Career Opportunities in African American Studies at Coe College
Career Opportunities
Career options will be available to students who may use African American Studies as a primary interest or as a base on which to build related careers. African American Studies plays a key role in the college’s efforts to provide students opportunities to build good foundations of understanding and coping in our complex world and growing multicultural society
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Related Programs
Student Opportunities
As an African American Studies student at Coe, you will benefit from a strong liberal arts curriculum that broadens your intellectual horizions and provides sound preparation for a successful career in your desired field.
Students may focus more pointedly on specific areas in literature or history or sociology or on special research topics.
Independent-study and off-campus-study opportunities may be woven into students' concentration plans.
Students may come to obtain more appreciation of diversity in human experiences by examining and studying selected cultural elements of the diasporic African world.
African-American Studies
Interdepartmental Programs
Three track options are available for students who wish to major in this interdisciplinary area: the History track, the Literature track, and the Sociology track. All majors must include among their chosen track offerings The African American in theUnited States I (AAM-367), The African American in the United States II (AAM-377), African Literature (AAM/ENG-166), African American Literature (AAM/ENG-267), and an Independent Study (AAM-8 5) in their senior year.
Students planning to major in this area should consider carefully what they expect to do following graduation. They should seek close advising in examining programs of study. Supportive courses outside the
Student Opportunities
Off-Campus Opportunities
Coe offers many opportunities for students to intern and study off-campus, and these opportunities are particularly rich for history students.
The opportunities include:
Internships
Cedar Rapids, as the second largest city in Iowa, offers abundant opportunities for internships, particularly in the field of history. History students have worked at the African-American Historical Museum of Iowa, the National Czech and Slovak Museum, the Brucemore Estate, the Herbert Hoover Presidential Library, and the Marion Historical Society. In addition, history majors have interned in law firms, at the Office of the United States Attorney, in the offices of Iowa members of Congress, and with
Student Opportunities
Students benefit from a strong liberal arts curriculum that broadens intellectual horizions and provides sound preparation for a successful career in desired fields.
Students seeking experiences and studies that are not easily contained within a single discipline may find American Studies an accomodating discipline in which to work.
All students who major in American Studies must take four required courses which are supplemented by seven additional courses from three areas (American History, American Culture, and American Social and Natural Sciences).
Students may include in their program appropriate courses taken during the Washington Term (if they choose to attend the Washington Term).
The Integrative
African American Studies Major
All majors are required to take the following core of courses:
AAM-367 The African American in the United States I
AAM-377 The African American in the United States II
AAM/ENG-166 African Literature
AAM/ENG-267 African American Literature
AAM-8_5 Independent Study (completed during the senior year)
Six courses from the appropriate list below:
History
*HIS-145 History of the United States to 1865
*HIS-155 History of the United States Since 1865
HIS-397 Women in America
HIS-487 American Colonial History
HIS-525 Recent American History I
HIS-535 Recent American History II
HIS-545 Intellectual and Social History of the United States I
HIS-555 Intellectual and Social History of the United States II
HIS-725 Seminar in American History I
HIS-735 Seminar
Africana and Latin American Studies
The program encompasses two major concentrations -- Africana studies and Latin American studies -- and four topical minor concentrations: African studies, African American studies, Latin American studies and Caribbean studies.
Africana studies is an interdisciplinary program that studies the history and culture of the peoples of Africa and the African Diaspora.
The Latin American studies program offers students the opportunity to undertake the comparative study of Latin American society and culture, drawing from such disciplines as anthropology, archaeology, economics, geography, history, literature and literary criticism, and political science.
Both programs provide a suitable background for engaging in graduate
Requirements for the Minor in African-American Studies
Seven courses including African-American Studies 276; English 343; History 247; one course selected from Music 232, 238, or American Studies 275, 282; at least one course focused on Africa or the Caribbean; and two courses selected from American Studies 493, Anthropology 217, 231, English 346, 413 (when appropriate), 427, Philosophy 213, Religious Studies 356, or Sociology 252, 354, 355, 357, 358. Course substitutions and exchanges may be made in consultation with the advisor.
Interested students also may consider an independent major in Africana studies (a selection of courses combining study of the Caribbean, the Americas,
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