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Undergraduate spring application deadline is December 1 for spring term.

  • Accounting

    Knowledge of accounting concepts and frameworks is a necessary part of the educational preparation for careers in business.

  • Art

    Cultivate your creativity and develop marketable skills with a core curriculum of drawing, painting, and digitally-based art.

  • Biology

    The study of life, from the simplest cells to the most complex ecosystems

  • Business: Accounting

    Knowledge of accounting concepts and frameworks is a necessary part of the educational preparation for careers in business.

  • Business: Business Administration

    Gain skills in demand by businesses and other organizations. Prepare for positions in business, nonprofit organizations, and government.

  • Business: Economics

    Essential for all careers in management and to becoming a well-informed citizen and participant in society.

  • Business: Entrepreneurship and Innovation

    Develop skills to start a business, launch a career as an innovative manager within an existing organization, support a family business, or become a franchisee.

  • Business: Finance

    Learn solid academic grounding in areas such as investments, financing and risk management, and prepares students for careers in corporate finance and financial institutions.

  • Business: Human Resource Management

    Prepare for professional career opportunities in business, government and nonprofit organizations.

  • Business: International Business

    Learn about the increasing interactions of American companies with worldwide marketing, purchasing, financial dealings and other business activities.

  • Business: Management

    Gain skills in demand by businesses and nonprofits. Prepare to work as a manager and leader in a variety of organizations.

  • Business: Management Information Systems

    Prepare for a career in high-demand IT occupations such as a business systems analyst, enterprise technology architect or application developer.

  • Business: Marketing

    Study the demographic, psychographic, social, economic, technological, environmental and cultural factors that influence the demands for consumer and industrial goods.

  • Business: Supply Chain and Operations Management

    Understand the flow of materials, information, and money between suppliers, producers and servicing organizations, and customers.

  • Chemistry

    Learn to think creatively, analyze data, and understand human interaction with the material world from multiple perspectives.

  • Communication Arts and Literature Education

    Designed to provide broad knowledge of literacy and communication.

  • Communication Studies

    Learn to build and train teams, bridge information gaps, analyze information flow, resolve conflicts, and understand and work to improve organizational systems and cultures

  • Computer Science

    Study systematic approaches for the design and development of application systems that support the functioning of core industries and services.

  • Criminal Justice

    Understand justice processes from classic criminology to contemporary controversies in criminal law.

  • Early Childhood Education

    A degree and licensure program to prepare diverse, reflective and resilient teachers of children from birth to age 3.

  • Economics

    Essential for all careers in management and to becoming a well-informed citizen and participant in society

  • Elementary Education

    A program to prepare diverse, reflective, and resilient teachers to teach urban youth.

  • English

    Gain and share an appreciation of great works in this popular and useful major.

  • History

    Develop skills such as reading comprehension, analysis, cross-cultural comparison and written argumentation that are useful in a range of careers and avocations

  • Management Information Systems

    Prepare for a career in high-demand IT occupations such as a business systems analyst, enterprise technology architect or application developer.

  • Mathematics BA

    This traditional math program provides students with a strong undergraduate foundation in mathematics essential for graduate studies and preparation in a variety of careers.

  • Mathematics BS

    Offers students the quantitative and computational knowledge, and communication skills, essential for careers in industry and further study of applied mathematics.

  • Police Science

    Develop the knowledge, perspective and skills necessary for successful law enforcement careers, with both academic and hands-on skills course work

  • Political Science

    Combines academic study of politics with real-world political experience to understand social justice, the rule of law, and institutional power.

  • Pre-Social Work

    Prepares students for generalist social work practice with client systems of various sizes and types with special emphasis on Native Americans and communities of color

  • Psychology

    From community service to consulting, a degree in psychology helps prepare you for any number of careers

  • Sociology

    Learn fundamental skills in sociological analysis and research, including hands-on experience.

  • Theater

    Gain an understanding and appreciation for acting, directing and playwriting