Twitter
Basket
Items: 0    Total: £0.00
Was: £560.00
Now: £504.00 Suggested Duration: 400 Hours
Level: 3
Format: Paper
Awarding Organisation: NCFE
A to Z Courses   A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Subscribe To Our Newsletter
Name

Email Address
Learning at Work Day 23rd May 2013

Learning at Work (LAW) Day is an annual awareness campaign organised by the Campaign for Learning
Other news articles

Dementia Awareness Week 19 – 25 May 2013

Adult Learners Week 18 – 24 May 2013

NCC Raise Money for Acquired Brain Injury Week

Mental Health Awareness Week
Psychology of Criminal Profiling and Criminology Diploma

Course Description

Psychology of Criminal Profiling and Criminology Diploma Bundle


This Psychology of Criminal Profiling Diploma is a very intriguing and fascinating course and has been introduced due the increasing popularity of the courses surrounding this subject area - Criminal Psychology, Forensic Psychology, Criminology, Forensic Science.

Every criminal act is committed by a criminal and in seeking to understand the workings of the criminal mind and its motivations, investigators have increasingly turned for assistance to what is now popularly known as psychological profiling. This investigative discipline is based on the belief that a criminal does not just leave physical clues at the scene of the crime but that he also leaves psychological clues. By careful examination and consideration of these clues the skilled profiler endeavours to build up a picture of the likely offender. A skilled profiler combines common sense, observation, background knowledge and geographical factors with a sound knowledge of psychology in his efforts to profile a killer.

Module 1 gives an introduction to profiling, this is an essential part of the course and requires concentrated study if the learner is to gain maximum benefit from working through the case studies.

Our first case study of the Psychology of Criminal Profiling Diploma takes us to Argentina and Buenos Aires of the early 1900s and a study of the infamous ‘Big Eared Pest’, the child killer Santos Godino.

In case study 2 we will go back to Germany in the 1930s and examine the case of Peter Kurten, ‘The Monster of Dusseldorf’, and the groundbreaking work of Professor Carl Berg.

In case study 3 we move to the United States of the 1940s and the incredibly accurate profile of George Metesky, ‘The Mad Bomber of New York’ by Manhattan psychiatrist Dr. James Brussel.

Case study 4 brings us to war time London and Sussex in England in the 1940s and the case of John George Haigh, ‘The Acid Bath Murderer’.

Case study 5 of the Psychology of Criminal Profiling Diploma takes us back to the United States where we once again meet Dr. James Brussel in the investigation of a series of murders committed in Boston of the 1960s by Albert de Salvo, ‘The Boston Strangler’.

Case study 6 takes us back to Yorkshire of the 1970s where Dr. Stuart Kind helped to bring an end to the reign of terror of Peter Sutcliffe, ‘The Yorkshire Ripper’.

For case study 7 we return to the United States and Chicago of the 1970s where we encounter John Wayne Gacy and his alter-egos, Pogo and Patches the Clown and the gruesome murders of more than thirty young men and boys.

For case study 8 of the Psychology of Criminal Profiling Diploma we return to London of the late 1970s and early 1980s, to Muswell Hill, London, where we examine the serial murders committed by Dennis Nilsen, ‘The Muswell Hill Killer’.

The old mill town of Hyde, Cheshire some five miles from the centre of Manchester provides the 1990s setting for case study 9 which examines the murderous medical practice of ‘Doctor Death’, alias Doctor Frederick Harold Shipman.

Our final case study takes us to Stirling, Scotland in 1996 where we encounter disgraced scout master and jobless shopkeeper, Thomas Hamilton, who in a murderous frenzy slaughtered sixteen children and a teacher at Dunblane Primary School.

At the end of each case study within the Psychology of Criminal Profiling Diploma the learner is required to use the information contained in the study material and any other information they have collected, either from further reading, research on the internet or other media, to complete a profiling sheet. The learner will then use this information to compile a detailed pen portrait of the offender(s) studied.

In the conclusion to this Psychology of Criminal Profiling Diploma we examine some of the differences in definition of and approach to profiling, and consider more recent developments such as computer aided geographic profiling.

At the end of this last module the learner is invited to carry out research in the media and on the internet to draw up a profile of Raoul Moat.

The Level 3 Criminology course is an extremely insightful home study course that has been created due to the popular demand of our Level 3 Certificate. Criminology is a broad subject area that draws on the study of crime, violence, victims, terrorism, criminal statistics and the criminal justice system. The Criminology course is a multi-disciplinary course that encompasses law, psychology and sociology in order to gain greater knowledge of this discipline and make informed conclusions.

Course topics covered within the Criminology course include Children and Criminology, Young Offenders and the Criminal Justice System, the Anglo American Model and Labelling Theory and Critical Criminology.

The Psychology of Criminal Profiling and Criminology Diploma Bundle course is designed for study by distance learning at work or at home in your own time and at your own pace.

Our aim is to provide you with the best deal available when purchasing the Psychology of Criminal Profiling and Criminology Diploma, therefore registration fee, certification fee and full tutor support is included in the course price for you.

 

Previous Knowledge Required

The good news is that no prior learning knowledge or experience is essential to take this course. This course is openly available to anyone wishing to study the fascinating subject of Psychology and Criminology.

 

Support

You will receive the course manual, assignments and study guide plus tutor support by mail and email.

Our student support team are also available for any other queries that you may have whilst completing your Psychology of Criminal Profiling and Criminology Diploma. You can be assured that unlimited support is available for your home study
Psychology of Criminal Profiling and Criminology course, so there is no need to struggle or feel isolated during your studies.

 

Assessment

Theoretical information is provided throughout the course, followed by a series of activities and essays that are to be completed and marked by your personal tutor.

 

Modules

  • Psychology of Criminal Profiling Diploma
  • Module 1: An introduction to Profiling Criminals
  • Module 2: Cayetano Santos Godino
  • Module 3: The Monster of Dusseldorf
  • Module 4: The Mad Bomber of New York
  • Module 5: The Acid Bath Murderer
  • Module 6: Who was the Boston Strangler?
  • Module 7: The Yorkshire Ripper
  • Module 8: John Wayne Gacy
  • Module 9: The Muswell Hill Murderer
  • Module 10: Doctor Death
  • Module 11: The Dunblane Massacre
  • Module 12: Conclusion
  • Criminology Diploma
  • Introduction to Criminology
  • Chapter 1: Social Order Maintenance in Celtic & Roman Britain
  • Chapter 2: Inequality before the Law
  • Chapter 3: Criminalisation, Victims and the Role of the State
  • Chapter 4: Classicism and Positivism
  • Chapter 5: The Anglo American Model and the Chicago School of Criminology
  • Chapter 6: Anomie, Social Control & Deviant Subculture Theories
  • Chapter 7: Administrative Criminology
  • Chapter 8: Labelling Theory and Critical Criminology
  • Chapter 9: Right Realism
  • Chapter 10: Left Idealism and Left Realism
  • Chapter 11: Feminist Criminology
  • Chapter 12: Ethnicity and Crime
  • Chapter 13: Mentally Disordered Offenders and the Criminal Justice System
  • Chapter 14: Young Offenders and the Criminal Justice System
  • Chapter 15: Children and Criminology
  • Chapter 16: Agencies of Social Control
  • Chapter 17: The National Probation Service
  • Chapter 18: Incarceration and Punishment
  • Chapter 19: White Collar Crime
  • Chapter 20: Violent Crime

 

Awarding Organisation

This course has been accredited under NCFE IIQ Licence by NCC Resources Limited which has been approved as an NCFE Investing in Quality (IIQ) centre to give formal recognition to courses. At the end of this course successful learners will be awarded a certificate of achievement by NCFE. The training courses have been designed specifically to meet the needs of learners who prefer to study from home. The course measurable learning outcomes have been benchmarked at Level 3 (using Ofqual's Qualification and Credit Framework (QCF) level descriptors) to allow you to consider the depth of study, difficulty, and level of achievement involved.

 

For more information about Awarding Organisations click here

Was: £560.00
Now: £504.00 Suggested Duration: 400 Hours
Level: 3
Format: Paper
Awarding Organisation: NCFE

Home  |   A-Z Listings  |   About Us   |   Distance Learning   |   Bookstore |   Testimonials   |   Downloads   |   Useful information   |   Links   |   Sitemap
Registration & office address: NCC Resources Ltd, The Woodside Centre, Catchdale Moss Lane, Eccleston, St Helens, Merseyside WA10 5QJ
VAT Number: 816552330, Company Reg Number: 3133767, UKPRN: 10022731