School of Economic, Political and Policy Sciences
Bachelor of Arts in Criminology and Biology (Double Major)
Degree Requirements (128-130 hours)
I. Core Curriculum Requirements: 42 hours1
Communication (6 hours)
3 hours Communication (RHET 1302)
3 hours Communication Elective (CRIM 3300, BIOL 4337, BIOL 4390, BIOL 4391, BIOL 4398, BIOL 4399, PSCI 3325, or NATS 4310)2
Social and Behavioral Sciences (15 hours)
6 semester credit hours Government (GOVT 2301 and GOVT 2302)
6 hours American History (HIST 1301 and HIST 1302)
3 hours Social and Behavioral Sciences Elective (ECON 2301 or ECON 2302 or SOC 1301 or SOC 2319)3
Humanities and Fine Arts (6 hours)
3 hours Fine Arts (ARTS 1301)
3 hours Humanities (HUMA 1301)
Mathematics and Quantitative Reasoning (6 hours)3, 4
6 hours Calculus (MATH 2413 and MATH 2414)
or Applied Calculus (MATH 1325) and either STAT 3332 Statistics for Life Sciences or EPPS 3405 Introduction to Social Statistics with Laboratory
Science (9 hours)
9 hours Chemistry (CHEM 1311 and CHEM 1111, CHEM 1312 and CHEM 1112, and CHEM 2123)3
II. Major Requirements: 71-73 hours
Criminology Major Preparatory Course (No hours beyond Core Curriculum)
ECON 2301 Principles of Macroeconomics3
or ECON 2302 Principles of Microeconomics3
Criminology Core Courses (24 hours)
CRIM 3300 Crime and Civil Liberties
CRIM 3301 Theories of Justice
CRIM 3302 Advanced Criminology
CRIM 3303 Advanced Criminal Justice
CRIM 3304 Research Methods in Crime and Justice Studies
CRIM 3319 Comparative Justice Systems
CRIM 4311 Crime and Justice Policy
CRIM 4322 Senior Research Seminar
Biology Major Preparatory Courses (15-17 hours beyond Core Curriculum)
CHEM 1111 General Chemistry Laboratory I
CHEM 1112 General Chemistry Laboratory II
CHEM 1311 General Chemistry I
CHEM 1312 General Chemistry II
CHEM 2123 Introductory Organic Chemistry Laboratory I5
CHEM 2125 Introductory Organic Chemistry Laboratory II5
CHEM 2323 Introductory Organic Chemistry I5
CHEM 2325 Introductory Organic Chemistry II5
MATH 2413 Differential Calculus and MATH 2414 Integral Calculus3, 4
or MATH 1325 Applied Calculus I and either STAT 3332 Statistics for Life Sciences or EPPS 3405 Introduction to Social Statistics with Lab
PHYS 2325 Mechanics and PHYS 2125 Physics Laboratory I
or PHYS 1301 College Physics I and PHYS 2125 Physics Laboratory II
PHYS 2326 Electromagnetism and Waves and PHYS 2126 Physics Laboratory II
or PHYS 1302 College Physics II and PHYS 2126 Physics Laboratory II
Biology Major Core Courses (32 hours)
BIOL 2111 Introduction to Modern Biology Workshop I5
BIOL 2112 Introduction to Modern Biology Workshop II5
BIOL 2281 Introductory Biology Laboratory5
BIOL 2311 Introduction to Modern Biology I5
BIOL 2312 Introduction to Modern Biology II5
BIOL 3101 Classical and Molecular Genetics Workshop
BIOL 3102 Eukaryotic Molecular and Cell Biology Workshop
BIOL 3161 Biochemistry Workshop I
BIOL 3162 Biochemistry Workshop II
or BIOL 3335 Microbial Physiology
BIOL 3301 Classical and Molecular Genetics
BIOL 3302 Eukaryotic Molecular and Cell Biology
BIOL 3318 Forensic Biology
BIOL 3361 Biochemistry I
BIOL 3362 Biochemistry II
BIOL 3380 Biochemistry Laboratory
III. Elective Requirements: 15 hours
Guided Electives (15 hours)
Biology (6 hours): BIOL 4380 Cell and Molecular Biology Laboratory
Criminology Related Electives (9 hours)
All students must complete at least 51 hours of upper-division courses to graduate.
1. Curriculum Requirements can be fulfilled by other approved courses from accredited institutions of higher education. The courses listed in parentheses are recommended as the most efficient way to satisfy both Core Curriculum and Major Requirements at UT Dallas.
2. Double majors may choose CRIM 3300, BIOL 4337, BIOL 4390, BIOL 4391, BIOL 4398, BIOL 4399, PSCI 3325, NATS 4310 or another approved Biology elective to fulfill the Core Curriculum Communication Elective.
3. A required Major course that also fulfills a Core Curriculum requirement. Hours are counted in Core Curriculum.
4. Six hours of Calculus are counted under Mathematics Core, and 2 hours of Calculus are counted as Major Preparatory Courses.
5. Indicates a prerequisite class to be completed before enrolling for upper-division classes.