Internships are only offered in the spring and summer. Dr. Clay is the instructor.
Internship Opportunity
Internships through the Greater Grads program often turn into full-time positions after graduation.
Internships are only offered in the spring and summer. Dr. Clay is the instructor.
Internship Opportunity
Internships through the Greater Grads program often turn into full-time positions after graduation.
Special Degree Designations
Students who graduate with special degree designation such as those listed below are allowed to wear a special satin hood with their cap and gown during the Commencement ceremonies. The special degree designation will appear on a student's transcript and diploma. If a student qualifies for both the Distinction and Honors degree, the Honors degree takes precedence.
You should pick up your application for graduation from your college academic advising(College of Arts and Sciences - Ellison Hall) office early in your last semester.
Deliver the completed application for graduation to the Office of Academic Records (Buchanan Hall, Room 330, 1000 Asp, Norman, OK 73019) before the deadlines:
Graduation date | Application due date |
December | October 1 |
May | March 1 |
August | July 1 |
Note: There is no graduation fee except for Advanced Program students who must pay a $25 fee. Doctoral candidates no longer pay a microfilming fee to the University.
Review the information on graduation in the OU General Catalog and Degree Navigator carefully. There are a variety of general education, residency, and grade point average requirements that you must fulfill in order to graduate. Remember that the responsibility for meeting graduation requirements lies with the student. Degrees and diplomas will be conferred upon only those students who have paid all tuition and fees.
The application it is good for a maximum of three consecutive academic terms should degree requirements not be met. If a student has not been cleared to graduate after three consecutive academic terms, a new application will need to be submitted.
| By Courtney Paris/The Daily | |
| Posted 12:07 p.m., July 2, 2008 | |
According to the University’s Requirements for the Bachelor of Arts College of Arts and Sciences: Before a student can do an internship they must have completed Sociology core classes 1113,3123,3523 and any Criminology Substantive Course (Part II) To learn more log onto http://www.ou.edu/soc/ or e-mail William Clay at wcclay@ou.edu. |
For 11 years William Clay has advised OU students as a sociology adviser and as an assistant professor.
For 11 years he has asked the same question, “What do you want to be?”
And for 11 years he has heard many of the same responses.
“An FBI agent, a profiler or a police detective.”
The criminology theme is a result of prime time television shows like “CSI”, “Law and Order” and “The Closer,” Clay said.
“This just tells me these kids are watching TV,” he said. “They don’t know what these jobs really entail, so we hook them up with an internship to show them.”
OU does not offer a degree in criminology, but a sociology degree with an emphasis in criminology. This curriculum emphasizes more on the theory of criminology and less on the specifics of certain jobs, Clay said.
“Here, we ask the questions,” he said. “We study why crime activity happens. We don’t have labs to teach them about blood splatter, we don’t show them how to use handcuffs.”
To help students get an idea of what they are looking to do with their degrees, the department has found different places around the state that offer student internships.
“We try to give students an idea of what they can do with their degree,” Clay said. “We place them in different organizations that can give them experience of the actual job they are looking to do.”
One of the internship programs students is through the OUPD. For years Clay has been advising students to Officer Steven Chandler for a semester long-internship that includes ride-alongs, office work, and other on-site duties.
“We spread them around from administration records, to dispatch to working side by side with detectives,” Chandler said. “We try to show them how an actual police office functions.”
Cory Bennett, a sociology major with an emphasis in criminology, started his internship with the OUPD on June 10 . Bennett said he went into the internship expecting to learn what working at a police station was like from day to day, and in the process has learned a lot more.
“I’ve learned that police officers go through a lot of training and practice to learn how to deal with citizens on a daily basis without violating their rights,” Bennett said. “My favorite thing is the ride-alongs — it lets you interact with the people and it’s funny how people react whenever a cop is around.”
He also said he has learned other technical things, like the proper way to handle firearms.
Chandler said he believes the internship does more than just learning the skills of the profession — it allows students to get a new perspective on what police officers actually do.
“They see a different side than what’s on TV,” Chandler said. “They actually get an appreciation for what law enforcement really is.”
Internships used to be a requirement for sociology majors, Clay said. Now they are offered as an option for students looking to fulfill their upper division electives, but even though an internship is no longer mandatory, Clay said it is worthwhile to students’ futures.
“With the experience they are getting and the networking they are partaking in, most of them end up getting jobs out of the deal,” Clay said. “These students were a lot more marketable. If you went around Oklahoma, you’d find our students.”
Sometimes the students find their expectations for the job did not match up with their experience in the internship, Clay said.
“Sometimes we get students that realize this isn’t what they want to do,” he said. “Even that has some benefits — they aren’t wasting time on something that they don’t really want.”
Internships through the Sociology Department are only offered in the spring semester and during the summer. The program requires students to accumulate 120 hours of experience at an internship location and then submit a written paper about their experience in order to earn three credit hours.
After a student has completed an initial registration for a particular term, he or she will be permitted to add new courses with the approval of the instructor and dean of the college when required, or drop courses with the approval of the adviser and the dean of the college when required.
Different regulations will apply, depending on when add/drop occurs. Read the following instructions carefully to determine the rules that apply to your add or drop:
NOTE: The regulations listed below apply to courses that meet the full semester or summer session. Courses that do not meet the full term will have different deadlines.
Period I. Free add and drop: Students may add classes online at enroll.ou.edu during the first week of classes for Fall, Spring and Summer without approval of instructor. Students may add classes online during the second week of classes for the Fall and Spring semester with approval of instructors. Students may drop classes online at enroll.ou.edu without additional charges or grading penalties anytime up through the end of the second week of classes in Fall or Spring, or the first week of classes in Summer Session. No grades will be recorded for dropped courses.
Note on tuition charges for dropped courses: You will be required to pay tuition and fees for any course dropped after the second week of classes in Fall or Spring Semesters or after the first week of Summer Session, even if you add another course at the same time.
Period II. Third through sixth week of Fall and Spring; second or third week of Summer Session: Students may add classes only by permission of the instructor of the course and the Dean of the student’s College. Courses dropped during this time will be recorded with a grade of “W.” (University College requires their students to obtain approval of the Dean to drop a course after the second week of classes.)
If the course to be added or dropped has not yet begun, students can add/drop online at enroll.ou.edu. To add or drop courses already underway, students need to obtain an add/drop form from the OU Enrollment Services office in Buchanan Hall 230, get appropriate permissions and then return the form to Enrollment Services.
Period III. Seventh through tenth week of Fall and Spring or fourth and fifth of Summer Session: The same restrictions on added courses apply as for Period II, above. For dropped courses, instructors may assign a grade of “W” or “F.” (University College requires their students to obtain approval of the Dean to drop a course after the second week of classes.) To drop a course at this time, students need to obtain an add/drop form from the OU Enrollment Services office in Buchanan Hall 230, get appropriate permissions and grade assignments and then return the form to Enrollment Services.
Period IV. Eleventh week through end of classes in Fall and Spring, sixth week through end of classes for Summer Session. Permission of instructor and Dean is required for added classes. Students who wish to drop a course during this period must petition the Dean of their College. Instructors may assign a grade of “W” or “F.” To drop a course at this time, students need to obtain an add/drop form from the OU Enrollment Services office in Buchanan Hall 230, get appropriate permissions and grade assignments and then return the form to Enrollment Services.