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The University of Chicago's Anthropology program stands out as one of the country's top programs for exceptional faculty and outstanding teaching. Undergraduate students collaborate directly with professors engaged in diverse research projects, spanning from Amazonian cultural studies to examinations of modern identity politics. The department immerses students in the field through comprehensive ethnographic resources and analytical frameworks. Learners have the opportunity to design personalized academic paths focusing on specialties like archaeology, human origins, and biological, cultural, linguistic, or psychological anthropology. This discipline embraces numerous historical and comparative methods for understanding human cultural and biological diversity, extending from investigations of human development and ancient history to analyzing cultures as networks of symbolic meaning. At its core, anthropology bridges natural sciences like anatomy, genetics, and geology with social sciences and humanities including psychology, sociology, linguistics, philosophy, historical studies, and religious comparisons. While advanced study can prepare students for academic and museum careers, anthropology more commonly serves as foundational knowledge for pursuits in other social sciences, humanities, or biological sciences, as well as professional paths in government, corporate sectors, legal practice, healthcare, social work, and beyond.
Students are required to have high school equivalent of US qualification.
Applicants are required to have score of 100 or higher on the Internet-Based TOEFL or 600 or higher on the Paper-Based TOEFL. Minimum required scores on the IELTS are an overall score of 7.0, with subs cores of 7.0 each. The minimum acceptable score on the PTE is 70