General Information and Academic Calendar
Graduate Programs of Study and Certification
Tuition, Fees and Financial Assistance
|
(585) 395-2377 |
Chairperson and Distinguished Teaching Professor: Owen S. Ireland, PhD, University of Pittsburgh. Distinguished Teaching Professor: Arden Bucholz, PhD, University of Chicago. Professors: John W. Killigrew, PhD, Indiana University; W. Bruce Leslie, PhD, Johns Hopkins University; Salahuddin Malik, PhD, McGill University; Lynn H. Parsons, PhD, Johns Hopkins University. Associate Professors: Ronald W. Herlan, PhD, SUNY Buffalo; Kathleen S. Kutolowski, PhD, University of Rochester; Kenneth P. O'Brien, PhD, Northwestern University; Alison M. Parker, PhD, Johns Hopkins University. Assistant Professor: John P. Daly, PhD, Rica University; Jennifer M. Lloyd, PhD, University of Rochester; Anne S. Macpherson, PhD, University of Wisconsin; Morag Martin, PhD, University of California-Irvine; Paul B. Moyer, PhD, The College of William and Mary; James Spiller, PhD, University of Wisconsin.
For more than a quarter century the Department of History has offered high quality and rigorous graduate training in history to a diverse student body, including secondary school teachers seeking certification or advanced training; those committed to museum, archival, and records management careers; PhD aspirants; and mid-life career changers from a variety of professions. Their one common feature has been a love of history and a desire to study it intensively.
Admission to the Program
There are two ways to begin graduate study in history:
The Admissions Process: Application forms can be obtained from the Office of Graduate Admissions at (585) 395-5465 or from the Department of History at (585) 395-2377 at SUNY Brockport, 350 New Campus Drive, Brockport, NY 14420. Please submit application materials to the Office of Graduate Admissions by May 15 to be considered for summer admission; by July 15 for fall-semester admission; and by December 1 for spring-semester admission. Students must submit the following credentials to the Office of Graduate Admissions as part of the self-managed application packet:
OPTIONAL: The department encourages but does not require scores from the Graduate Record Examination.
Criteria for Admission: In assessing these materials, the Graduate Committee in the Department of History will consider the following:
Program Requirements and Options
General Requirements:
The MA Curriculum:
| A. | American History |
|
| HST 614 Reading Seminar in Early America |
|
|
| HST 615 Reading Seminar in Modern America |
|
|
| HST 691 Research in American History |
|
|
| HST XXX Elective in American History |
|
|
| HST XXX Elective in American History |
|
|
| HST XXX Elective in American History |
|
|
|
|
||
| B. | World History |
|
| HST 641 Explorations in World History |
|
|
| HST 64X Reading Seminar in World History |
|
|
| HST 64X Reading Seminar in World History |
|
|
| HST 695 Research in World History |
|
|
| HST XXX Elective in World History |
|
|
| HST XXX Elective in World History |
|
NOTE: The Reading Seminars in American History may also be used to satisfy World History requirements.
Other Program Possibilities
Teacher Certification and the History MA Degree
Students may, with advisor approval, transfer 12 Social Science credits
from a History MA into the Alternate MS in Social Studies Adolescence
Education program.
Financial Aid
The department offers a limited number of assistantships and fellowships. Please contact the Program Director for details.
Students who would like a copy of the Master of Arts in History Program Handbook and other information about the program should write or call:
Director of Graduate Studies
Department of History
SUNY College at Brockport
350 New Campus Drive
Brockport, New York 14420-2956
Telephone: (585) 395-2377
HST 501 American History: Topics. Provides an overview of selected topics in American history for teaching and nonspecialists interested in acquiring, updating or refreshing basic understanding. Topics vary yearly. 3 Cr. Summer
HST 502 History of Rochester. Covers the development of Rochester from its earliest days as a boom town on the Genesee River, through its transition from "Flour City" to "Flower City." Includes Rochester's emergence as a major business, research, and cultural center in the 20th century, and its impact on the surrounding area of New York state. 3 Cr. Spring
HST 503 Internship. Prerequisite: Director's permission. Entails field experience in an archive, museum, historical society, or other institution that can provide a professionally valuable period of training closely related to the student's academic program. Arranged through the Graduate Committee. 3 Cr.
HST 504 Global History Seminar. Considers the development of global history during the 20th century and introduces the study of several of its separate civilizations, such as India, China, Islam, Europe, Africa and Amerindia and topics such as gender, ecology, demography, and war. 3 Cr. Summer
HST 506 Culture and Sport (A). Examines the influence of cultural patterns of sports as they have developed overt the centuries. Using a wide variety of materials, allows students to look at sport in Africa, Asia, Europe and North America. 3 Cr.
HST 507 American Environmental History (A). Examines the changing relationship between people and nature over the course of American history. Considers why Americans' environmental attitudes have changed, how human activities in the colonies and United States affected the natural world, and in what ways these effects created opportunities for and limitations on economic development and social progress. 3 Cr.
HST 516 Colonial America (A). A writing intensive upper-division survey of North American history from pre-Colombian times through 1763. Explores topics such as Indian-European contact and conflict, European imperial competition and methods of colonization, the origins of slavery and African-American culture, and the emergence of a distinct Anglo-American social order in the 18th century. 3 Cr.
HST 517 The American Revolution. Covers the socio-political dimensions of American history from the beginning of the Revolution through the creation of the new nation, the Constitution, the emergence of national-level politics and the War of 1812. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 518 The Early Republic (A). Examines in depth the young American nation from 1800 to 1848. Focuses on the market revolution and the transforming social and political changes that followed in its wake and prepared the way for Civil War. 3 Cr.
HST 519 Civil War and Reconstruction. Provides an intensive study of the Civil War era (18481877). Surveys the breakdown of the American institutions that led to the Civil War, followed by an examination of the war itself and its controversial aftermath in the Reconstruction era. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 520 America from Reconstruction to the Great Crash, 18771929. Explores America's transformation from a dominantly agrarian and commercial society into an urban, corporate capitalist one. Examines the impact of this revolution on family, community, politics, foreign policy, education and culture. Also covers immigration and dramatic changes in ethnic, religious, and racial life. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 521 America Since 1929. Uses the Depression as a watershed and then examines American society to today. Features political change from Roosevelt to Reagan, foreign policy from Pearl Harbor to the present, and the evolution of popular culture since the 1920s. Also gives attention to economic and social developments. 3 Cr. Spring
HST 522 History of American Education (A). Recognizes that Americans have long placed education at the center of national life, expecting it to cure social problems, shape cultural identity, and promote individualism. Examines education through three perspectives: the evolution of American schools and educational beliefs, education's changing social role, and placing American schools in international perspective. 3 Cr.
HST 523 U (A). S. Social History . Explores the relationship between social structure, individual experience and everyday life; also patterns of sex roles, family organization, work and leisure, immigration and mobility, and the development of new lifestyles. 3 Cr. Spring
HST 524 American Foreign Relations (A). Focuses on the late 19th century, when the United States burst on the international scene, quickly becoming the most influential society in history. Examines that dramatic trajectory through America's cultural, diplomatic, economics, educational, and political relations with other societies. Explores the impact of America on other societies and their impact on American society. 3 Cr.
HST 526 American Cultural History (A). Examines the emergence of modern American culture. Includes topics such as the aftermath of the Civil War; responses to industrialization, urbanization, and technological change; the rise of mass consumer culture; and the role of the artist and intellectual in American society. 3 Cr. Spring
HST 534 Modern Caribbean History (A). Examines both marked differences and parallels between the Puerto Rican and Cuban national experiences since the U.S. intervention of 1868. Considers economic, political, social, and cultural history. Includes migration to the U.S. and the linkages between island and diaspora histories. Reflects on the cultural futures of Puerto Ricans, Cubans, and their governments. 3 Cr.
HST 537 Overseas London. Sponsored by Brunel University and SUNY Brockport, enables students to live and to study for one semester in London. Examines the relationships between British and American society and history by means of lectures, discussions and field trips. Credit varies. Every Semester.
HST 538 Women and Gender in Latin America. Examines at an advanced level the diversity of Latin-American and Caribbean women's experiences from Iberian conquest to the 20th century. Analyzes the gender dynamics of colonial, national, dictatorial, and revolutionary states, economies, and cultures, as well as the importance of women's movements and feminism. Discusses Latina history in the U.S. and of Latin-American and Caribbean masculinity in historical perspective. 3 Cr.
HST 540 Study in Mexico. Provides students with immersion in Mexican life and culture in Cuernavaca. Permits students to earn credits through the study of Spanish in small groups and through study of Mexican history, politics and culture. Enhances academic study with the experience of living with Mexican families. Credit Varies. Spring.
HST 541 World War I. Covers military aspects of the Great War (191418), including the causes of the war, the German offensive, the Western and Eastern Fronts, sea battles, technology and warfare, the entry of the United States, the disintegration of Czarist Russia, and the movements for peace. 3 Cr.
HST 546 Renaissance and Reformation. Covers the origin and nature of the Renaissance, its evolution as a distinct cultural epoch, as well as its relationship to the mass religious movement known as the Reformation. Gives attention to the fine arts, literature, politics, economy, and intellectual climate of Europe. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 548 The French Revolution. Considers the revolution's origins in the Old Regime and the Enlightenment before examining its political and cultural development as well as its immediate after- math in the Napoleonic era and its influence on Europe in the 19th century. 3 Cr.
HST 549 Europe in the 20th Century. Examines European states' loss of political and economic hegemony in the world as they endured a series of crisesworld wars, economic depression, totalitarianism, loss of empiresand political, economic, and cultural responses to this decline in the post World War II era. 3 Cr. Spring
HST 556 Modern France. Studies the main themes in French civilization since the Enlightenment through literature and art of the 19th and 20th centuries as well as historical studies of French society. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 560 Modern Africa. Surveys major patterns of pre-colonial Africa; examines the colonial experience and African struggles for independence; and explores the problem of "development" in post-colonial African states. 3 Cr.
HST 567 Modern South Asia (A,C). Surveys the background of South Asian nations under European colonialism and the movement to independence. Also examines the post-independence problems of the area and the contemporary impact of these nations on the word. 3 Cr.
HST 587 Asian Survey (A,C). Surveys Asian cultures through films, slides, lectures, and textbooks. Using a chronological and regional approach, focuses on the unity and diversity of the peoples and cultures of China, South Asia, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East. 3 Cr.
HST 595 Women and Class (A). Examines and analyzes US women's experiences in terms of gender, class, and work. Introduces theories of women's and gender history and of gender and class analysis. Entails a seminar format and expects committed student participation. 3 Cr.
HST 599 Independent Study in History. Arranged in consultation with the instructor-sponsor prior to registration. 1-3 Cr. Every Semester
HST 600 Introduction to Historical Studies. Explores the nature of historical knowledge and the means whereby that knowledge is achieved. Stresses the development and execution of a simple research design. Introduces students to modern historical scholarship. Should be taken early in a student's MA program. Also open to students in other programs with a serious interest in history. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 601 Topic in US History (A). Provides a thematic approach to American history with specific topics changing each semester. 3 Cr.
HST 614 Reading Seminar in Early America. A broad reading course in early American history, examines writings from the colonial beginnings through Reconstruction. Acquaints students with the principal literature and major recent interpretations of the field. Requires students to read, interpret, and synthesize a variety of readings in social, political, economic, and intellectual history. May be repeated for credit. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 615 Reading Seminar in Modern America. Examines writings on American history since Reconstruction. Allows students to learn to analyze historical scholarship through readings and seminar discussions. Requires a concluding essay to help students develop a synthetic overview. May be repeated for credit. 3 Cr. Spring
HST 641 Explorations in World History (A). Introduces students to world history as a distinctive field of historical study, focusing on transregional connections or encounters and on large-scale comparative analysis. Uses themes and case studies to illustrate the character of a truly "world" history, to develop a framework for examining cross-cultural interaction, and to foster facility in comparative analysis. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 643 Regional Seminar: Modern Europe (A). Introduces students to the study of modern Europe and places this within the framework of world history, focusing on trans-regional connections or encounters and on large-scale comparative analysis. 3 Cr. Spring
HST 644 Regional Seminar: Latin America (A). Examines key themes in Latin-America history with a focus on the post-1800 period. May include topics such as economic dependency, race and gender relations, state-building, and popular movements. Places the region in a comparative and transatlantic context. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 645 Regional Seminar: East Asia (A). Examines the history of the Sinocentric world, Southeast Asia, and Central Asia (Tibet, Xinjiang and contiguous Turkic-Muslim areas). Entails two segments: a) selected readings on a discrete, specific historical issue or development, and b) a critique and overview of significant English language works in Asian history. 3 Cr. Spring
HST 646 Regional Seminar: Africa (A). Examines a series of themes or topics that cast Africa's historical experience in a larger world historical and comparative framework. Includes topics such as state-building, Islam in Africa, slavery and slave trades, the colonial experience, race relations, and nationalism. 3 Cr. Fall
HST 691 Research Seminar in American History. Prerequisite: Instructor's permission. An individualized research experience. Allows students to develop skills in original scholarly research in American history and to explore the methods and resources appropriate for a selected area of investigation. Themes vary with the student and instructor. 3 Cr. Every Semester
HST 695 Research in World History (A). Prerequisite: Instructor's permission. Offers an individualized research experience in which a student and a faculty member examine a topic of mutual interest and one in which the student has developed some expertise. Normally scheduled at the end of the student's program. 3 Cr. Every Semester
HST 699 Independent Study in History. Arranged in consultation with the instructor-sponsor prior to registration. 3 Cr. Every Semester
HST 700 Historical Integration (A). Entails individualized integrative experience culminating in an extended interpretive essay and an oral examination. 3 Cr. Every Semester
HST 701 Thesis. Allows students to undertake a scholarly research, composition, and writing project with the assistance of a faculty advisor. May be completed in one or two semesters as a two-step research and writing project. Two readers must approve each submitted thesis. The original and one copy should be submitted to Drake Memorial Library, and one copy should be submitted to the Department of History, all unbound. 3-6 Cr.
HST 710 College Teaching Practicum. Provides the mature graduate student in his or her second or third semester with extensive reading in the literature on current teaching practices, audio-visual material utilization, curriculum design, and experience in all aspects of collegiate-level teaching at the introductory level: lecturing; small-group discussion; and the preparation, administration and evaluation of written assignments and exams. Culminates with a report containing a pedagogical essay by the student, a description of the teaching experience, and the instructor's evaluation of both the pedagogical essay and the teaching experience. 3 Cr.
The information in this publication was current as of December 2002 when the text was compiled. Changes, including but not restricted to, tuition and fees, course descriptions, degree and program requirements, policies, and financial aid availability may have occurred since that time. Whether or not a specific course is scheduled for a given term is contingent on enrollment, budget and staffing. The college reserves the right to make any changes it finds necessary and may announce such changes for student notification in publications other than the College catalogs. For the purpose of degree and program completion, students are bound by the requirements in effect as stated in the printed catalog at the time of their matriculation at SUNY Brockport. Inquiries on the current status of requirements can be addressed to the appropriate College department of office. Also refer to the Brockport Web site home page at www.brockport.edu for current information.
Collaborative Training Dinner
5 pm - 7 pm
Faculty Staff Convocation
8:30 am - 10:30 am
Collaborative Training
1 pm - 5:30 pm
Red Cross Blood Drive
11 am - 4 pm