Ask to Study - Ask your questions about online degrees

Sociology - Metropolitan Community College - Longview - Lees Summit MO

Ask your questions about this Campus Associate program from Metropolitan Community College - Longview - Lees Summit MO




Sociology Associate from Metropolitan Community College - Longview - Lees Summit MO details


Program Format: Campus Program Level: Associate

Sociology from Metropolitan Community College - Longview - Lees Summit MO is a Campus Associate Sociology degree that prepares you for a Human Services career. Description Sociologists study human behavior, especially the study of the origins, organization, institutions, and development of human society. Social, religious and governmental influences all change that behavior. Sociologist may analyze a social institution or a part of it and may study class or social status, social movements, criminal deviance and even revolution. It is a broad science, covering many different disciplines. As a result, our courses cover criminology, sex roles, family violence, Native American and African American culture, anthropology and more. Our sociology program is built around the Associate in Arts (AA) degree . This degree gives you a solid background in general education courses that can transfer to a four-year institution. It also allows 17 hours of elective courses that let you home in on your specific sociology interests. View more details on Metropolitan Community College - Longview . Ask your questions and apply online for this program or find other related Sociology courses.

If you are interested in appling online for this Sociology degree, this Google search for Metropolitan Community College - Longview - Lees Summit MO might help.
More Resources:

Here you have more valuable resources related to this Metropolitan Community College - Longview - Lees Summit MO program. You can discover more about Sociology or other closely related Sociology topics on the next external pages :

Ups, we didn't find any question about Sociology on our external sources. Why don't you ask one yourself?