The undergraduate program in History is taught in three different formats: 100, 300 and 400 level courses. Primarily for freshmen and sophomores, 100 level courses serve a university-wide clientele seeking to earn credits for Letters and General Education requirements as well as potential history majors. Primarily for juniors and seniors, 300 level courses offer more detailed information and historical concepts in particular subjects. They are completed by students earning a BA in history, but can also be part of other disciplinary programs (e.g., Film Studies, International Relations, Women’s Studies, and African and African-American Studies.) The capstone sequence, taught at the 400 level, is for history and education majors who are typically in their junior or senior years. These guidelines are designed, therefore, with all of these particular audiences in mind, with the assumption that general education students, majors in other disciplines, and history and education degree candidates will benefit from learning how to think, write and speak as historians in the making.
Students in history courses will begin to develop at the 100 level and then perfect at the 300 and 400 level their “historical understanding,” made up of the following elements:
Students will develop the following skills as they progress toward graduation:
In 100 and 300 level history classes:
Students will improve their mastery of the following abilities in oral presentations, papers, exams and group assignments:
- question the limits of the sources’ framing of historical questions
- identify biases of the authors of sources.
- write clear well-formed sentences and paragraphs
- analyze primary and/or secondary sources
- frame and answer historical questions
- analyze the context in which the sources were created
- extract information relevant to the assignment
- quote the sources accurately and effectively
- follow scholarly conventions in citations as appropriate
In the 400 level history sequence:
Students will study historians’ accounts of a thematic topic, locate primary sources, prepare a research paper précis, and prepare two drafts of a research paper. They will incorporate the following skills:
- identification of a meaningful historical question
- knowledge of historical context
- appropriate use of primary sources
- understanding and interpretation of secondary sources (historiography related to a particular theme)
- construction of an effective argument in support of a thesis
- effective writing
- appropriate documentation of sources
Level of Student Performance:
By the time of graduation as a history major, 75% of students will exhibit good to excellent mastery of the elements required in the 400 level sequence.
The following methods may be used to assess student progress at all levels:
University College advisor
Dr. Michael Honhart
Department Chair
Dr. Joëlle Rollo-Koster
Asian Studies minor
Dr. Timothy George
Classical Studies minor
Dr. Daniel Carpenter
Medieval Studies minor
Dr. Joëlle Rollo-Koster
Underwater Archaeology minor
Dr. Rod Mather
Phi Alpha Theta, History Honors Society
Dr. Robert Widell