Javascript is currently not supported, or is disabled by this browser. Please enable Javascript for full functionality.

   
    Nov 26, 2024  
2011-2012 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2011-2012 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Anthropology


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Majors and Minors

OVERVIEW OF DEGREE REQUIREMENTS

Minimum number of credits required to graduate: 120

Minimum Cumulative GPA required to graduate: None.

Minimum Grade requirements for courses to count toward major: A “C-” or better is required in all Anthropology (ANT) courses, except ANT 492 which requires a “C” or better.

Other GPA requirements to graduate: None.

Contact Information: Paul Roscoe, Chair, Professor of Anthropology, 5773 S. Stevens Hall, Room 106A (207) 581-1894, Fax: (207) 581-1823


Anthropology is the study of human cultures, societies, and behavior in all parts of the world throughout all periods of history. There are four sub-disciplines: archaeology, the study of historic and prehistoric cultures and civilizations; Socio-cultural anthropology, which is concerned with current cultures of all degrees of complexity; physical anthropology, the biological aspects of the human species; and anthropological linguistics, which is concerned with the scientific study of language and its relationship to thought and society. In the past, anthropologists tended to study people in small, tribal societies. In recent decades, more attention has been given to peasantry and industrialized, urban societies and to the application of anthropology to understanding problems of these societies.

The Department of Anthropology focuses on archaeology and socio-cultural anthropology. Courses in biological/physical anthropology also are offered .  In addition, the Department offers courses in folklore, oral history, and geography, which are closely related to anthropology.

Departmental Notes:
Graduate Training in Archaeology
The Department of Anthropology cooperates with the Climate Change Institute to train graduate students in prehistoric archaeology. Application is made through the Graduate School.

The PhD in Anthropology and Environmental Policy Program centers on understanding human society and culture in cross-cultural perspective and their pivotal role in implementing successful environmental policy. The program engages students in a multi-disciplinary framework bridging environmental sciences and policy while focusing on the sociocultural impacts of, and responses to, local and global environmental change. Application is made through the Graduate School.

An Individualized Ph.D. in Anthropology is possible under certain circumstances. (See also, Graduate School Catalog).

Career Opportunities:
Anthropology provides very broad training in the social sciences. Therefore, a background in Anthropology is useful in any career in which an understanding of people or the societies in which they live is important. Due to the broad nature of the field, students trained in anthropology have followed a wide range of careers. In recent years, our majors have pursued advanced training in anthropology, archaeology, law, social work, business, theology, library science, writing, museum work, nursing, computer programming, clinical psychology, education, economic development, and the U.S. Armed Forces.

International Affairs in Anthropology majors receive excellent preparation for careers in law, Foreign Service, international development, or business operating in the international arena.

Students with course work and practical experience in archaeology, as well as those with graduate degrees in archaeology, have found employment with public agencies and private organizations concerned with cultural resource management.

Special Resources and Programs
The archaeology faculty focuses on historic and prehistoric North America and prehistoric South America. A number of faculty are jointly appointed with the Canadian-American Center and the Climate Change Institute. The cultural anthropologists have extensive field experience in the Middle East, Oceania, Latin America, and North America.

Periodically, the anthropology faculty offers field schools in prehistoric archaeology, oral history and folklore, and geography. Students also are encouraged to participate in research programs in New England and the Maritime Provinces currently in progress. In recent years students have been hired to work on archaeology field and laboratory projects, in the Maine Folklife Center, and the Hudson Museum of Anthropology.

The Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology
Students may declare an anthropology major in their first year, and must declare their major once they have accumulated 53 credits. It is desirable to begin taking anthropology courses in the first semester at the university.

First year students are advised to take ANT 101 (fall semester) and ANT 102 (spring semester), as these are both required for the major and are prerequisites for many upper division courses. Other 100 and 200 level courses in anthropology are relevant and may be taken in the first year. First year students also concentrate on completing General Education requirements.

ANT 300 and ANT 317 are both major requirements and should be taken as early as possible, and normally not in the senior year. ANT 300 is our writing intensive course within the major and is limited to 15 majors of junior standing per semester. There is a waiting list for this course. Please sign up for the waiting list in the Anthropology Office, as soon as possible. The capstone course, ANT 492, is taken in the junior or senior year.

Requirements for Anthropology Majors


A minimum of 37 credits of anthropology or geography is required. In some cases, double majors may be able to apply six credits of collateral courses to the major. Majors must pass the following courses with at least a “C -” grade - with the exception of ANT 492, which majors must pass with at least a “C” grade.

  • Credits: 3
  • Credits: 3
  • Credits: 3
  • Credits: 3
  • Credits: 1
  • ANT 300, 317, the Capstone courses, and 9 other credits must be taken at UMaine.

    Because ANT 300 and ANT 317 are prerequisite to some advanced level courses, students should take them as early in their program as possible. Note: senior majors normally may not take ANT 300 and ANT 317. Students writing an honors thesis do not have to take the capstone course, ANT 492.

    Advanced study in anthropology normally requires use of quantitative methods and foreign language competency, and some theoretical sophistication. Consequently, students planning to do graduate work in anthropology should take a course in Statistics, such as ANT 462 (Numerical Methods in Anthropology), and achieve foreign language competency at the intermediate level. A knowledge of statistics and one or more foreign languages is required in most Ph.D. programs in Anthropology. Those interested in graduate work in archaeology should take some 500 level courses in Anthropology.

    The anthropology major emphasizes a broadly based undergraduate curriculum. In consultation with his or her advisor, the student should select courses to sample effectively the sub-disciplines of anthropology, and avoid over-specialization at the B.A. level. A few interdisciplinary course concentrations or minors are appropriate for the anthropology major. These are included under the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.

Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: Majors and Minors