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Home > Courses
> Certificate & Interdisciplinary Minor Programs
> Modern European Studies Minor
Modern European Studies Minor
Contact: Jacqueline Urla
Office: 208 Machmer
Phone: 545-2869
The Program
The minor in Modern European
Studies is an interdisciplinary and interdepartmental program that allows
students to supplement their major with a focus on the geographical areas
of western and eastern Europe. In addition to increasing the student's
knowledge of European society,
politics, culture, and heritage, the minor may be useful in supporting
application to professional and graduate school, governmental and international
service, and teaching or business.
The minor is open to all undergraduates, regardless
of their major.
Requirements
1. Five courses (a total
of at least 15 credits) that focus on modern Europe. No more than one
may be at the 100 level, and none may be counted for both the minor and
the student's major.
2. One of the five courses
must be in a modern European language other than English. It must be more
advanced than the fourth semester language course (240-249), unless it
is the student's second European foreign language, in which case
it must be at or above the second semester level (120-129). The advanced
course must be conducted primarily in the foreign language in question.
3. One of the five courses
must include a significant research component (a paper written from multiple
sources, or equivalent work). Alternatively, by arrangement with any participating
faculty member, the research may be carried out for the Independent Study
course, EURO 396.
4. At least three of the
five required courses must be taken in residence at the University of
Massachusetts or one of the Five Colleges or while participating
in an official University of Massachusetts study abroad program.
Courses
Any course that focuses
primarily or exclusively on the culture, politics, or society of contemporary
Europe, or its history after 1789, will qualify. Such courses are regularly
offered by the following departments: Anthropology, Art History, Comparative
Literature, Economics, English, French and Italian, Geosciences, Germanic Languages, History, Philosophy, Political
Science, Slavic Languages, Spanish and Portuguese, and the Isenberg School
of Management. Students should design their programs
in consultation with a member of the Modern European Studies Executive
Committee.
Study Abroad
Courses taken abroad can
be used for credit toward the minor if they are approved by a member of
the Modern European Studies Executive Committee.
The University offers full year, semester and summer
programs in Europe. The countries involved include Denmark, France, Germany,
Great Britain, Greece, Hungary, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Russia,
Spain, Sweden, and Switzerland. In addition, the Anthropology Department
operates a field program in various European countries.
Students who are going abroad during the academic year
must make all arrangements with International Programs, from which detailed
information on foreign study opportunities can be obtained.
Restriction
Upon completion, the minor
is recorded on the student's transcript, but only courses passed at grade
C or higher will count toward it.
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