Title: CRJ 301 Successful Learning/crj301dotcom
1 CRJ 301 Successful Learning/crj301dotcom
2 CRJ 301 Successful Learning
- CRJ 301 Entire Course
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- CRJ 301 Week 1 DQ 1 Juvenile Justice - Putting it
in Perspective - CRJ 301 Week 1 DQ 2 Juvenile Rights and the
Courts - CRJ 301 Week 2 DQ 1 Reality Meets the Theoretical
- CRJ 301 Week 2 DQ 2 Rights of Juveniles
- CRJ 301 Week 2 Juvenile Crime PowerPoint
- CRJ 301 Week 3 DQ 1 The Role of Juvenile Courts
- CRJ 301 Week 3 DQ 2 The Changing Role of
Probation - CRJ 301 Week 3 Journal Article Review
- CRJ 301 Week 4 DQ 1 Goals of Juvenile Confinement
- CRJ 301 Week 4 DQ 2 Special Populations - A
Challenge to Juvenile Justice - CRJ 301 Week 4 Journal Article Review
3 CRJ 301 Successful Learning
- CRJ 301 Week 1 DQ 1 Juvenile Justice - Putting it
in Perspective - For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
- Juvenile Justice Putting it in Perspective. In
Chapter 1 of the text, our author talks about
"putting it all into perspective." After reading
chapters 1 and 2 and reviewing the video Young
Kids, Hard Time (this video is recommended, but
not required), select one of the juveniles from
your reading, the movie, or you may speak from
personal experience and a particular juvenile in
mind. Address the three questions in the
following quote from the video - In a world that demands justice when the
unthinkable becomes reality, there are no easy
answers when that reality involves minors
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- CRJ 301 Week 1 DQ 2 Juvenile Rights and the
Courts - For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Juvenile Rights and the Courts. In Chapter 2 of
the text, our author summarizes five U.S. Supreme
Court Cases - a. Kent v. United States (1966)
- b. re Gault (1967)
- c. re Winship (1970)
- d. McKeiver v. Pennsylvania (1971)
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- CRJ 301 Week 2 DQ 1 Reality Meets the Theoretical
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Reality Meets the Theoretical. In Chapter 4 of
the text, our author talks about risk factors and
protective factors. Select a juvenile of your
choice or one that we have already studied (such
as Greg Ousley, Colt Lundy, or Paul Gingerich
from the video in Week One, "Young Kids, Hard
Time") and conduct a search for additional
information on their case, their trial, and their
situation. Give us a short history of the
individual selected, and then identify the risk
factors and protective factors you see with the
juvenile. Evaluate these factors through the lens
of the lifecourse theory. Does the concept of
persistence or desistence come into play with
this juvenile?
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- CRJ 301 Week 2 DQ 2 Rights of Juveniles
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Rights of Juveniles. Read either the case study
at the beginning of Chapter 5 about the
Juveniles at the Plaza or the case study about
drug searches in schools. Both of these cases
deal with the legal rights of juveniles and
interpretations of law by the U.S. Supreme Court.
Review the Bill of Rights, which are the first 10
amendments to the U.S. Constitution, and identify
the rights addressed in one of the case studies.
How is the right adjusted to accommodate for
juveniles? Why do juveniles have a modified right
compared to adults? How do these
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- CRJ 301 Week 2 Juvenile Crime PowerPoint
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
- Statistical Analysis Presentation. Present a
PowerPoint slide presentation or a written report
(you do not have to do both) depicting your
analysis of historical juvenile crime data for a
specific category of crime, or criminal issue. As
an alternative to PowerPoint, you can use one of
the presentation applications listed here, or one
approved by your instructor MoveNote,
VoiceThread, Prezi, or Google Present. Select one
component of the criminal justice system (e.g.,
law enforcement, courts, or corrections) to focus
your research. The data and charts you develop
may be used in your Final Paper. You will
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- CRJ 301 Week 3 DQ 1 The Role of Juvenile Courts
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- The Role of Juvenile Courts. The separation of
the juvenile court from the adult court for
hearing juvenile delinquency cases is a major
social justice statement. The textbook lays out
five critical thinking questions at the end of
Chapter 6. Select one for your initial post to
the discussion - a. Should the philosophy of the juvenile court
system be rehabilitative or punitive? Defend your
position. - b. Has Child Protective Services run its course
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- CRJ 301 Week 3 DQ 2 The Changing Role of
Probation - For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- The Changing Role of Probation. The author of the
textbook lays out three critical thinking
questions at the end of Chapter 7 that examine
issues surrounding probation and its role in
addressing juvenile delinquency. Select one of
the critical thinking questions for this
discussion - a. Probation is the workhorse of the juvenile
justice system, but it often suffers from a
negative image. That negative image emanates from
critics who believe that probation is too lenient
of a punishment. What are your views on
probation? What other alternatives do you
recommend?
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- CRJ 301 Week 3 Journal Article Review
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Courts and Delinquency Intervention/Prevention
Programs. Use the University Library to locate a
journal article encompassing such topics as
court programs, sentencing, probation, and
delinquency. You can use your research in your
Final Paper, due in Week Five. Also, the Required
and Recommended Resources, listed every week, are
available to use as research for your Final
Paper. Once you have found an article, provide
the following information
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- CRJ 301 Week 4 DQ 1 Goals of Juvenile Confinement
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Goals of Juvenile Confinement. In the Final
Paper, you must address the issue of treatment
versus punishment. This discussion is designed to
help everyone with this debate that shapes
juvenile justice in every state. There are many
thoughts that cross the spectrum, so this is your
opportunity to discuss, with your peers, the
benefits and challenges of a variety of juvenile
justice, in-residence programs. - There are four primary goals of confinement in
the juvenile justice system retribution,
deterrence, rehabilitation, and incapacitation.
Select two contrasting residential treatment
programs
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- CRJ 301 Week 4 DQ 2 Special Populations - A
Challenge to Juvenile Justice - For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Special Populations A Challenge to Juvenile
Justice. Chapter 9 of the text addresses special
populations of juveniles that pose significant
problems to the juvenile justices system. Assume
you were writing a proposal to a city or state
administrator to address one of the special
populations identified in our text (e.g., early
starters, juvenile gangs, or juvenile sex
offenders) and explain why juveniles in the this
category must be treated outside the normal
juvenile delinquency programs. What are the
benefits to this program in addressing the
special population? What is the measure of
effectiveness for these programs?
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- CRJ 301 Week 4 Journal Article Review
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Corrections and Delinquency Intervention/Preventio
n Programs. Use the University Library to locate
a journal article encompassing such topics as
corrections, jails, prisons, rehabilitation, or
boot camps. You can use your research in your
Final Paper, due in Week Five. Also, the Required
and Recommended Resources, listed every week, are
available to use as research for your Final
Paper. Once you have found an article, provide
the following information
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- CRJ 301 Week 5 DQ 1 Competing for Limited Funding
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Competing for Limited Funding. In today's reality
of shrinking budgets, states continue to look for
money that is not being effectively spent. State
legislatures want to ensure they are getting the
most for their limited dollars. The legislature
has requested you to present an overview of an
effective juvenile justice alternative sentencing
program that you are aware of from the text or
your research, and explain why it is effective
and why it should be funded. What is the intended
population? What standard are you using to
measure the effectiveness? Why do you think it is
effective and worthy of continued funding?
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- CRJ 301 Week 5 DQ 2 Connecting the Dots - What is
an Effective Program - For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Connecting the Dots What is an Effective
Program? In Chapter 10, the text addresses
primary, secondary and tertiary prevention
programs. What are these levels? Give an example
of an effective program in each level. Give a
brief description of each program, its intended
purpose, and target juvenile population. Why do
you think they are effective? - When responding to one of your classmates,
address one of the programs with a focus on one
of the texts questions below concerning
prevention programs
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- CRJ 301 Week 5 Final Paper
- For more course tutorials visit
- www.crj301.com
-
- Focus of the Final Paper
- The purpose of the Final Paper is for students to
pick a branch of the criminal justice system and
then answer, for the role of a specific
professional, the branch of the criminal justice
system, and the criminal justice system at large,
how they can use the social justice principles of
equality, solidarity, and human rights to build a
more just society. - Example if the student chooses
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