Corrections · Florida
Corrections colleges in Florida
Corrections program coverage in Florida is being verified. Use the filter-first search at /results to find related programs offered in the state.
Corrections is an applied criminal-justice major focused on supervising and rehabilitating people in jails, prisons, and community programs, suited to students drawn to public-safety work.
We're still verifying Corrections programs in Florida. Try a broader search at /results?q=Corrections or browse all colleges in Florida.
What you'll study in a Corrections program
- Foundations of corrections and the structure of the U.S. penal system
- Custody, security, and inmate-supervision procedures
- Probation, parole, and community-based supervision
- Correctional law and the legal rights of incarcerated people
- Offender rehabilitation, counseling, and reentry planning
- Crisis intervention, de-escalation, and conflict management
- Institutional safety, contraband control, and emergency response
- Ethics, professional conduct, and use-of-force standards
- Scenario-based training and a supervised facility internship
Where a Corrections degree can lead
- Correctional Officer
- Probation Officer
- Correctional Counselor
- Detention Officer
- Parole Officer
- Corrections Supervisor
Typical pay: Early-career wages vary by employer, region, and experience (BLS, 2024 correctional officers and jailers median $57,970).
Corrections trains students to work inside the system that holds and supervises people who have been arrested, convicted, or sentenced. You study how incarceration facilities and community-supervision programs actually operate, the legal rights of people in custody, and the methods used to manage behavior, reduce conflict, and prepare individuals for reentry into society. Coursework covers the daily duties of corrections work along with the theory behind it: why sentencing and supervision are structured the way they are, how custody differs from probation and parole, and how officers, counselors, and case managers coordinate to keep facilities safe and orderly. Unlike a broad criminal-justice or criminology major, which surveys the whole system from policing to courts to the study of why crime happens, Corrections concentrates specifically on what occurs after a sentence is handed down and on the institutions and supervision programs that carry it out.
Corrections is typically offered as an associate or bachelor's degree, often as a concentration within a criminal-justice department, and many programs include scenario-based training, role-play exercises, and an internship or field placement inside a facility or supervision office. For frontline correctional-officer roles, the federal classification lists a high school diploma or equivalent as the typical entry-level education, with agencies providing their own training-academy instruction and certification; counseling, probation, and supervisory tracks generally expect a degree, and some specialized roles may require state certification or licensure that students should verify with their state agency. Graduates work in state and federal prisons, county jails, juvenile detention centers, probation and parole offices, and community-corrections and reentry programs, in positions such as correctional officer, detention officer, probation or parole officer, correctional counselor, and corrections supervisor.
In federal data for the closely related occupation of correctional officers and jailers, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reports a 2024 median wage of $57,970 and projects employment to decline about 7.8% from 2024 to 2034; a high school diploma or equivalent is the typical entry-level education for that occupation. National figures are occupation-wide medians across all experience levels, not starting wages or graduate outcomes.
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