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The Maine Studies Interdisciplinary Masters Degree
Description
The University of Maine Graduate School offers an interdisciplinary concentration
in Maine Studies within the Master of Arts in Liberal Studies (MALS). This
degree program offers students the opportunity to design an interdisciplinary
study of Maine through classes in literature, history, folklore, Native American
studies, Franco-American studies, women’s studies, geology, geography,
political science, and other disciplines. Students will also participate
in interdisciplinary seminars.
The Maine
Studies graduate program allows students to pursue Maine-related interdisciplinary
interests such as Wabanaki culture and the environment, poverty and public policy,
immigrant history and culture, women’s work and the economy, the art and
culture of the coast, or folklore and labor history, to name just a few examples
of interdisciplinary research areas. While providing a better understanding
of the state’s problems and opportunities, both past and present, this
interdisciplinary liberal arts program will also sharpen students' research and
critical thinking skills and deepen their understanding of Maine. The program
will help prepare students for careers in such areas as teaching, government,
business, historical preservation, or social services. Students may complete
most, in some cases all, of this program through distance technologies.
Curriculum
With the guidance of an academic advisor, students will complete 30 graduate
credit hours in order to earn the Maine Studies Interdisciplinary Masters degree. These
credit hours will be distributed in the following way:
6-9 hours of LIB 500, Interdisciplinary Seminars, including:
LIB 500 – Exploring
Interdisciplinarity
LIB 500 – A
Sense of Place: Maine and Regional Identity
15-21 hours of graduate level course credits distributed the following way:
No more than
2 courses may be taken at the 400 level
No more than 3 courses may be taken in a single discipline (this stipulation
does not apply to courses with the LIB designator)
3-6 hours of LIB 699, Master Project in Liberal Studies, usually completed near
the end of the student’s academic program.
At least 15 of the required 30 credit hours must be Maine-related courses as
identified by the Coordinator of the Maine Studies program.
For more information contact:
The Maine Studies Program
Carol Toner, Coordinator
5 Chadbourne Hall
University of Maine
Orono, Maine 04469
207-581-3147
Carol.Toner@umit.maine.edu
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