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Anthropology explores humanity from multiple perspectives: biological, socio-cultural, and historical. The Anthropology Department offers students a comprehensive program, featuring courses that examine human evolution across time—covering our diverse cultures, behaviors, belief systems, and origins.
Learning Objectives -
Gain foundational understanding of Anthropology's holistic approach and modern anthropologists' interpretations of culture and biology.
Trace Anthropology's professional evolution, clarifying its dual identity as both scientific discipline and humanities field, and how it emerged as a unique area of study while maintaining ties to other academic domains.
Explain Anthropology's four-field structure and how its sub-disciplines interconnect, especially regarding biological and social interpretations of sex, gender, and race.
Analyze how cultural components—economic systems, social structures, political organizations, and religious traditions—interrelate within societies, while comparing diverse cultures throughout history.
Develop cultural awareness through Anthropology's integrated perspective, recognizing cultures as evolving systems influenced by global interactions.
Identify personal and societal cultural biases, understanding their origins while maintaining objectivity when assessing cultural representations in ethnographies, media, and films.
Understand ethical responsibilities in Anthropology, particularly researchers' duties toward studied communities, sponsors, and the academic field.
Graduates of high schools or equivalent are eligible for admission, with the equivalent of a GPA of 2.0 or better.
Students must be 18 years or older by the start of the semester without restrictions.
English Proficiency: TOEFL: PBT 450, CBT 160, IBT 60; iTEP: 3.0; IELTS: 5.5; IGCSE: C; GTEC CBT: 1030; Pearson Test of English: 45; PTE Academic: 44; STEP-Eiken: Grade Pre-1.
Application deadlines: Fall Semester: June 15; Spring Semester: November 1; Summer Session: May 1