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Experts in highly technical fields frequently need to adapt their specialized knowledge to seemingly unrelated areas. This requires them to possess not only deep expertise in their primary discipline but also working familiarity with another broad, often interdisciplinary subject area. For instance, a chemist may provide specialized insight on legal or ethical issues. A museum curator could assess both scientific and historical data to determine a painting's provenance. A reporter might investigate a complex story spanning scientific, medical, and technological domains.
The Forensic Science Integrated Learning Major (ILM), comprising 25-26 credits, serves as an excellent complement to various degree programs such as Anthropology, Biochemistry, Biology, Chemistry, Earth Sciences, Linguistics, Mathematics, Physics, Psychology, and Sociology. Additional majors may be considered if students submit proposals demonstrating relevant connection courses and obtain director approval.
This ILM offers comprehensive exposure to forensic science, enhancing career prospects across multiple related professional environments. Following the standard ILM structure, the Forensic Science program culminates in a capstone project where students network with industry professionals, conduct original research, and publicly present their results.