In addition to the required 100-level history courses in Western Civilization and/or World History and the 200-level American history survey courses, all students must take HIS 280 (introduction to public history), HIS 290 (research methods), HIS 490 (a research seminar), at least 18 credit hours of 300-level or above history classes with a minimum of three credit hours in each of the four categories — United States, Europe, Africa/Asia/Latin America/Middle East, Global/Transnational — and an additional six credit hours distributed across two of the four categories.
For more information, contact the History Department .
Note: The bachelor of arts degree requires intermediate level (202) proficiency in a foreign language.
Career Potential
- Public history (museum, archives)
- Social work
- Government and nonprofit agencies and organizations
- Public school teacher
- Business