Overview
The History Department at the University of Kansas is particularly distinguished in
undergraduate teaching. In Spring 2007, the History Department was awarded
the
Excellence in Undergraduate Advising Award from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
In addition, many History faculty members have won individual awards for their teaching,
such as the Kemper Prize and Distinguished Professor awards. The department as a whole
ranks well above the University average in student evaluations.
- Faculty
in the department are often nationally and internationally recognized
leaders in their field, and they bring this advanced knowledge
to bear on their teaching.
- Courses
in the department are usually small, and the larger courses
always include
Teaching Assistants, so students can receive
individual attention and feedback on
their work.
- Flexibility is a given in the department:
students have only two required courses--a course on historical
methods and a senior research seminar--and a choice of
concentrating on any of ten fields, as well as the opportunity to design their
own major.
The department and faculty also have links to interdisciplinary
work in Environmental
Studies, African and African-American
Studies, Indigenous Nations Studies, and other area studies
programs.
- Resources for history research at KU are rich.
Watson and Anschutz libraries help make up a major research
library collection, and the Spencer Library offers such resources
as the Wilcox Collection on extremist politics, the University
Archives, and major collections in British history, among others.
- For more information, see the History Major Program Description.
|