College of Arts and Sciences College or Arts and Sciences

Karin Ruhlandt, Dean
203 Tolley Edifice
thecollege.syr.edu/

About the Higher

The Higher of Arts and Sciences (A&S) is Syracuse University'south first and largest college. As the home of the liberal arts, it forms the foundation of a Syracuse education and offers fifty+ majors in the natural sciences and mathematics, the humanities, and the social sciences (in partnership with the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Diplomacy). Approximately one third of Syracuse'due south pupil trunk is enrolled with A&South | Maxwell, and written report in internationally recognized programs with more than 350 achieved kinesthesia.

Hallmarks of an A&Southward education include a keen focus on experiential learning, the tillage of strong critical reasoning and communication skills, and an integrated advising model that links academic and career mentorship. A&S is a primary contributor to the University'due south R1 ("Very High Inquiry") designation, and both undergraduates and graduates can participate in enquiry across the disciplines. Students can also choose to complement their A&S coursework with offerings from the University's other schools and colleges. Additionally, A&S participates in the Shared Competencies, Syracuse Academy'due south institutional learning goals that highlight the knowledge and skills students can expect to gain through their major courses, liberal arts requirements and co-curricular activities. This powerful alloy produces graduates who are lifetime explorers-people who are professionally and personally adaptable, fearless in their pursuits, and who strive to make the earth healthier, more hopeful and more human. They contain a worldwide network of lxx,000+ alumni. Our alumni remain continued to A&S as informational board members, immersion trip sponsors, student mentors, and financial supporters.

More Information:

On the Web:
The College of Arts and Sciences

Dean'south Office
203 Tolley Building
Telephone: 315-443-3949
E-mail: casdean@syr.edu

Bookish Departments

The College of Arts and Sciences is a place of discovery, creativity, and imagination that forms the cadre of a liberal arts education at Syracuse University. Through its three academic divisions–the Sciences and Mathematics, the Humanities, and the Social Sciences (offered in collaboration with Maxwell)–the College offers an eclectic array of traditional degree options every bit well as a number of interdisciplinary, dual, and combined-caste programs.

African American Studies
Anthropology
Art and Music Histories
Biology
Chemistry
Advice Sciences and Disorders
Earth & Environmental Sciences
Economics
English
Geography and the Environment
History
International Relations
Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics
Mathematics
Philosophy
Physics
Political Science
Psychology
Policy Studies
Religion
Science Teaching
Sociology
Women'due south and Gender Studies
Writing Studies, Rhetoric, and Limerick

Undergraduate Studies

The College of Arts and Sciences offers undergraduate students an opportunity to explore major and minor programs in each of the academic divisions: Humanities, Natural Sciences and Mathematics, and Social Sciences. Undergraduate Social Sciences courses are taught by faculty who likewise agree appointments in the Maxwell Schoolhouse of Citizenship and Public Affairs.

Interdisciplinary and Special Programs: The College offers a number of interdepartmental and interdivisional majors and minors.

For a listing of the majors and minors offered, refer to Academic Offerings.

Undergraduate General Regulations

For academic rules and regulations applying to all Academy students, see Academic Rules above, which also contains special regulations that apply to Arts and Sciences students. The regulations below apply to all students matriculated in the College of Arts and Sciences.

Degrees

The College of Arts and Sciences is authorized by New York State to grant the bachelor of arts (B.A.) and the bachelor of science (B.S.) degrees. Students dually enrolled in ii colleges at Syracuse University are granted the advisable degree for the home college. For example, a pupil in Arts and Sciences and the S.I. Newhouse Schoolhouse of Public Communications might receive the B.A. in English/advertising, with Arts and Sciences as the home higher. The degree(s) available for each program of study are indicated nether Academic Offerings.

Minimum Requirements

A minimum of 120 credits of coursework is required for the B.A. or B.South. degree. For all students enrolling in the Higher of Arts and Sciences, xxx of the 120 credits must exist taken in upper-partition courses. Every major leading to the available's degree in the College of Arts and Sciences must include at least 18 credits of upper-partitioning work (courses numbered 300 and above) in the bailiwick. Every B.S. degree plan must include at least 30 credits of upper-segmentation coursework in the discipline, or at to the lowest degree six credits more than than the B.A. program in the aforementioned field (whichever is greater), in upper-sectionalisation piece of work in the subject area. Of the upper-division credits counted toward the completion of a major, at to the lowest degree 12 must be taken at Syracuse University. In order to exist awarded a B.A. in a program, a pupil must earn at least 12 upper partition credits uniquely counting toward the B.A. In gild to be awarded a B.S. in a program, a educatee must earn at least 15 upper division credits uniquely counting toward the B.S. In the example of the Integrated Learning Majors, a student must earn at least 12 upper division credits uniquely counting towards the B.A. or B.Southward. In order to be awarded a pocket-sized in a program, a student must earn at least 6 upper sectionalization credits uniquely counting toward the pocket-sized. Students must earn the course point average of at to the lowest degree 2.0 (C) in upper-sectionalisation courses taken at Syracuse University and counted toward the completion of a major or pocket-size. To be eligible for graduation, students must attain the minimum grade point average of 2.0 in courses taken at Syracuse University.

Ninety-Six Credit Rule

Except in the dual and some selected studies programs, information technology is required that all singly enrolled College of Arts and Sciences students earn at least 96 arts and sciences credits (earned in the College of Arts and Sciences or transferred from some other institution and accepted as arts and sciences credit). Upwards to 24 credits toward the 120 required for graduation may be taken in other Syracuse University colleges or schools or accepted in transfer equally non-arts and sciences credit from other accredited institutions. In dual programs, the higher requires that at least 90 credits be earned in the Higher of Arts and Sciences (or transferred from some other institution and accepted as arts and sciences credit). Upward to 30 non-arts and sciences credits may count toward the degree. Combined degrees crave 96 arts and sciences credits and a minimum of 150 credits. Nether selected studies, programs leading to the B.A. degree must include at least ninety arts and science credits, and programs leading to the B.S. degree must include at least 75 arts and science credits. A maximum of 24 credits of the combination of independent study, feel credit or pass/neglect coursework may be counted toward a degree in the college. Up to 4 credits in physical educational activity (PED) courses numbered 100 to 299 may exist included amidst the 24 non-Arts and Sciences credits counted toward a degree in the college for singly enrolled students.

Intra-University Transfer

The college will review applications for intra-university transfer on a continuing basis throughout the academic year. The awarding deadline for acceptance to Arts and Sciences and Maxwell is the course add deadline for the effective term which the pupil is seeking to IUT. Applicants who are making satisfactory progress and take a cumulative course betoken average of 2.0 or above will be admitted to the college. Students with a current cumulative GPA below 2.0 should submit a letter of the alphabet with the awarding, explaining the reason(s) for prior academic problems, why they believe they will be academically successful in the Higher of Arts and Sciences, and what major they are interested in pursuing. Students who volition have junior standing when entering the College must include a programme of written report form signed by their intended major section. Incomplete applications will not be considered. The Banana Dean of Educatee Success will review applications. Students volition be notified past e-mail prior to the kickoff of the semester.

Advising and Career Services

On the Spider web:
Advising and Career Services
Health Professions Advising
Pre-Law Advising

Office:
342 Hall of Languages
Call: 315-443-3150
E-mail: casadvising@syr.edu

The Higher's Advising and Career Services are designed to ensure academic success for students from the time they arrive on campus through graduation. Our professional staff members work as a team to help students make a successful transition to college, to explore their interests, to develop a programme for their academic career, and to successfully meet their academic and career goals. Specifically, our professional staff members help students:

  • Develop fourth dimension management skills
  • Identify bookish enrichment opportunities
  • Map strategies to improve academic performance
  • Empathize the Liberal Arts Core
  • Select courses, majors, and minors
  • Maintain steady progress toward completing degrees
  • Plan for graduate schoolhouse or entry into the job market

Additionally, staff members aid students understand the purpose and benefits of a liberal arts education and how to effectively market a liberal arts degree to prospective employers.

Pre-professional advising services are designed for students interested in pursuing careers in the wellness and legal professions. Services include individual and small-scale group, workshops designed to enable students to successfully prepare for, and transition to, mail service-baccalaureate degree programs in the health and legal professions. Pre-health and pre-law advising is available to all matriculated Syracuse University and SUNY-ESF undergraduate students and alumni.

Special Note: Medical schools require applicants to obtain either a Sponsorship or Credentials letter of the alphabet from their corresponding college's pre-wellness advising program.

Office:
342 Hall of Languages
Phone: 315-443-3150
Fax: 315-443-9397
Email: casadvising@syr.edu

Declaring Majors

Each pupil in the Higher of Arts and Sciences must fulfill the requirements of at least one major. The majors available, including dual and combined caste programs, are described under individual headings nether Academic Offerings and also on the College's website. See beneath for rules governing the selection of a program.

Declaring a Major

Before or during the 2nd semester of the sophomore year, each student in the College of Arts and Sciences selects a major in consultation with their academic advisor. The student applies to the department or committee administering major studies in that field for admission to the major.

The Declaration of Major Course is used for this purpose and is available online through Casadvising.syr.edu on the Bookish Forms page. To declare a major officially, a student secures the signature of the appropriate department or committee chair, or program director, on this form and returns the form to the Advising and Career Services office. Students who neglect to submit a completed Proclamation of Major Form to the college Advising and Career Services office earlier earning 60 total credits will be alleged ineligible to annals for subsequent semesters.

At various times, students are asked to state on other routine forms, including the admissions application, what their major volition exist. Such declarations are informal expressions of involvement and intent and are not binding, either on the part of the pupil or the department/program (or committee). Completion of such routine forms does non secure access to any major plan. Only submission of the Proclamation of Major Form, with the appropriate signatures can achieve that terminate.

Changing Majors

Students may change a major at whatever time before registration for the terminal total semester of study past submitting a new Declaration of Major Grade with the approval of the new major department/program or committee.

Double Majors

Students may wish to declare, to fulfill the requirements for, and to graduate with 2 or more majors. To do then, they should signal both majors and obtain the appropriate signatures on the Declaration of Major Form. The 2d major may be added no later than the registration period for the last total semester of report.

Special Degree Options and Combinations

Double Majors

Two majors may be pursued simultaneously in the Higher of Arts and Sciences/ Maxwell, or in the college and another schoolhouse or college at the University. Students must fulfill all the requirements for both majors as well as all other degree requirements of The College. A unmarried degree is conferred by the College. The two majors announced on the transcript. In social club to be awarded a BA in a program, a student must earn at least 12 upper partition credits uniquely counting toward the B.A. In society to be awarded a B.S. in a program, a pupil must earn at to the lowest degree xv upper partitioning credits uniquely counting toward the B.S. In the case of the Integrated Learning Majors, a student must earn at least 12 upper partition credits uniquely counting towards the B.A. or B.Due south. Students singly enrolled in the College who have a second major in another school or higher must still earn the minimum of 96 credits in the Higher of Arts and Sciences.

Delight notation: Arts and Sciences students may non declare the double major in whatever of the post-obit areas: English language education; science education; mathematics educational activity; social studies instruction; Spanish education; advertising; broadcast journalism; graphic arts; magazine; newswriting; photography; public relations; television, radio, and picture show.  These majors require dual enrollment.

Academy Requirement

FYS 101 - First Year Seminar

Liberal Arts Cadre

The Liberal Arts Core requirements are a set of principles that flexibly guide students to select courses and serve to ascertain the common structural core of a liberal arts education at Syracuse. They were devised and adopted past the kinesthesia of the College. They assure that each student's course of study includes the most of import features of an pedagogy in the liberal arts. In that location are 3 central parts to the Liberal Arts Core requirements: I. Liberal Skills; Ii. Bounded Perspectives; and Iii. Disquisitional Reflections.

I. Liberal Skills

The Liberal Skills Requirement asks each student to farther develop fundamental intellectual skills of effective writing and gives the student a choice of whether to satisfy a requirement in 2nd language skills or quantitative skills.

Two. Divisional Perspective

  1. A student must take iv 3- or iv-credit courses in each of the three curricular divisions of the College of Arts and Sciences: the Humanities, the Natural Sciences and Mathematics, and the Social Sciences divisions.
  2. In each division, 2 of the courses must constitute an approved sequence.
  3. Of the twelve courses used to satisfy the divisional requirement, no more than than three courses may be taken from a single department or program (even if the courses of the department or program are in more than than one sectionalisation), with the exception of 3-credit HNR courses offered past the Renée Crown University Program. Any form cantankerous-listed is considered to vest to each of the departments in the cross-list. Therefore, it counts as i of the maximum of 3 allowed from a single section to fulfill the bounded distributional requirement. Experience Credit and Independent Study credit cannot be used to satisfy the Divisional Perspective Requirement.
  4. In each partitioning, no more than one course may be selected from schools and colleges outside the College of Arts and Sciences.
  5. In the Natural Sciences and Mathematics Division, at least one laboratory form must be included.

Iii. Critical Reflections Requirement

Students are required to take three courses from the list provided on the College of Arts and Sciences web site. These courses may be simultaneously used to partially satisfy other liberal arts core requirements or requirements for majors and minors.

Transfer credit is not accepted for Critical Reflections requirements except when defined in joint agreements.

4. Idea Course Requirement

The IDEA course requirement provides undergraduate students the opportunity to explore concepts in social justice, broadly defined. The IDEA acronym encapsulates the core concepts of Inclusion, Diverseness, Equity, and Accessibility. These concepts are integral to models of social justice, and through their examination students tin can learn about important values, voices, and lives that have been marginalized and erased, forth with strategies to create stronger and more just communities.

Students are required to take two courses from the listing found here. These courses may be simultaneously used to partially satisfy other liberal arts cadre requirements or requirements for majors and minors.

Transfer credit is not accustomed for Idea requirements.

Liberal Skills Requirement

  • Writing Skills Requirement
  • Linguistic communication Skills Requirement
  • Quantitative Skills Requirement
  • Writing Intensive Requirement

Divisional Perspective Requirement

  • Humanities Division
  • Natural Sciences and Mathematics Partitioning
  • Social Sciences Division

Critical Reflections Requirement

  • Critical Reflections on Ethical and Social Bug Requirement

IDEA Grade Requirement

  • Inclusion, Diversity, Disinterestedness, and Accessibility

Special Degree Offerings

For additional information on the post-obit options, contact: Advising and Career Services Office:
342 Hall of Languages
Call: 315-443-3150
E-mail: casadvising@syr.edu

Options for Study in the College of Arts and Sciences

In that location are two general options for written report leading to the B.A. or B.Southward. degree for undergraduates in the College of Arts and Sciences: the Standard Program and the Selected Studies Program.

The Standard Program involves the Liberal Arts Core, a major, electives and, possibly, a minor or an boosted major. The get-go two years are devoted largely to work that satisfies requirements of the Liberal Arts Core. Each educatee must accept a primary major earlier they reach threescore credits.

The selected studies program offers the student an opportunity to develop a highly individualized curricular plan. This plan, which can pb to the B.A. or the B.S. degree, is intended to see individual needs. It provides considerable freedom in curricular planning, but also requires greatly increased responsibleness on the role of the student. Each student in the selected studies program develops a 4-year program of study based on academic goals. They are assisted past a faculty advisor who helps to formulate an academically sound curriculum. For boosted data please meet Selected Studies.

Combined Programs

The College of Arts and Sciences offers combined programs of report with certain professional schools and colleges within the Academy. These programs lead to two degrees and require at least thirty credits across the minimal requirement for one degree and a total of at least 150 credits. This means that it generally takes v years (10 semesters) to complete a combined program. Specific requirements vary from program to programme and are described under individual programme headings. Students pursuing a combined plan in the College of Arts and Sciences must complete all college requirements relevant to the chosen program of study. A minimum of 96 credits in the Higher of Arts and Sciences is required. For a full general definition and requirements of a combined program and comparing with other kinds of programs, refer to the advisable chart in the Academic Rules section of this catalog.

A combined program in the College of Arts and Sciences is offered with the College of Engineering science and Computer Science and results in the Arts and Sciences/Fine art, B.A. or B.Southward. in Arts and Sciences and the B.Due south. in Engineering.

Dual Enrollments

The College of Arts and Sciences offers dual enrollments in cooperation with sure professional person schools and colleges within the Academy. These lead to a single degree jointly authorized and certified by the cooperating colleges. The standards and procedures for admission vary and are described nether individual headings. With careful course choice and planning, students are able to cease inside four years (eight semesters). (For a full general definition and requirements of a dual program and comparing with other kinds of programs, refer to the appropriate nautical chart in the Bookish Rules department of this catalog.)

Dual enrollments in Arts and Sciences are offered only with the School of Education, the Martin J. Whitman School of Management, and the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.

For the Dual program offered with the School of Education:

Contact Office of Bookish and Student Services, 111 Waverly Avenue, Suite 230; 315-443-9319, or

For the College of Arts and Sciences, contact Advising and Career Services, 342 Hall of Languages, 315-443-3150, casadvising@syr.edu.

Dual enrollment options in the College of Arts and Sciences and the School of Education ready subject matter teachers for grades 7-12, in biological science, chemistry, world sciences, English, mathematics, physics, social studies and Spanish. Students complete the Liberal Arts Core of the College of Arts and Sciences (with some specified courses), depth in the content area to be taught, and professional coursework and field experiences focusing on the skills and knowledge necessary to teach students from various backgrounds and with varying abilities. Students receive i bachelor's degree jointly awarded past both colleges.  Programs require a minimum of 124-127 credits.

For the Dual program offered with Martin J. Whitman School of Direction:

Contact Lindsay Quilty, Banana Dean, the Office of Undergraduate Programs, Whitman Suite 215, 315-443-2361, or

For the Higher of Arts and Sciences, contact Advising and Career Services, 342 Hall of Languages, 315-443-3150, casadvising@syr.edu.

Students in the Higher of Arts and Sciences who are dually enrolled in the Martin J. Whitman School of Management receive 1 bachelor's degree jointly awarded by both colleges in Management and in one of the following programs: Applied Mathematics, Biology, Biotechnology, Chemistry, Earth Science, International Relations, and Mathematics. At least 140 credits are required to graduate.

Students who wish to enroll in this program should request dual enrollment at the time of admission to the University.

For the Dual program offered with S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications:

Contact South.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications, 315 Newhouse 3, 315-443-1908 or

For the College of Arts and Sciences, contact Advising and Career Services, 342 Hall of Languages, 315-443-3150, casadvising@syr.edu

Students in the College of Arts and Sciences who are dually enrolled in the Southward.I. Newhouse Schoolhouse of Public Communications receive ane bachelor'southward caste jointly awarded by both colleges.

Students complete the requirements for the B.A. degree or the B.S. degree from the College of Arts and Sciences, including at least ninety credits in Arts and Sciences coursework and an Arts and Sciences major, or a selected studies plan approved by the dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. Students also satisfy requirements for a major in the South. I. Newhouse Schoolhouse of Public Communications, chosen from the professional fields of advertising; circulate and digital journalism; graphic design; magazine; newspaper and online journalism; photography; public relations; or tv set, radio, and film. At to the lowest degree 122 credits, including electives, are required to graduate.

Students who wish to enroll in this program should request dual enrollment at the time of admission to the University, or they may consult the Schoolhouse of Public Communications about an intra-University transfer to the dual program.

Kickoff-Year Students Entering the Dual Programme

Students inbound the Arts and Sciences/Public Communications Dual Degree in their first twelvemonth will be required to satisfy the core requirements for the dual caste by completing the requirements of the College of Arts and Sciences Liberal Arts Cadre.

Students entering the dual program after the outset twelvemonth and who are either singly enrolled in the College of Arts and Sciences or the Due south.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications satisfy the core requirements for the dual degree by completing the requirements of the school or college in which they were originally singly enrolled. In either case, the Higher of Arts and Sciences is the home college.

Other Undergraduate Programs of the College

iLEARN-Innovative Learning
441 Hall of Languages, 315-443-1643

iLEARN supports a variety of innovative educational programs and undergraduate inquiry activities in the College and its departments. Information technology also serves as a clearinghouse for information near undergraduate research and other innovative learning opportunities, also as a source of encouragement and support for their further development.

iLEARN helps students complement traditional classroom and laboratory work with enhanced out-of-classroom learning experiences. These experiences correspond active learning at its best, tapping students' creativity, curiosity, and drive. These kinds of opportunities also enable students to utilise their knowledge and skill to contained enquiry and other scholarly projects that engage students with current issues, and give them the kinds of experiences helpful in making career choices. Students may choose to earn academic or experience credit.

Funding Opportunities

iLEARN has funds available for use past Arts and Sciences undergraduate students, faculty, and departments/programs for eligible projects. Eligibility is dependent on a project's relevance to the types of educational activities listed in the mission statement.

English to Speakers of Other Languages

Contact: Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, 340C H.B. Crouse, 315-443-2175

Syracuse University offers a program in English language to speakers of other languages (ESOL, ESL) for whatever student whose native language is not English language. Afterward taking the English Language Assessment Exam (ELAE) and receiving the results, students are recommended to take courses at the intermediate or advanced level. At the intermediate level, the program integrates the four skills of speaking, listening, reading, and writing. At the advanced level, the program focuses on limerick, reading, critical thinking and research paper writing. For undergraduate students these courses may substitute for courses in the department of Writing Studies, Rhetoric, and Composition Programme.

First Year Forum

Contact: Office of Curriculum, Instruction and Programs, 441 Hall of Languages, 315-443-2875

The First Yr Forum is a ane-credit form required of all new, kickoff-yr students in the higher and aids with the transition from secondary school to higher life, equally well as deepens students' start-year intellectual experiences by providing a personal and less academically-specialized see with a faculty member. Each forum section consists of approximately 16 students, and meets once a calendar week for approximately half the semester to share ideas, experiences and concerns, and topics of general involvement. A focal point of the forum is the Milton First Year Lecture Series, which brings nationally renowned experts to campus to address the kickoff-year students.

Renée Crown University Honors Programme
Professor Danielle Taana Smith, Director
306 Bowne Hall, 315-443-2759

The Renée Crown Academy Honors Plan is a selective, demanding, and rewarding program for outstanding students who seek intense intellectual challenge and are prepared to invest the actress effort required to meet that challenge.

It is marked by four distinguishing characteristics:

  • heightened expectations;
  • participation in a vibrant and agile community of learners;
  • intensity of intellectual experience; and
  • special intellectual opportunities and responsibilities.

The program is open to qualified students from all undergraduate majors at Syracuse University. Its requirements, supplemental to those of their majors, stipulate that they demonstrate the attributes of depth, breadth, control of language, global awareness, civic appointment, and collaborative capacity.

Additional information tin exist establish nether Renee Crown University Honors Program in the catalog under Academic Offerings, Other Programs.

Contact: Office of Curriculum, Teaching and Programs, 441 Hall of Languages, 315-443-2875

The Soling Plan is an all-University program whose purpose is to foster creative and collaborative work across bookish boundaries. The program focuses on problem-solving, experiential learning, and originality. Students frequently work as multidisciplinary teams to explore solutions to specific, existent-world issues posed by the University or the customs. Students from different colleges typically work on projects with broader applications than usually plant in academic courses.

Undergraduate Enquiry Program

342 Hall of Languages, 315-443-3150

The Undergraduate Inquiry Programme (URP), housed in the College of Arts and Sciences but open to qualified participants from other colleges, exists to provide non-classroom, credit-bearing educational opportunities to undergraduate students. Interested qualified students work closely with Arts and Sciences faculty members in faculty-generated research projects, other projects representing the faculty member's academic interests, learning environments provided by professionals affiliated with the College of Arts and Sciences, or eligible off-campus internships with an identified Arts and Sciences advisor. The program features the apprenticeship model, and students gain firsthand feel in creative and investigative academic processes, interpret theory into practice, explore the cut edges of particular disciplines, develop closer working relationships with faculty members, and enhance their ain career and educational credentials.

Kinesthesia Participation

The plan offers Arts and Sciences faculty members a take chances to extend and aggrandize the character of their teaching in the undergraduate context, to piece of work closely with self-selecting, highly motivated students, to attract excellent students to continued report in their detail discipline, and to open both internal and external funding possibilities by way of undergraduate involvement in their work. Faculty fellow member are invited to propose projects to the College. Individual projects may extend beyond a semester in length as appropriate. The character and requirements of these projects, besides as the number of credits involved, vary greatly, since they come up from across the disciplines of the College of Arts and Sciences, and sometimes from other colleges as well. The common criterion for all, however, is appropriateness to an educational credit-bearing feel for qualified undergraduate students.

Syracuse University Away

Erika Wilkens, Banana Provost and Executive Director
106 Walnut Place, 315-443-3471

Syracuse Away offers undergraduate and graduate students the opportunity to study, enquiry, and intern abroad. Ranked among the height quality study abroad programs in the U.S., Syracuse Away has centers in 6 locations - London, Florence, Madrid, Strasbourg, Hong Kong, and Santiago, Chile – as well as summer, kinesthesia-led brusque term and World Partner semester options offer 100 programs in 60 countries. All center programs and over 34 summer programs are available to Syracuse and visiting students alike. These programs provide fully accredited Syracuse University courses for students in majors and disciplines beyond the College.

Visit Syracuse University Abroad for the latest information almost program availability.

Major

  • •  African American Studies, BA
  • •  Anthropology, BA
  • •  Practical Mathematics, BA
  • •  Applied Mathematics, BS
  • •  Fine art History, BA
  • •  Biochemistry, BS
  • •  Biology, BA
  • •  Biology, BS
  • •  Biophysical Science, BA
  • •  Biotechnology, BS
  • •  Chemistry, BA
  • •  Chemistry, BS
  • •  Citizenship & Civic Date, BA
  • •  Classical Civilisation, BA
  • •  Classics, BA
  • •  Advice Sciences and Disorders, BS
  • •  Creative Writing, BA
  • •  Digital Humanities, BA
  • •  Earth Sciences, BA
  • •  Economics, BA
  • •  Economics, BS
  • •  Energy and Its Impacts, BA
  • •  Energy and Its Impacts, BS
  • •  English and Textual Studies, BA
  • •  English Instruction (Dual), BA
  • •  Environment, Sustainability, and Policy BA
  • •  Environment, Sustainability, and Policy BS
  • •  Ethics, BA
  • •  Fine Arts, BA
  • •  Forensic Science, BA
  • •  Forensic Scientific discipline, BS
  • •  French and Francophone Studies, BA
  • •  Geography, BA
  • •  Geology, BS
  • •  High german Language, Literature, and Culture, BA
  • •  Health Humanities, BA
  • •  History of Compages, BA
  • •  History, BA
  • •  International Relations, BA
  • •  Italian Language, Literature and Culture, BA
  • •  Latino-Latin American Studies, BA
  • •  Linguistic Studies, BA
  • •  Mathematics Education (Dual), BA
  • •  Mathematics Education (Dual), BS
  • •  Mathematics, BA
  • •  Mathematics, BS
  • •  Mathematics/Business organisation Dual (Applied Mathematics or Mathematics)
  • •  Eye Eastern Studies, BA
  • •  Modernistic Strange Language, BA
  • •  Modern Jewish Studies, BA
  • •  Music History and Cultures, BA
  • •  Neuroscience, BA
  • •  Neuroscience, BS
  • •  Philosophy, BA
  • •  Physics, BA
  • •  Physics, BS
  • •  Policy Studies, BA
  • •  Political Philosophy, BA
  • •  Political Science, BA
  • •  Psychology, BA
  • •  Psychology, BS
  • •  Religion, BA
  • •  Russian and Central European Studies, BA
  • •  Russian Language, Literature, and Culture, BA
  • •  Scientific discipline Education-Biological science (Dual), BA
  • •  Science Education-Biology (Dual), BS
  • •  Scientific discipline Pedagogy-Chemistry (Dual), BA
  • •  Science Educational activity-Chemical science (Dual), BS
  • •  Science Education-Earth Science (Dual), BA
  • •  Science Education-Earth Science (Dual), BS
  • •  Science Didactics-Physics (Dual), BA
  • •  Scientific discipline Educational activity-Physics (Dual), BS
  • •  Selected Studies in Arts and Sciences, BA
  • •  Selected Studies in Arts and Sciences, BS
  • •  Selected Studies, BA
  • •  Selected Studies, BS
  • •  Social Studies Education (Dual), BA
  • •  Sociology, BA
  • •  Spanish Education (Dual), BA
  • •  Spanish Language, Literature and Culture, BA
  • •  Statistics, BA
  • •  Statistics, BS
  • •  Women's and Gender Studies, BA
  • •  Writing and Rhetoric, BA

Minor

  • •  African American Studies Minor
  • •  Anthropology Minor
  • •  Applied Statistics Pocket-sized
  • •  Arabic Studies Minor
  • •  Art History Pocket-sized
  • •  Asian/Asian American Studies Minor
  • •  Biology Minor
  • •  Chemistry Minor
  • •  Chinese Linguistic communication Small
  • •  Chinese Studies Minor
  • •  Classical Civilization Minor
  • •  Classics Minor
  • •  Cerebral Science Minor
  • •  Communication Sciences and Disorders Minor
  • •  Creative Writing Pocket-sized
  • •  Earth Sciences Minor
  • •  Economics Modest
  • •  English and Textual Studies Minor
  • •  Environment and Society Pocket-size
  • •  Fine Arts Minor
  • •  Forensic Science Minor
  • •  French and Francophone Studies Pocket-sized
  • •  Geography Minor
  • •  German language Minor
  • •  Global Political Economy Small
  • •  Global Security Studies Minor
  • •  History Modest
  • •  History of Architecture Small
  • •  Italian Pocket-sized
  • •  Japanese Studies
  • •  Jewish Studies Small-scale
  • •  Latin American Studies Small-scale
  • •  LGBTQ Studies Minor
  • •  Linguistic Studies Minor
  • •  Logic Minor
  • •  Mathematics Minor
  • •  Medical Anthropology Minor
  • •  Medieval and Renaissance Studies Pocket-size
  • •  Middle Eastern Studies Minor
  • •  Music History and Cultures Minor
  • •  Native American and Indigenous Studies Minor
  • •  Philosophy Minor
  • •  Physics Minor
  • •  Policy Studies Minor
  • •  Political Science Minor
  • •  Professional and Technical Writing Minor
  • •  Psychology Pocket-sized
  • •  Religion Modest
  • •  Russian and Key European Studies Minor
  • •  Russian Modest
  • •  Sociology Small-scale
  • •  South Asian Studies Pocket-size
  • •  Spanish Pocket-sized
  • •  TESOL (Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages), Minor
  • •  Women's and Gender Studies Minor
  • •  Writing Minor

Combined Caste

  • •  iv+1 A&S/Newhouse Combined Degree
  • •  Anthropology, BA/International Relations, MA
  • •  Anthropology, BA/Public Administration, MPA
  • •  Applied Mathematics, BA / Practical Statistics, MS
  • •  Applied Mathematics, BS / Applied Statistics, MS
  • •  Biotechnology BS/MS
  • •  Communication Sciences and Disorders BS/Voice communication Language Pathology MS
  • •  Economics, BA/International Relations, MA
  • •  Economics, BA/Public Assistants, MPA
  • •  Geography, BA/International Relations, MA
  • •  Geography, BA/Public Administration, MPA
  • •  History, BA/International Relations, MA
  • •  History, BA/Public Assistants, MPA
  • •  International Relations, BA / International Relations, MA
  • •  International Relations, BA/ Public Administration, MPA
  • •  Mathematics, BA / Practical Statistics, MS
  • •  Mathematics, BS / Applied Statistics, MS
  • •  Policy Studies, BA/International Relations, MA
  • •  Policy Studies, BA/Public Administration, MPA
  • •  Political Science, BA/International Relations, MA
  • •  Political Scientific discipline, BA/Public Administration, MPA
  • •  Sociology, BA/ International Relations MA
  • •  Folklore, BA/Public Administration, MPA

Certificate

  • •  Iroquois Linguistics for Linguistic communication Learners Document
  • •  Medicolegal Death Investigation Document

Other Programs

  • •  Integrated Learning Major in Neuroscience


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Source: http://coursecatalog.syr.edu/content.php?catoid=30&navoid=3865

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