Applied Social and Cultural Studies, B.A.

Contact

James Roche, J.D.
Assistant Director, School of Criminology, Society & Politics
jroche@une.edu

Mission

The mission of the Applied Social and Cultural Studies program is to offer a vigorous and exciting broad-based liberal arts education with an emphasis on cultural, global, and political dynamics. The programs provide a combination of theoretical, scientific, practical, and experiential approaches to understanding and solving human problems. Issues of gender, race, class, and culture, as well as hands-on learning, are emphasized throughout the curriculum. Our goal is to graduate students with marketable skills that prepare them for careers in a variety of public and social services and/or for graduate study in related areas.

Major Description

The Bachelor of Arts with a major in Applied Social and Cultural Studies is an interdisciplinary degree that allows students to integrate coursework from sociology, anthropology, political science, psychology, communications, and other related fields of study. The major emphasizes social science methods and ways of knowing, while introducing students to a variety of social science disciplines. Within the Applied Social and Cultural Studies degree, students will also pursue a concentration in one of the three particular content areas.

In addition to the interdisciplinary approaches to the social sciences, there are two unique elements to this program. First, students complete a 120-hour internship. This helps students to engage in experiential learning, apply social science to the real world, undertake career explorations. Second, upper-level students participate in a semester-long applied sociological experience. One option is an internship with a minimum of 360 hours of engagement to be selected from a variety of area schools, agencies, and programs. A second option is for a student to study abroad. While studying in a foreign society and culture is important, in and of itself, the primary focus of this requirement is for students to take courses and engage experientially in a way that helps students develop their areas of interest. Therefore, there needs to be an integrated social science experience that drives the study abroad learning as well as the opportunity to explore a new society and culture for this to be a successful experience and approval of the program is required.

Overall, this program will provide students with a strong foundation for understanding today's social issues and problems. Students will also have a wide range of skills and experiences that will enhance their future educational and career opportunities as well as enable them to be more active and aware citizens.

Admissions

See Undergraduate Admissions for more information.

Transfer Credit

See Undergraduate Admissions for more information.

Financial Information

Tuition and fees for subsequent years may vary. Other expenses include books and housing. For more tuition and fee information, please consult this catalog’s Financial Information section.

Curricular Requirements

Nor'easter Core Requirements
Nor'easter Core Requirements40
Program Required Courses
SOC 268Practice of Social Science Research3
SOC 270Classical Social Theory3
or SOC 280 Contemporary Social Theory
SOC 300Sociology Internship3
SOC 370Applied Field Method in Sociology3
Applied Capstone Experience9-16
Four Courses from Applied Concentration12
Select three of the following:9
Introduction to Anthropology
Cultural Anthropology
Intro Political Science
Introduction to Psychology
Intro to Sociology
Open Elective Courses (Students complete open elective credits as necessary to meet the University’s 120-credit minimum for graduation. The total number of elective credits required will depend on the student’s completed program, core, and other degree requirements.)38
Total Hours120-127

Please note: While some courses can fulfill both core and program requirements, the credits earned do not count twice towards the minimum total required credits for the degree.

Applied Capstone Experiences (ACE)

Internship

Students may take between 9-16 credits to complete this ACE. Students may select from over 750 sites in the Civic Engagement database. This learning opportunity should parallel the student’s concentration and help them to gain experience, skills, and knowledge of how systems work and how to develop contacts in a given field.

Thesis

Students may take between 9-16 credits to complete this ACE. The thesis should build on work the student has done in the ASCS major and their chosen concentration. This academic work should prepare them for graduate study in disciplines that have been incorporated into their concentration.

Study Abroad

Students will typically take 15-16 credits to complete a study abroad experience. While studying in a foreign society and culture is important, the primary focus is to take courses from the new institution that will help the student develop their areas of interest as they relate to the major. In short, there needs to be an integrated social science experience that drives the study abroad learning and the opportunity to explore a new society and culture for this to be a successful experience. All study abroad experiences should first be cleared with their advisor and the director of the School of Criminology, Society & Politics, to see if they qualify to meet the requirement for the Capstone.

Applied Concentration

There are two concentrations in the ASCS major: Health, Medicine, and Society; and Law, Crime, and Society. As soon as possible after arriving at UNE, students should declare their major. By the end of their second year, students should declare their concentration. There are no required courses in any concentration. In each concentration, students, in consultation with their advisor, select four courses from a variety of disciplines that will help them build foundations, skills, and develop expertise in their chosen concentration.

Health, Medicine, and Society

Course Options Include (but are not limited to)
ANT 211Medical Anthropology3
ANT 244 (Plagues & Populations)
PSC 325Politics of Public Health3
SOC 275Sociology of Food and Health3
SOC 355Medical Sociology3

Law, Crime, and Society

Course Options Include (but are not limited to)
CMM 411 (Communication, Law, and Regulation)3
PSY 252 (Forensic Psychology)3
PSY 255Social Psychology3
SOC 170Deviance and Crime3
SOC 333Sociology of Law3
SOC 421A Just Society?3

Students in this major can participate in the pre-health graduate school preparation tracks.

Academic and Technical Standards

A grade point average of 2.00 is necessary to be approved to add a major in Applied Social and Cultural Studies.

A minimum grade of C- must be achieved in all courses used toward program requirements in Applied Social and Cultural Studies. See Undergraduate Academic Policy also.

Learning Outcomes

Students in all social and cultural studies programs will explore the world and its diverse people, environments, social/cultural structure, and languages by employing sociological and anthropological theory, research design, analysis, experiential learning, and critical assessment methods. As a result, at the completion of all social and cultural studies programs, students will be able to recognize and evaluate the nature of social evidence and in doing so be able to articulate and apply appropriate terminology, and theoretical and methodological procedures to the examination of society, culture, and languages across space and time.