When you enroll at Susquehanna, you’ll be paired with an advisor and application tool to guide you in your course planning and scheduling. The following is an excerpt from the complete course catalog. Enrolled students follow the requirements of the course catalog for the academic year in which they declare each major and/or minor, consult with their advisor(s) and the Academic Planning Tool.
Learning Goals
- Develops a critical understanding of the relationships between individuals, culture and social structures.
- Improves abilities to speak, write and present information clearly to a variety of audiences.
- Develops an understanding of the links between theory and methods in the production of knowledge.
- Analyzes and critiques the dynamic nature of contemporary social and cultural worlds.
Requirements for Degrees
The Department of Sociology & Anthropology offers a major in sociology, a major in anthropology, a minor in sociology and a minor in anthropology. It also offers, in collaboration with the Department of Education, a course of study that leads to social studies teacher certification.
Students in the Department of Sociology & Anthropology may, with the approval of the advisor and/or department head, complete more than one major and/or minor in the department.
Requirements for a Major in Anthropology
An anthropology major must successfully complete 44 semester hours of coursework primarily in anthropology. Courses in related disciplines (e.g., sociology and history) may be credited toward the major as noted below. Students must receive grades of C- or better in classes applied to the major and achieve a cumulative GPA of 2.00 in the major. Required courses include ANTH-162 Introduction to Anthropology, ANTH/SOCI-235 Qualitative Research Methods, ANTH-400 History of Anthropological Theory and, as a capstone experience, ANTH/SOCI-500 Seminar or, with the permission of the department chair, by taking ANTH/SOCI-501 Independent Research. Of the remaining 28 semester hours, students must take at least five anthropology courses designated as theory courses, one course designated as an area studies course and one elective course. At least 12 of the theory course semester hours must be taken at the 300-level or above. Topics courses or honors courses taught by anthropology faculty may be credited toward the theory requirement pending departmental approval. GO programs reviewed by the department may satisfy the area studies requirement for the major. Depending on the project, ANTH-501 Independent Research may be credited toward either the theory or area studies requirement.
Required Courses
4 ANTH-162 Introduction to Anthropology
4 ANTH-235 Qualitative Research Methods
4 ANTH-400 History of Anthropological Theory
4 ANTH-500 Seminar
Theory Courses
ANTH-110 Introduction to Archeology
4 ANTH-152 Public Culture
4 ANTH-220 Magic, Witchcraft and Religion
4 ANTH-222 Life During Wartime
4 ANTH-237 Museums and Anthropology
4 ANTH-310 National, Transnational and Diasporic Communities
4 ANTH-311 Regulating Bodies: Food, Sex, Drugs and the Economy
4 ANTH-312 History and Culture of Jewish Cuisines
4 ANTH-322 Visual Anthropology: Imagining the Other
4 ANTH/SOCI-341 Family and Kinship
4 ANTH-360 Religious Fundamentalisms in the Modern World
4 ANTH/SOCI-413 Critical Race Theory
Area Studies Courses
Latin America and the Caribbean
4 SOCI-210 Caribbean Culture and Society
4 SPAN-447 Seminar in Hispanic-American Studies
4 HIST-180 Latin America, 1492-1825
4 HIST-181 Revolution and Identity in Latin America
Asia
4 HIST-151 Traditional East Asia
4 HIST-152 Modern East Asia
Africa
4 HIST-171 African Civilization
4 HIST-172 Early Modern Africa
North America
4 ANTH-227 Native America North of Mexico
4 HIST-111 United States History Before 1877
4 HIST-112 U.S. History from Frontier to Space
4 HIST-115 African American United States History
4 HIST-215 The Civil War in the American Experience
4 HIST-218 Work and Play in the U.S.A.
4 HIST-313 Social History of the United States
4 HIST-314 The Long Civil Rights Movement
4 HIST-316 Making a Multicultural United States
4 HIST-323 History of American Medicine
4 HIST-370 American Women
4 FILM-230 American Film and Culture
Europe
4 HIST-132 Ideas and Guns in Modern Europe
4 POLI-226 Soviet and Russian Politics
4 HIST-321 European Union
4 FRNC-310 French/Francophone Literary and Cultural or Film Studies
4 FRNC-460 Seminar on French and Francophone Literature and Culture or Film
4 GERM-460 Seminar in German Studies
4 SPAN-445 Seminar in Peninsular Spanish Studies
Diasporas and Translations
4 JWST-113 Introduction to Judaism
4 JWST-115 Jewish Philosophy and Ethics
4 JWST-255 Jewish Literature
4 JWST-312 History and Culture of Jewish Cuisines
4 JWST-338 The Holocaust
Teaching Certification
Secondary Teaching Certification Coursework required by the state of Pennsylvania for admission to the teacher certification program includes successful completion of FYSE-100 or equivalent course (having learning goals related to English composition), at least 3 semester hours in British or American literature, at least 6 semester hours of mathematics coursework (or other courses which satisfy the Central Curriculum Analytical Thought requirement) and at least one 40-hour externship.
Education course requirements for secondary education are EDUC-101 Introduction to Education and Society, EDUC-250 Educational Psychology, EDUC-260 Introduction to Special Education, EDUC-270 Instruction of Exceptional Students, EDUC-330 Technology in Education, EDUC-350 English Language Learners: Theory and Instruction, EDUC-380 Instructional Design, EDUC-479 Principles of Learning and Teaching in Secondary Education, EDUC-483 Differentiated Instruction and Classroom Management in Secondary Education and the EDUC-500 Student Teaching package (EDUC-501, EDUC-502, EDUC-503 and EDUC-600).
Sociology students who seek secondary education certification in social studies must take the following additional courses outside the Department of Sociology and Anthropology: EDUC-425 Methods of Curriculum Instruction and Assessment in Teaching Social Studies, ECON-105 Elements of Economics, POLI-111 American Government and Politics, POLI-121 Comparative Government and Politics, PSYC-101 Principles of Psychology, HIST-322 Pennsylvania History or HIST-324 Pennsylvania’s Pasts and Their Publics, and 1 course in U.S. history (HIST-111, HIST-112 or HIST-115).
Secondary education sociology students must also take the following courses within the Department of Sociology and Anthropology: ANTH-162 Introduction to Anthropology, SOCI-101 Principles of Sociology, SOCI-235 Qualitative Research Methods, SOCI-245 Quantitative Research Methods, SOCI-311 Sociological Theory, SOCI-333 Development, Globalization and Society or ANTH-310 National, Transnational and Diasporic Communities, SOCI-341 Family and Kinship, SOCI-413 Critical Race Theory, SOCI-500 Seminar or SOCI-501 Independent Research, and 8 semester hours in sociology electives (student teaching may be substituted for the electives requirement).
Honors
The departmental honors program recognizes outstanding academic performance in the major with departmental honors. To graduate with departmental honors in sociology or anthropology, candidates must:
- Have a GPA of 3.50 or above in the major and 3.25 or above overall,
- Secure the recommendation of the department faculty to pursue honors,
- Write a senior thesis or equivalent paper based on departmental seminars, and
- Sit for an oral honors examination.