Mar 28, 2024  
2016-2017 Graduate Catalog (as of 08-31-16) 
    
2016-2017 Graduate Catalog (as of 08-31-16) [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

History, M.A.


Bill Olejniczak, Program Director
843.953.5930
olejniczakb@cofc.edu

http://history.cofc.edu/graduate-program/index.php

Mission Statement

The Department of History at the College of Charleston is committed to providing an education that imparts an advanced understanding and appreciation of human history, to prepare students to engage the present, and ultimately to shape the future. Our curriculum will hold students’ attentions and afford them the opportunity to develop critical reading and sophisticated writing skills. Ultimately, our goal is to graduate interesting, analytical thinkers, ready to address the challenges of the Twenty First Century. Our undergraduate and graduate History programs support the mission of the School of Humanities and Social Science to “prepare students to be independent, engaged, lifelong learners who write with confidence, speak with clarity, solve complex problems, and act as responsible citizens.”   

Program Description

The Graduate School of the University of Charleston, South Carolina and The Citadel Graduate College offer a joint master of arts in history providing each student with advanced specialized work in one of three areas: United States history, European history or Asian/African/Latin American history. The program offers qualified holders of the baccalaureate degree the opportunity to pursue historical studies in the midst of some of America’s richest historical treasures. The management of the program is vested in a joint program committee composed of representatives of the two history departments, including the director and the associate director. (The latter two positions rotate between the two institutions.) Diplomas and other documents will indicate that the program was a joint endeavor and will include the names of both institutions

Admission Requirements

Degree-Seeking Students

  • Submit a completed online application with a nonrefundable application fee of $50.
  • Submit one official copy of a transcript from each institution of higher learning attended, including documentation of graduation from an accredited four-year college or university.
  • Submit three letters of recommendation, normally from former professors. Each referee should be as specific as possible in the analysis of the applicant’s potential for academic success.
  • Submit an official copy of test scores of the Graduate Record Examination or Miller Analogies Test (must be taken during the last five years). The minimum verbal score for the GRE taken on or after August 1, 2011 is 150 and a 4.0 for analytical writing. An applicant who fails to meet this score may be allowed to pursue coursework as a provisional student. Upon completion of nine semester hours with no more than three hours in independent study (HIST 770), and a minimum GPA of 3.250, the test score may be waived. The student must make this request in writing to the Joint Program Committee.
  • Submit written evidence of applicant’s ability to conduct research and present findings. Ideally, this requirement should be met by submission of a term paper, honors thesis, etc. from a graduate or upper-level course taken in college.
  • Ordinarily, applicants are expected to have completed and passed at least 15 hours of undergraduate history courses beyond the introductory level.
  • Applicants are expected to have a cumulative undergraduate GPA of at least 2.500 on a 4.000 scale and a 3.000 in the major.

Non-Degree Students

  • Submit a completed online application with a nonrefundable application fee of $50
  • Submit one official copy of a transcript from each institution of higher learning attended, including documentation of graduation from an accredited four-year college or university.
  • With the approval of the director or associate director, non-degree students may be permitted to register for up to 12 semester hours of credit prior to applying for admission to the program. Non-degree students who have taken in excess of 12 semester hours of graduate courses in history must have permission of the Joint Program Committee to continue enrollment in a non-degree status. Courses taken in non-degree status may only be applied towards a degree with the approval of the Joint Program Committee.

Application Deadlines

  • Fall: March 1, Priority; July 1, Final
  • Spring: November 1
  • Summer: March 1

Courses

Graduate courses will demand wide reading, thorough research, and advanced historical writing. Only graduate students will be automatically enrolled, but exceptional undergraduates - upper division majors in history and related disciplines who have a minimum GPA of 3.400 in history courses - may be enrolled in 500-level courses. For this, however, they will need to submit the appropriate form to the Graduate School Office. No more than two 500-level courses may be taken by an undergraduate, while 600-level and 700-level courses are for graduate students exclusively. Since juniors and seniors will not receive graduate credit for completing these courses, the amount of work required of them will not be as great as that expected of the graduate students. The qualitative expectations remain the same for all students.

Transfer Credit Policy

No program specific guidelines. Please refer to the Graduate School’s transfer credit policy .

 

Program Requirements
Student Learning Outcomes