CCDC supports criminal justice curriculum with $10K grant

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Southwestern Communi

To help SWCC “aggressively” promote its new criminal justice curriculum at the Osceola center, Clarke County Development Corporation approved a $10,000 grant Aug. 9.

The grant will be used to help fund a one-year position. The hiree would be in charge of launching a campaign to promote the curriculum, particularly in Osceola.

The Associate of Arts program was launched at the Creston campus and Osceola center for the fall 2011 semester. Since it started, it has had a “modest” enrollment, said Jane Bradley, associate vice president of instruction at SWCC.

The program had seven students enroll in the Osceola program in the fall and four in the spring. This fall the enrollment is at 10.

“We’re slightly up in enrollment,” said Bradley. “And it’s up in Osceola, which is exciting. But it’s still not where it needs to be. We’ve kind of hit that point where we feel like if we want this to build in Osceola, if we really want this to be a premiere program for the Osceola center we’ve really got to aggressively market this program, make some agreements with universities for transfer, perhaps expand our curriculum.”

According to Bradley, adjunct faculty member Sue Stearns, a former juvenile court officer, who helps teach courses, has spent quite a bit of time promoting the program so far.

“But it’s all been volunteer,” she said.

Stearns has more than 30 years of experience as a court officer and recently completed a Master’s degree in criminal justice from Simpson College.

Currently, SWCC recruiters market the technical programs primarily, said Bradley. This program falls into the Associate of Arts degree category.

“We don’t want it to get lost in the shufflings of all the other offerings at Southwestern,” she said.

According to Bradley, the criminal justice program is broad and will allow students to transfer to other schools and pursue careers as attorneys, judges, peace officers, highway patrol officers and other careers. This fall, the introduction to criminal justice program will be available to Clarke High School students. Other course offerings include criminology, constitutional law, introduction to computer forensics and juvenile delinquency.

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