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Anthropology offers valuable perspectives on our biological and cultural origins, presenting a comprehensive understanding of how economic, social, political, and religious systems interconnect. It encourages us to examine our societal structures, the dynamics between individuals and communities, and the origins of thoughts and emotions that foster unity or division among different groups. The department houses its own collections of prehistoric and historic Midwest fauna specimens, along with a cataloged human skeletal collection initially established by Stanford University Medical School. Additionally, it collaborates with the Office of the State Archeologist, based at the Iowa campus, to access the Iowa Archaeological Collection. The BS program focuses on developing research techniques, scientific analysis, and integrating Anthropology with other disciplines. Students must participate in lab or field research projects, take supplementary courses in quantitative or formal reasoning, and pursue a minor aligned with their academic interests. This program suits students passionate about Anthropology's four main branches: sociocultural, biological, linguistic anthropology, and archaeology.
Students must meet the following requirements for admission: completion of academic upper secondary school (generally a total of 12-13 years of primary and secondary education); a corresponding secondary school diploma or leaving certificate; completion of minimum high school course requirements of the following: 4 years of English/language arts; 2 years in a single language of world languages; 3 years including courses in physical science, biology, chemistry, environmental science and physics of natural science; 3 years of social studies; 2 years of algebra; and 1 year of geometry.
English Language Requirements: