|
Nov 27, 2024
|
|
|
|
American University Catalog 2018-2019 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Public Anthropology (Graduate Certificate)
|
|
Offered by the Department of Anthropology , College of Arts and Sciences , the Public Anthropology (Graduate Certificate) is designed for individuals seeking to address issues of economic freedom, human rights, and social justice through a public anthropology lens. Students can build competency in the field of public anthropology while working full-time without the commitment of a full graduate degree program. Most classes are offered in the evenings. No more than 12 credit hours of this graduate certificate may be transferred into a degree program.
|
Admission to the Program
Open to students with a bachelor’s degree or equivalent from an accredited institution. Students must complete 6 credit hours with grades of C or better in anthropology courses at or above 200-level, or have internship experience in a related field before beginning coursework for the certificate.
Certificate Requirements
- 15 credit hours of approved coursework with at least 6 credit hours at or above 600-level, with grades of C or better. Grades of C- or D in certificate program courses are not accepted toward the fulfillment of certificate requirements, although these grades will be included in the calculation of the GPA. Students must have a minimum 3.00 cumulative GPA in certificate courses in order to be awarded a certificate. Students in certificate programs must take a minimum of 6 credit hours during each 12-month period and complete the certificate in four years. International students must enroll in 9 credit hours each semester (except for summer). A maximum of 3 credit hours earned at an accredited college or university may be applied toward the certificate as transfer credit
Required (3 credit hours)
Complete 3 credit hours from the following:
Electives (12 credit hours)
- 12 credit hours in graduate public anthropology courses with at least 6 credit hours at or above 600-level, chosen in consultation with the student’s faculty advisor
|
|
|