Seminar in Security Problems

3

Total Credit Hours: 3

Total Credit Hours: 39