Applied Behavior Analysis

Psychology, Bachelor of Science with a Concentration in Applied Behavior Analysis Requirements

GENERAL EDUCATION REQUIREMENTS - 34 Hours Required
Minimum of “C-“required
Fundamental Skills 15
Writing – 6 hrs.
ENGLISH COMPOSITION I
COLLEGE RESEARCH AND INFORMATION LITERACY
Oral Communication – 3 hrs.
PUBLIC SPEAKING FUNDS
ARGUMENTATION AND DEBATE
Quantitative Literacy – 3 hrs.
INTRODUCTION TO MATHEMATICAL AND COMPUTATIONAL THINKING
QUANTITATIVE LITERACY
QUANTITATIVE REASONING FOR HEALTHCARE PROFESSIONALS
COLLEGE ALGEBRA WITH SUPPORT
Data Literacy – 3 hrs.
Select one from the following:
DATA LITERACY AND VISUALIZATION
ELEMENTARY STATISTICS
Until Fall 2028, students can satisfy this requirement with an approved data literacy course, or any approved natural or social science general education course.
Breadth of Knowledge13
Social Science – 3 hrs.
Humanities – 3 hrs.
Natural & Physical Science (must complete a lab) – 4 hrs.
Arts – 3 hrs.
Individual and Social Responsibility 6
Cultural Knowledge – 3 hrs.
Civic Knowledge and Engagement – 3 hrs.
MAJOR REQUIREMENTS
**Course will satisfy UNO's General Education requirement
^Course requires pre-requisite(s)
Psychology Major with a Concentration in Applied Behavior Analysis - 38+ Hours Required
Required Coursework 23
The first six courses should be taken early in the student’s degree program. Concepts learned in these courses will benefit the student in upper-level Psychology classes.
INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY I (**)
INTRODUCTION TO PSYCHOLOGY II (^)
CAREER PATHS IN PSYCHOLOGY (^)
EXPLORATIONS IN THE SCIENCE OF PSYCHOLOGY
STATISTICS FOR THE BEHAVIORAL SCIENCES (^)
STATISTICAL METHODS I
RESEARCH METHODS IN PSYCHOLOGY (^)
LEARNING (^)
BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS AND INTERVENTIONS (^)
SENIOR ASSESSMENT IN PSYCHOLOGY (^)
Select two 3 or 4-credit (PSYC) Psychology courses from the following Applied Behavior Analysis classes 6-7
SMALL-N RESEARCH METHODS (^)
CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS OF BEHAVIOR (^)
BASIC/EXPERIMENTAL BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS (^)
LABORATORY IN APPLIED BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS (^)
PRACTICE AND ETHICS IN BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS (^)
PRACTICUM IN PSYCHOLOGY (^)
Select four 3-credit (PSYC) Psychology courses from four of the five areas below. Courses taken for the concentration can be applied toward this requirement. See an advisor to plan accordingly.12
Applied Psychology
EDUCATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY (^)
LEARNING (^)
PSYCHOLOGICAL AND EDUCATIONAL TESTING (^)
PSYCHOLOGY IN THE SCHOOLS (^)
FORENSIC PSYCHOLOGY (^)
ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY (^)
PERSONNEL PSYCHOLOGY (^)
Social/Personality/Developmental Psychology
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY (^)
CHILD PSYCHOLOGY (^)
ADOLESCENT PSYCHOLOGY (^)
PERSONALITY THEORIES (^)
PSYCHOLOGY OF ADULT DEVELOPMENT AND AGING (^)
Mental Health
CLINICAL PSYCHOLOGY (^)
PERSONALITY AND ADJUSTMENT (^)
ABNORMAL PSYCHOLOGY (^)
MENTAL HEALTH AND AGING (^)
BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS AND INTERVENTIONS (^)
PSYCHOLOGY OF EXCEPTIONAL CHILDREN (^)
LAW & PSYCHOLOGY: ETHICS, RESEARCH & SERVICE (^)
Cognitive Neuroscience
COGNITIVE PSYCHOLOGY (^)
COGNITIVE NEUROSCIENCE (^)
SENSATION AND PERCEPTION (^)
BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE (^)
ANIMAL BEHAVIOR (^)
HORMONES & BEHAVIOR (^)
PSYCHOLOGY OF LANGUAGE (^)
Additional Perspectives
PHILOSOPHY OF MIND (^)
HISTORY OF PSYCHOLOGY (^)
CONCEPTUAL ANALYSIS OF BEHAVIOR (^)
POLITICAL PSYCHOLOGY (^)
AFRICAN AMERICAN PSYCHOLOGY (** ^)
LIMITS OF CONSCIOUSNESS (^)
POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY, HEALTH, & WELL-BEING (^)
INDEPENDENT STUDY IN PSYCHOLOGY (^)
SENIOR THESIS (^) 1
Select one 3-credit Psychology Laboratory course at the 4000 Level. Course taken for the selected concentration can also be applied toward this requirement. See an advisor to plan accordingly.3
LABORATORY IN PSYCHOLOGY: LEARNING (^)
LABORATORY IN PSYCHOLOGY: COGNITION, SENSATION AND PERCEPTION (^)
LABORATORY IN PSYCHOLOGY: BEHAVIORAL NEUROSCIENCE (^)
ANIMAL BEHAVIOR LABORATORY (^)
LABORATORY IN APPLIED BEHAVIOR ANALYSIS (^)
LABORATORY IN DEVELOPMENTAL PSYCHOLOGY (^)
LABORATORY IN PSYCHOLOGY: SOCIAL/INDUSTRIAL-ORGANIZATIONAL (^)
SENIOR THESIS (S^) 2
Select two 3-credit (PSYC) Psychology courses at the 3000-4000 level. Courses taken for the selected concentration can also be applied toward this requirement. See an advisor to plan accordingly.6
College Breadth (choose one option)15-30+
Option 1: Complete any UNO minor or undergraduate certificate - 15+ hours
Option 2: Additional General Education Requirements - 18+ hours
Additional quantitative literacy - 3 hours
Additional Social Science Gen. Ed. from another Discipline - 3 hours
Additional Humanities Gen. Ed. from another Discipline - 3 hours
HIST 1000 and HIST 1010 - 6 hours
Additional Nat. and Physical Science w/ or without Lab - 3-5 hours
Option 3: CAS comprehensive major (50+ hours) OR any second UNO major (30+ hours)
Bachelor Science Cognate Requirement 15
Students pursuing a BS in psychology must complete 15 credit hours of a cognate set of courses. Students will select one of the five cognate sets below. Course selection must include at least two different departments or programs. No more than 6 hours of courses may be at the 1000 level, with the remaining 9 hours taken at the 2000 level or above. Students may take a minor in place of the cognate under the following circumstances: 1) Students pursuing Option 1 College Requirements, which requires a minor, must take a second minor to satisfy the cognate requirement; OR 2) Students pursuing Option 2 College Requirements, which require additional general education courses, may add a minor to satisfy the cognate requirement
Advocacy, Ethics, Social Justice & Law
BUSINESS ETHICS (^)
PUBLIC SPEAKING FUNDS (**)
ARGUMENTATION AND DEBATE (**)
CRIME TO COURTROOM: THE JUSTICE JOURNEY (**)
CRIMINAL LAW (^)
POWER, PERCEPTION, AND PUNISHMENT (** ^)
WOMEN, CRIME AND JUSTICE (** ^)
INTRODUCTION TO ENVIRONMENTAL LAW & REGULATIONS (^)
U.S. CONSTITUTIONAL HISTORY SINCE 1860 (^)
CRITICAL REASONING (**)
INTRODUCTION TO ETHICS (**)
PHILOSOPHY OF LAW (^)
INTRODUCTION TO AMERICAN NATIONAL GOVERNMENT (**)
INTRODUCTION TO PUBLIC POLICY (**)
INTRODUCTION TO LAW (**)
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW: CIVIL RIGHTS
CONSTITUTIONAL LAW: CIVIL LIBERTIES (^)
REAL ESTATE LAW (^)
INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY (**)
INTRODUCTION TO LGBTQ STUDIES (**)
SOCIAL JUSTICE AND SOCIAL CHANGE (** ^)
Artistic and Literary Perspectives
ART APPRECIATION (** ^)
HISTORY OF ARCHITECTURE SINCE 1850 (^)
GENDER & SEXUALITY IN MODERN ART (^)
MUSIC AND THE BLACK EXPERIENCE (**)
INTRODUCTION TO CREATIVE NONFICTION WRITING (**)
INTRODUCTION TO LANGUAGE (** ^)
INTRODUCTION TO BRITISH LITERATURE I (** ^)
INTRODUCTION TO BRITISH LITERATURE II (** ^)
AMERICAN LITERATURE I (** ^)
AMERICAN LITERATURE II (** ^)
AMERICAN NONFICTION (** ^)
VISUAL COMMUNICATION AND CULTURE (** ^)
VALUES AND VIRTUES
PHILOSOPHY OF ART (^)
INTRODUCTION TO DANCE
RELIGIONS OF THE WORLD (**)
RELIGION AND CRITICAL THOUGHT
FILM HISTORY AND APPRECIATION (**)
THEATRE HISTORY AND LITERATURE:MODERN / 1850-2000
CREATIVE WRITING FOR THE ARTS (** ^)
Global Culture & Diverse Populations
GLOBAL INDIGENOUS ART (**)
INTRODUCTION TO BLACK STUDIES (**)
AFRICAN-AMERICAN HISTORY II: 1865-1954 (**)
AFRICAN AMERICAN HISTORY III: 1954-PRESENT DAY (** )
INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION: THEORY AND PRACTICE (** ^ *)
COMMUNICATING RACE, ETHNICITY & IDENTITY (** ^)
POWER, PERCEPTION, AND PUNISHMENT (** ^)
INTERNATIONAL CRIMINOLOGY AND CRIMINAL JUSTICE (** ^)
SOCIO-CULTURAL REPRESENTATIONS IN LITERATURE (** ^)
BLACK SHORT STORY (** ^)
SURVEY OF NATIVE AMERICAN LITERATURE (** ^)
LATINO/A LITERATURE (** ^)
IRISH LITERATURE I (** ^)
IRISH LITERATURE II (** ^)
INTRODUCTION TO TRIBAL MANAGEMENT AND EMERGENCY SERVICES (**)
LATIN AMERICA: AN INTRODUCTION (**)
MUSIC OF THE PEOPLE:THE WORLD (**)
GLOBAL HEALTH (**)
RELIGION AND HUMAN RIGHTS (**)
INTRODUCTION TO LGBTQ STUDIES (** ^)
RACE AND ETHNIC RELATIONS IN THE U.S. (** ^)
RACE, CLASS AND GENDER IN THE UNITED STATES (**)
INTRODUCTION TO SPECIAL EDUCATION (** ^)
Health and Science Explorations
INTRODUCTION TO MEDICAL CAREERS & ETHICS
BIOLOGY I (** ^)
BIOLOGY II (^)
ART AND SCIENCE OF MEDICAL DECISION-MAKING (^)
GENETICS (^)
INTRODUCTION TO IMMUNOLOGY (^)
GENES, BRAIN, AND BEHAVIOR (^)
GENDER AND COMMUNICATION (** ^)
HEALTH COMMUNICATION (^)
INTRODUCTION TO GERONTOLOGY (**)
BIOLOGICAL PRINCIPLES OF AGING (^)
HEALTH ASPECTS OF AGING
FOUNDATIONS IN PUBLIC HEALTH (**)
HEALTHFUL LIVING
WOMEN'S HEALTH AND ISSUES OF DIVERSITY (**)
PUBLIC HEALTH POLICY (^)
PUBLIC HEALTH LEADERSHIP AND ADVOCACY (^)
INTRODUCTION TO NEUROSCIENCE I (^)
INTRODUCTION TO NEUROSCIENCE II (^)
BIOMEDICAL ETHICS
PHILOSOPHY OF NATURAL SCIENCE (^)
NEUROETHICS (^)
SPIRITUALITY AND WELLNESS (^)
May choose only 1 of the following MATH courses:
CALCULUS FOR THE MANAGERIAL, LIFE, AND SOCIAL SCIENCES (^)
CALCULUS FOR BIOMEDICINE (^)
CALCULUS I (^)
Work Technology & Communication
INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION (**)
HEALTH COMMUNICATION (^)
COMPUTER SCIENCE PRINCIPLES (** ^)
USER EXPERIENCE DESIGN (^)
PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS (MICRO) (** ^)
PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS (MACRO) (** ^)
ECONOMICS OF TECHNOLOGY (^)
WRITING FOR THE WORKPLACE (^)
TECHNICAL COMMUNICATION (^)
INTRODUCTION TO BUSINESS (**)
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS (^)
MANAGING COLLABORATIVE ENGAGEMENT (^)
BUSINESS COMMUNICATIONS (^)
SOCIAL MEDIA MARKETING (^)
INTRODUCTORY SOCIOLOGY (** ^)
APPLIED ORGANIZATIONAL SOCIOLOGY (^)
WORK AND SOCIETY (^)
ELECTIVES
Elective hours as required to reach a total of 120 hours
1

Senior Thesis Part I: Thesis Proposal (first 3 of 6 credit hours). Requires special permission from a faculty member and the student must meet the Psychology Senior Thesis criteria.

2

Senior Thesis Part II: Data Analysis, Interpretations and Conclusions (second 3 of 6 credit hours). Requires special permission from a faculty member and the student must meet the Psychology Senior Thesis criteria.