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Nov 07, 2024
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2024-2025 Pitzer Catalog
American Studies Major
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Return to: Areas of Study
The major in American Studies consists of eleven courses. Students develop a thematic focus in consultation with their adviser by the beginning of the junior year.
To introduce students to the field of American Studies, students take:
- AMST 103 JT Intro to American Cultures , a prerequisite course that is team-taught by members of the intercollegiate faculty in the spring semester to introduce the themes, concerns, and methodologies of American Studies (one course).
To provide a broad knowledge and set of skills in the field, students take:
To provide depth as well as breadth, students take:
- AMST 180 SC American Studies Seminar (one course);
- Four courses drawn from at least two departments that focus on a specific theme (e.g., Race and Social Justice in the U.S.; the U.S. in a Transnational Context) - (four courses)
For their capstone experience in American Studies, students must complete:
All students are required to write a senior thesis by enrolling in this two-course, two-credit sequence. Students will enroll in AMST190 SC, a seminar, in the fall semester. In the spring semester, students enroll in AMST191 SC and complete the thesis under the direction of their thesis adviser and second reader.
American Studies Courses
American Studies
Anthropology
Asian American Studies
Chicana/o-Latina/o Studies
English and World Literature
Environmental Analysis
History
Political Studies
Sociology
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American Studies Honors
Students may pursue an honors degree in American studies by fulfilling the following additional requirements:
- Maintain a GPA in the major of 3.5 (A-).
- Receive a grade of A- or better on the thesis.
- Successfully defend the thesis in an oral examination before a committee of three members (the thesis committee, plus an additional member). At least one reader should be a Pitzer faculty member.
Students interested in the Honors Program should notify the coordinator of the American Studies Program at Scripps, in the spring of their junior year.
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Return to: Areas of Study
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