2024-2025 Undergraduate Catalog
History
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View Programs and Courses
Faculty
Professor: Bradley Austin, Chairperson
Professors: Emerson Baker, Annette Chapman-Adisho, Aviva Chomsky, Andrew T. Darien, Gayle V. Fischer, Bethany Jay, Alexandros Kyrou, Li Li, Michele Louro, Christopher Mauriello, Donna Seger, Jamie Wilson
Associate Professors: Kenneth Okeny, Margo Shea
Faculty Emeriti
Professors: Charles F. Ames, Jr., James T. Doyle, Julius W. Dudley, Charles Kiefer, Elizabeth Malloy, Joan M. Maloney, Paul Marsella, Mary Emily Miller, Dane A. Morrison, William Thomson
Associate Professor: Vincent F. McGrath
Programs Offered
History, Secondary Education Major Combined BA & M.Ed
Concentrations
History, Applied History Concentration, Pre-Legal/Business Option, BA
History, Applied History Concentration, Public History Option, BA
History, Africa, Asia, and Latin America Concentration, BA
History, European Concentration, BA
History, United States History Concentration, BA
Minor
History Minor
Programs in History
The Department of History is distinguished by the breadth of its faculty’s expertise. The faculty includes distinguished scholars in United States, European, Latin American, and Asian History. These faculty resources enable the department to offer major fields of study in United States history, European history, and African, Asian and Latin American history.
Most history courses are open to any undergraduate. Few have specific prerequisites. History majors have priority in registering for classes, but the majority of students enrolled in most history courses are majoring in other departments and schools. The history faculty welcomes this diversity of students.
Major in History
The purpose of the major is to help students understand themselves as products and makers of history. History courses introduce them to historical patterns and problems in a variety of areas and periods, as well as to different historical materials and techniques of analysis. Our courses encourage students to learn to think critically and to search deeply in at least one area of concentration. Achievement of these goals depends heavily on effective use of faculty advice, and each student should see his or her advisor as soon as one is assigned. Thereafter, each student should confer with the advisor at least once each semester to ensure smooth progress through the program of study.
Through a series of introductory and advanced courses, history majors become familiar with past knowledge, the forces of change, and the varieties of historical scholarship that treat societies throughout the world. They also learn to collect, evaluate, organize, and interpret evidence, and to present it in oral and written forms. Students with grounding in historical knowledge possess the central core of an excellent liberal arts education that may be applied to a variety of uses, including active citizenship, graduate school, and various occupations. Department graduates work in such fields as law, business, librarianship, archival and museum management, teaching at all levels, government service, and journalism-in brief, wherever expertise in critical thinking and clear writing are recognized assets.
The program for majors consists of 36 credits hours in history Students majoring in history may select a concentration. The History Department encourages, but does NOT require students to select a concentration.
Combined Bachelor of Arts History/Master of Education Secondary Education
The History department also offers an integrated bachelor’s/master’s degree program in History with an application process occurring in the second year. Students seeking initial licensure to teach in the public schools must apply to the combined program and complete an approved minor in Teacher Education. Students will apply to the licensure program in the spring of their second year and will begin the licensure program in their third year. Students who successfully complete the undergraduate portion will continue to a fifth year and will graduate with a Master of Education with eligibility for initial licensure at the conclusion of the fifth year of study, assuming all academic and licensure standards are met.
Admissions requirements to the licensure program include, but are not limited to:
- A passing score on the Communication and Literacy portions of the Massachusetts Test for Educator Licensure (MTEL);
- 3.0 minimum GPA in prior college course work;
- Demonstrated work with children;
- Interview;
- Recommendation form from EDC115 Exploring Education instructor (if class was taken at SSU);
- In-person writing sample from a prompt.
Exceptions may be made to the above-referenced requirements at the discretion of the admissions committee. Retention in the program is based on satisfactory academic progress (maintenance of a 3.0 GPA) and the passing of specific MTEL tests required for licensure in the chosen field. Students who do not meet these retention guidelines must exit the program and complete a degree without licensure
Departmental courses (42 credits hours)
All History Majors (regardless of concentration)
HST 200 Historiography
HST 204 U.S. History and Constitutional Government I OR HST 205 U.S. History and Constitutional Government II
HST 505 Seminar: Research and Writing in History
Six credits chosen from Africa, Asia & Latin American electives
Six credits chosen from European History electives
One 100-level History course and One Public History course
History – No Concentration:
Required courses outlined above
27 credits hours (8 courses) chosen from the history electives)
Concentration in Applied History; Pre-Legal/Business
Required courses outlined above
Choose three of the following
HST 210 Legal History
HST 211 Civil Rights in American History
HST 218 U.S. Women’s History
HST 239 Latinos in the US
HST 297 Chinese/Japanese American History
HST 318 Era of the American Revolution & Constitution
HST 390 Colonial India
HST 432 English Constitutional History
HST 438 Europe in the Age of Enlightenment
HST 461 Roman Law
HST 501 Internship
Choose four electives from the Department’s offerings
Concentration in Applied History; Public History
Required courses outlined above
Choose three of the following:
HST 300 Introduction to Museum Work
HST 301 Introduction to Archeology
HST 311 - Historic Heritage of the North Shore
HST 324 Oral History
HST 332 Architectural History of America: An Introduction
HST 333 American Material Culture: An Introduction
HST 501 Internship
Choose one elective from the Department’s offerings
Concentration in United States History:
Required courses outlined above
Choose four elective courses in U.S. History
Concentration in European History:
Required courses outlined above
HST 269 Introduction to European History
Choose three elective courses in European History
Concentration African, Asian, and Latin American History
Required courses outlined above
Choose four elective courses in African, Asian, and Latin American History
Interdisciplinary and Other Minors
The History Department participates in the following IDS Minors: African-American Studies , Latin American, Caribbean and Latino Studies, Urban Studies, and Women’s Studies. In addition, a wide range of academic minors in other disciplines are available. Please consult the Program of Study section of this catalog for further information.
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