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Minors, Certificates, & Letters (Nonmajor Programs)
These programs are meant to allow students to explore and attain some competence
in a second field. In some cases, students may choose a minor or certificate
topically connected to their major (e.g., a major in Spanish and a certif-icate
in Latin American studies), or may choose a secondary field removed from their
primary area which evinces a specific skill (e.g., a major in philosophy
and a minor in cartography).
Descriptions of departmental minors and letter programs are given at the end
of the department's major description. Certificate and interdepartmental minor
programs are grouped separately.
It is the student's responsibility to make sure that all requirements for these
various programs have been met and to obtain the proper departmental signature.
An authorized form for minors is available at the Registrar's Office and must
be filed upon completion of the minor and prior to graduation.
Certificates and Letters
African Studies (Five College), Arboriculture and Urban Forestry, Asian and
Asian American Studies, Criminal Justice, Culture, Health and Science (Five
College), Film Studies, International Agricultural Studies, International Relations,
Interpreter's Studies, Latin American Studies, Medieval Studies, Middle Eastern
Studies (Five College), Native American Indian Studies, Population Studies,
Religious Studies, Social Research and Analysis
Minors
Aerospace Studies, Afro-American Studies, Agricultural Economics, Anthropology,
Arabic Language, Art, Art History, Astronomy, Biology, Chemistry, Chinese, Classical
Civilization, Comparative Literature, Computer Science, Economics, Engineering
Management, English, Entomology, Environmental Design, Environmental Sciences,
Exercise Science, Food Marketing Economics, Food Science, Forestry, French and
Francophone Studies, Geography, Geology, German, Greek, Hebrew, History, Human
Nutrition, Italian Studies, Japanese, Judaic Studies, Latin, Latin American
Studies, Linguistics, Managerial Economics in Food and Resource Industries,
Mathematics, Microbiology, Middle Eastern Studies, Modern European Studies,
Music Performance, Natural Resource Economics, Philosophy, Physics, Plant Pathology,
Plant and Soil Sciences, Political Science, Portuguese, Psychology, Russian
and East European Studies, Sociology, Spanish, Wildlife and Fisheries Conservation,
Women's Studies.
Letters of Specialization
Criminal Justice (Sociology), Developmental Disabilities and Human Services
(Psychology), International Agricultural Studies (Agricultural majors in the
College of Food and Natural Resources), Marketing Information Technology (Marketing),
Mental Health Interventions (Psychology), Social Reseach and Analysis (Sociology)
Other Nonmajor Programs
Courses in other areas contribute to undergraduate education by fulfilling
General Education, college, or major requirements, or as electives. Several
departments regularly offer courses at the elementary and intermediate levels
in other languages (Danish, Dutch, Polish, Swedish, Yiddish), and the English
as a Second Language Program offers college-level English language courses to
non-native speakers. Some departments that have only graduate programs offer
some courses that are available to under-graduates (Biostatistics and Epidemiology,
Community Health Studies, Environmental Health Sciences, and the Labor Relations
and Research Center). (See index for respective entries.)
Other nonmajor programs described in this book include: Aerospace Studies (Air
Force ROTC), Military Science (Army ROTC), Athletics/Intramurals/General Physical
Education, Internships, Study Abroad, and the Stockbridge School. Also, undergraduates
at this University may elect courses at the other area colleges in the Five
College consortium (Amherst College, Hampshire College, Mount Holyoke College,
and Smith College.
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