2024-2025 Catalog

History, BA, BS

Degree Requirements - 126 credits

Students can earn a Bachelor of Arts degree or a Bachelor of Science degree with this major

History Major Requirements: 11 courses, 41 credits

Core Requirements (2 courses, 5 credits)

CAS-201College to Career: Explore Your Options and Find Your Path

1

CAS-H201Honors College to Career: Explore Your Options and Find Your Path

1

HST-200Gateway to the Past The Historian's Craft

4

Students in the Honors Program have the option of completing the Honors version of a course.

Introductory Elective (1 course, 4 credits)

Choose one of the following:

HST-100Introduction to Asian Studies: Culture, People, Ideas

4

HST-103Cultures and Social Transformations in Asia

4

HST-181American Life to the Civil War Era

4

HST-182American Life Since the Civil War Era

4

Advanced Electives (3 courses, 12 credits)

-Choose one additional 4-credit History course at the 200-level or above

4

-Choose one additional 4-credit History course at the 200-level or above

4

-Choose one additional 4-credit History course at the 200-level or above

4

Note: A list of History courses can be found in the Courses section of the Academic Catalog.

Capstone Experience (1 course, 4 credits)

Choose four credits from the following in consultation with the major advisor:

HST-522History Internship

4

HST-530Senior Applied Learning Project

4

HST-H555Senior Honors Capstone

4

Concentration Requirement (4 courses, 16 credits)

Choose one of the following areas of concentration:

  1. United States History

  2. Regional and Global Histories

  3. Public History

Advanced Placement Credit: Students who scored a 4 or 5 in A.P. American and/or European History may count these toward the Introductory Electives requirement.

Residency Requirement Policy: In the College of Arts and Sciences, a two-course (8 credit) residency requirement must be satisfied for completion of a minor and a four-course (16 credit) residency requirement must be satisfied for the completion of a major.

About the History Major

Learn more about the experiences and opportunities available within this major.

View the Program Page

Concentrations

United States History Concentration: 4 courses, 16 credits

Choose four of the following:

BLKST-226The African American Experience in Literature and Film

4

HST-271African-American History 1619-1860

4

HST-272African-American History from 1860

4

HST-334Cold War America Through the Tumultuous 1960s

4

HST-371U.S. Women's History Colonial to 1865

4

HST-374The Early American Republic: Politics and Culture in the New Nation

4

HST-H374Honors Jefferson to Jackson: Culture and Politics in the New Nation

4

UES-325Environmental History of the U.S.

4

Regional and Global Histories Concentration: 4 courses, 16 credits

Choose four of the following:

BLKST-395From \ck to Africa\ to \ack Lives Matter\: A Global History of Panafricanism

4

HST-218Service Learning- Walls and Bridges: Immigration in Global Perspective

4

HST-251Modern East Asia

4

HST-256Exploring Asia

4

HST-260Asian Peoples and Cultures

4

HST-268History of the Mediterranean

4

HST-275Women in 20th-Century Europe

4

HST-321History of Islam

4

HST-H321Honors History of Islam

4

HST-340Europe in the 20th Century

4

HST-343A History of Martial Arts in Movies

4

HST-348Samurai: History, Literature and Film

4

HST-356World War II: the Global War

4

HST-H356Honors World War II: The Global War

4

HST-357Spain's Ancient to Early Modern Societies and Realms

4

HST-358Spanish Society and the State, From Absolutism to Democracy?

4

WGS-225From Prophetess to Poetess: African Women Since 1800

4

WGS-330Furies to Femi-Nazis: A History of Modern Anti-Feminism

4

Public History Concentration: 4 courses, 16 credits

HST-236Public History in Practice

4

Choose three of the following:

BLKST-395From \ck to Africa\ to \ack Lives Matter\: A Global History of Panafricanism

4

CJN-2355Production I

4

HST-239Getting Started With Oral History

4

HST-H239Honors Getting Started With Oral History

4

HST-241Narrating the Past With Digital History

4

HST-H241Honors Narrating the Past With Digital History

4

HST-296Building Urban America: City Design and Architecture From 1700-1880

4

HST-H296Honors Building Urban America: City Design and Architecture

4

HST-383Boston: Heritage of a City

4

HST-465Monumental Women: Female Public Space

4

HST-H465Honors Monumental Women: Female Public Space

4

About the History Major

Learn more about the experiences and opportunities available within this major.

View the Program Page

History Major Learning Goals and Objectives

Learning goals and objectives reflect the educational outcomes achieved by students through the completion of this program. These transferable skills prepare Suffolk students for success in the workplace, in graduate school, and in their local and global communities.

Learning Goals Learning Objectives
Students will... Students will be able to...
Understand the discipline of history - Communicate how and why historians frame questions on human experience
- Recognize that history is an interpretative account of the past, which historians create in the present from surviving evidence
- Explain the origins of historians’ different interpretations of the past
- Describe and apply the ethical standards for historical practice as defined by the profession
Understand a body of historical knowledge pertaining to a society, nation, and/or region - Communicate how historical actors shaped and were shaped by their historical period
- Interpret historical ideas and actions in their social, cultural, and political contexts
- Analyze the histories of a society, nation, and/or region within the context of global developments
Understand the sources and methods used by historians to interpret the past - Distinguish primary and secondary sources and their uses in explaining the past
- Analyze sources for their credibility, context, perspective, and bias
- Describe quantitative and qualitative research methods and their uses by historians
Know how to create credible historical arguments and narratives - Articulate open-ended, clear, and interesting research questions about historical actors, events, and/or developments
- Design a research strategy that comprises academic databases, archival collections, and digitized sources
- Explain historical phenomena chronologically and in terms of historical continuities, discontinuities, and cause and effect
- Identify the characteristics of a focused, reasoned, and valid historical argument
- Communicate the significance of the research findings
Understand how to apply historical knowledge and historical thinking to contemporary issues - Describe how history shapes their lives and contemporary society
- Explain the value of historical thinking for lifelong learning and engaged citizenship

About the History Major

Learn more about the experiences and opportunities available within this major.

View the Program Page