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Anthropology, General Track (B.A.)

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B.A., Anthropology,
General Track

College of Humanities and Social Sciences

What You'll Do

People are unlike any other living thing on Earth. We develop complex written languages, weave together diverse cultures, and question why we do the things we do. Anthropologists seek answers to who we are as people, how we came to be that way, and how modernity exerts differential forces on the variety of humanity that exists around the world. 

As an Anthropology major in the General Anthropology track, you’ll study humankind from its beginnings millions of years ago to the present day.

You'll acquire a strong foundation in all four subdisciplines of Anthropology: sociocultural, biological, linguistic, and archaeology. The flexibility of enough free electives in this major will allow you to add a double major, a minor, or an internship.

Anthropology internships have included studying tumbilis (Swahili for blue monkeys) in the forests of western Kenya, working in the museum laboratory at the Smithsonian Institution, working in forensic laboratories, easing the transition for immigrants new to the United States, and helping staff members in human service agencies.

What You'll Become

The B.A. degree in Anthropology in the General Anthropology track prepares you for work in this field or for graduate school. Your future may lead you to a career in a museum, on the staff of a government agency, in the marketing section of a corporation, or on a project run by a nongovernmental organization.

More students are choosing anthropology as a major, partly because of growing job opportunities. According to Bureau of Labor Statistics data, anthropology jobs are expected to grow by 28 percent between 2011 and 2018, just shy of the 30 percent growth rate predicted for software engineers and engineering technicians.

Applied and practicing anthropologists are at historic employment levels in the public sector. Trained anthropologists work in international development, cultural resource management, forensic and physical anthropology, natural resource management, and defense and security sectors.

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Special Features

  • IUP offers a master’s degree in Applied Archaeology.
  • Students with this major may be interested in adding the Asian Studies, Latin American Studies, or Pan-African Studies minor.
  •  Students often join faculty in attending professional meetings such as the Northeastern Anthropological Association, Society for Applied Anthropology, and American Anthropological Association conferences. They also present papers at the PASSHE University Undergraduate Anthropology Meetings.
  • Students enjoy hands-on learning opportunities by working with IUP Archaeological Services, which has conducted over $6 million in projects for the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission, the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation, Indiana County, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, the National Park Service, and other agencies.
  • Students in the honors program have executed research on diverse topics, including the social effects of energy extraction, library use, rape culture on college campuses, and cultural and historical changes in women's dress in Indiana.
  • The Anthropology Club organizes outings, guest lectures, films, and other activities.    

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