Reinhardt University - Academics

Academics

Reinhardt University offers 43 programs of study:

Graduate degrees

  • Master of Business Administration
  • Master of Music
  • Master of Arts in Teaching in Early Childhood Education

Bachelor's programs

  • Art
  • Biology
  • Business administration (accounting, general business, management, marketing)
  • Communication (communication arts, writing for the media, visual communication)
  • Communication management and leadership (a degree completion program offered only at extended sites)
  • Digital art and graphic design
  • Education (early childhood, middle grades, secondary biology, secondary English, secondary mathematics)
  • English
  • History
  • Liberal studies
  • Math
  • Media, culture and society
  • Music
  • Music education
  • Organizational management and leadership (degree completion program offered only at extended sites)
  • Professional communication (organizational leadership degree completion program offered only at extended sites)
  • Psychology
  • Public relations and advertising
  • Public safety management and leadership (organizational leadership degree completion program offered only at extended sites)
  • Religion
  • Sociology (criminal justice/criminology, cultural diversity, family studies and social services)
  • Sport studies (sports administration, sports information)
  • Theater (new for fall 2010)
  • World languages and cultures

Associate degrees (two-year)

  • Criminal justice
  • Fire management
  • Pre-nursing

In addition, a two-year associate degree in pre-nursing prepares students to transfer to a baccalaureate nursing program.

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    Our first line of defense in raising children with values is modeling good behavior ourselves. This is critical. How will our kids learn tolerance for others if our hearts are filled with hate? Learn compassion if we are indifferent? Perceive academics as important if soccer practice is a higher priority than homework?
    Fred G. Gosman (20th century)

    Almost all scholarly research carries practical and political implications. Better that we should spell these out ourselves than leave that task to people with a vested interest in stressing only some of the implications and falsifying others. The idea that academics should remain “above the fray” only gives ideologues license to misuse our work.
    Stephanie Coontz (b. 1944)