All art history majors will earn a B.A. degree. In addition to the general education requirements, including third semester language proficiency, students are required to complete 39 credit hours toward the major.
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The art history major at Grand Valley State University will offer students a broad based knowledge of visual culture, its social and historical contexts of production as well as an introduction to theoretical approaches. The major uses an interdisciplinary model, which offers students opportunities for intensive study within the Department of Art and Design while allowing them to select from courses offered in other departments across the GVSU campus.
The program’s emphasis on visual analysis, research, critical thinking, presentations, and writing prepare students for a wide variety of careers. These transferable skills are excellent preparation for later professional studies
A student choosing history of science as a minor program must complete 20 hours of study in the history of science, normally including HSC 201, 202, 399, and related courses from other units. Courses not regularly offered may be available through independent study. Such a minor is not recognized as a “teachable minor.”
Students who minor in history must complete at least 20 credit hours, including:
HST 203 - World History to 1500 A.D. Credits: 3
HST 204 - World History since 1500 Credits: 3
HST 205 - American History to 1877 Credits: 3
HST 206 - American History since 1877 Credits: 3
Chair: Galbraith. Professors: Cole, Devlin, Goode, Kelleher, Mapes, O’Neill, Smither, G. Stark, Tripp; Associate Professors: Buckridge, Cooley, Coolidge, Galbraith, Murphy, Shapiro-Shapin, D. Stark, Underwood, Welch; Assistant Professors: Benjamin, Chapman, Collier, Daley, Crouthamel, Gottlieb, Montagna, Moore, Morison, Rosales, Shan, Stabler, Wangdi.
For additional information about opportunities your college offers, please refer to your college’s section in this catalog.
What human beings can do, might do, or ought to do makes no sense at all unless we know what they have done already. This involves the study of History. History examines the lives of people, the consequences of ideas, and the
In today’s technological society no person can be considered to be truly educated unless he or she has an understanding of the role of science in the world. The history of science program offers students the opportunity to go beyond the accumulation of scientific facts and to gain an understanding of the historical roots of science and technology as well as the interaction between scientific history and social, literary, economic, and political history. Thus, scientists can understand the history of their discipline as a part of the progress of human civilization. Nonscientists, on the other hand, can see that science
Basic Objectives The History Major and Minor at Saginaw Valley State University are designed to provide students with a firm grounding in history as an academic discipline. Such a grounding includes substantial and diverse content knowledge in American, European and World History, analytical and interpretive skills, the writing and evaluation of historical argumentation.
Program Description
Foundation courses: 9 cr
Elective courses: 30 cr
Capstone: 3 cr
Total credits: 42
All history courses teach students to formulate historical questions and to construct narratives and interpretations. Issues of diversity, including race, ethnicity, class, and gender are not only addressed in individual classes on both the survey and upper
Students majoring in history are required to complete at least 39 credit hours, including the four survey courses, a course in the writing of history, and the capstone. Students pursuing teacher certification must also take SST 310 and six 300-level electives in history. Students not pursuing student certification must take seven history electives at the 200 or 300 level. The required courses include:
HST 203 - World History to 1500 A.D. Credits: 3
HST 204 - World History since 1500 Credits: 3
HST 205 - American History to 1877 Credits: 3
HST 206 - American History since 1877 Credits: 3
HST 300 - Writing History
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