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What To Learn

High School

What high school courses should you take if you're interested in this career? Get your answers from the Law, Public Safety, Corrections and Security cluster Law Enforcement Services pathway.

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Think you fit the bill for this challenging career? There are several options you might want to investigate.

"As far as formal education is concerned, there really are no formal criminal profiling programs," says Brent Turvey. He is the author of a textbook on criminal profiling. He recommends enrolling in a sociology, criminology or psychology undergraduate program. Take forensic science electives where available.

"You need a very strong forensic science background, and a very good understanding of the theories surrounding psychology and sociology," he says. "You have to have a good understanding of other people. But most important of all, you have to have a keen, objective mind, and good critical thinking skills."

To build these skills and to gain hands-on experience with cases, he suggests seeking out internships at a legal aid or public defender's office.

Profiler Candice Skrapec says the multidisciplinary nature of profiling makes many demands on aspiring profilers. "When students come in, the first thing I tell them is that no one thing is going to make them a profiler," she says.

"It's going to take many years of work and study. The key ingredient is really being in some position to systematically observe and analyze different offender types. That could be through being a police officer, working in a prison or doing academic research."

Don't try to take shortcuts, says profiler Ron Mackay, like some of the courses in criminal profiling now sprouting up on the web. "I don't think that the online training offered on the Internet even comes close to meeting the need," he says.

Too many people calling themselves "profilers" lack experience with actual cases, says MacKay.

"Profiling the personality characteristics and traits of the unknown offender has to start with crime scene reconstruction," he says. "The more experience one has with crime scenes of all kinds, but particularly those involving rape and murder, the better they can do this first step."

He recommends beginning with a career in law enforcement and then applying to the International Criminal Investigation Analysis Fellowship (ICIAF). It offers a two-year program to train criminal investigative analysts.

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