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Our academic curriculum is founded on the principle that Anthropology offers unparalleled understanding of human identity, our evolutionary journey, and potential futures. By exploring both historical and contemporary aspects of biological and cultural diversity, students gain enhanced problem-solving skills and the ability to positively impact communities at local, national, and global levels. Whether undergraduates continue to advanced anthropology studies, transition to other fields, or enter professional careers immediately, we deliver comprehensive learning through diverse course formats - from large lectures to intimate seminars, along with various laboratory and fieldwork opportunities spanning anthropology's subfields. Our graduate programs equip students for both scholarly research and practical applications in Anthropology.
This program emphasizes the structured examination of humanity, our ancestors, primate relatives, and cultural systems through comparative analysis. Coursework encompasses biological/physical anthropology, primate studies, human fossil records, archaeological methods, language anthropology, cultural documentation, cross-cultural analysis, historical ethnography, social anthropology, psychological anthropology, research methodologies, and practical applications in fields like medical science, forensic investigation, museum curation, and global relations.