"Marriage and Motherhood" doesn't just get a Bachelor of Science degree; it also gets an ASSOCIATE of Science degree.
Anyway, looking at their course catalog, here's how you get the Bachelor level...
FRESHMAN
Autumn: Old Testament Survey, English Composition, Gospels, Children's Literature (3 credits each), Proverbs (2), Preparation for Leadership, Christian Womanhood I, one elective (1 each)
Spring: New Testament Survey, English Composition, Personal Evangelism, General Mathematics (3), Christian Ladies' Attitude and Appearance (2), Christian Womanhood II, Personal Finance (1)
SOPHOMORE
Autumn: Beginning Cooking (4), Sophomore English, U.S. History I, Beginning Sewing (3), Preparation for Marriage (2)
Spring: U.S. History II, Intermediate Sewing, Homemaking Electives (3), Communication in Marriage, How to Rear Children, Baking (2), Bible (1)
JUNIOR
Autumn: Philosophy of Education, Beginning Keyboarding I, Sewing Ladies' Clothes (3), Biblical Standards, Speech, Sewing Children's Clothes (2)
Spring: Bible (4), Beginning Keyboarding II, Nutrition and Cooking with Health Food (3), The Christian Wife, Practical Medical Training for the Home, Electives (2), Principles of Leadership (1)
SENIOR
Autumn: How to Rear Infants (3), Teaching Music in the Elementary School, How to Rear Teenagers, Preparation for Marriage, Canning and Freezing, Home Decorating, Electives (2)
Spring: Bible (4), Sewing Drapes and Household Items, Cooking for Guests, Home Management, Women Used of God, Activities for the Home, Church, and School, Electives (2)
(I *think* that when they say Bible and naught else, they means electives from the Department of Bible)
And here's how some of these courses are described...
Gospels: A concise study of the four Gospels, beginning with a historical background of the intertestamental period and a brief study of the geography of Palestine. An overveiw of the four-fold picture of our Lord (emphasizing Christ's birth, ministry, death, resurrection, post-resurrection appearances, and ascension) is studied thoroughly. The inspired harmony of the books is shown.
("is shown"? Is this a course or a prolonged sermon?)
Preparation for Leadership: This course takes the college freshman or sophomore through the basics of followship with a distinct Christian perspective. Emphasis is placed on having a Scriptural attitude in life and building from this a successful foundation for Christian service.
(Followship? They meant fellowship, yes?)
General Mathematics: A course designed for education majors with a weakness in mathematics. It includes simple arithmetic, fractions, decimals, percent, proportions, word problems, properties of real numbers, exponents, and introduction to algebra. Applications are stressed.
("Weakness" would have to be an understatement. I truly hope that women in this program can pre-test out of having to take this.)
Christian Ladies' Attitude and Appearance: A practical coursed coordinated by the teacher based on the Biblical fact that the Christian lady is a daughter of the King. Self worth, posture, cleanliness, skin and hair care, and wardrobe planning are discussed.
(So if she's a princess, does that mean that circlets, cloaks, and brooches are part of the wardrobe planning?)
Christian Womanhood (two courses, HO 203 and 223. HO being "homemaking"): A basic course giving special attention to problem areas in the lives of all Christian women. Subjects such as child rearing, soul winning, having a joyful spirit, creating a peaceful atmosphere in the home, and dressing modestly are discussed. Emphasis is placed on the preparation of social events.
Personal Evangelism (BI 103; this one is in seemingly every program): An emphasis on the man, methods, message, and means of evangelism. This course is a careful study of the Spirit-filled life of the soul winner as well as the work.
Preparation for Marriage: A study not directly related to how to treat a man but rather directed on learning the virtues listed in Titus 2 and on preparing to be a good wife. Dating and engagement will also be discussed as well as grooming and some homemaking.
(How come I don't see a similar course for would-be husbands? Anyway, they're talking about Titus 2:4-5: "That they may teach the young women to be wise, to love their husbands, to love their children. To be discreet, chaste, sober, having a care of the house, gentle, obedient to their husbands: that the word of God not be blasphemed.")
Communication in Marriage: Study of the wife's relationships, dealing with her husband and children and the ups and downs of a woman's life, as well as how to be a consistent, Christ-like, enjoyable person in the pressures of the home.
(Now if only the heads of Hammond Baptist could themselves be consistently Christ-like and enjoyable, too.)
Women Used of God: The study of comparisons of Bible women (such as Deborah, Ruth, Esther, and Miriam) to women who have been greatly used of God in recent years (such as Susanna Wesley and Ann Judson) and women God is now using.
(And their motto is "Training you to do the hard thing.". I'll own that these days, with all the near-apathetic parents, it may LOOK hard, but with just a modicum of a sense of mutual fealty between you and your children...)
And I can't resist placing this one that I chanced to see...
Cults (BI 504): A study of the historical and theological positions of modern-day perversions of Biblical truth, such as Jehovah's Witnesses, Christian Scientists, Mormons, Adventists, and Roman Catholics. Graduate students only.