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History, B.A.

Informed, engaged, creative: Students of history at Â鶹´«Ã½ learn the values and skills foundational to a wide range of careers. Open the door to your future by studying the past. History majors become leaders in law, public policy, education, business, medicine and technology. They work in higher education and government, for nonprofits and NGOs, and as entrepreneurs and marketing associates.

ÌýSLU's Department of History offers small classes, one-on-one mentoring, and opportunities to engage in internships and individualized research.ÌýOur 18 full-time faculty members serve more than 90 undergraduate majors and minors and nearly 1,000 undergraduates in our courses every semester,

The department’s award-winning teachers are deeply committed to helping students grow as thinkers and as human beings in the best of the Jesuit educational model.

A major or minor in history will sharpen your mind and open your eyes, giving youÌýthe confidence to say, “I know who I am because I know my history.â€

Additional program highlights include:

  • Students in our courses are guided by professors who are outstanding writers, engaging speakers and leading experts in their fields. Our faculty members have written for The New York Times and the Washington Post, and been interviewed on PBS, NPR and St. Louis Public Radio.Ìý
  • The history undergraduate program hosts vibrant extracurricular events that help students network, hone their skills, and share their passions for history.
  • The department’s stellar internship program allows students to pursue their particular interests while deepening skills and professional connections. Through internships, SLU's history majors and minors have diversified elementary school curricula, shaped museum exhibitions, created podcasts, and researched historic foodways for an award-winning St. Louis restaurant.ÌýÌýÌý

Curriculum Overview

History majors at SLU are educated in basic intellectual and communication skills valued in business, journalism, public service and law, among other fields. In recent years, undergraduates have augmented studies in history with education, political science, foreign language or business administration — combinations that have proven attractive in medicine, business and government service.

Â鶹´«Ã½ history students learn to interpret a variety of sources, develop the skills to find relevant information and evidence, and articulate an argument. They practice clear and forceful writing.

Fieldwork and Research Opportunities

SLU's Department of History offers a variety of internships with museums and other historical organizations, most of which are eligible for course credit. Internship opportunities in the St. Louis area include:

  • Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and Museum
  • Campbell House Museum
  • Discovery Expedition of St. Charles
  • Eugene Field House and Toy Museum
  • Holocaust Museum
  • Jefferson Barracks
  • Jefferson National Expansion Memorial Achieves
  • Landmarks Association of St. Louis
  • Lincoln Home and National Historic Site
  • Midwest Jesuit Archives
  • Missouri History Museum
  • National Archives Records Center
  • Â鶹´«Ã½ Art Museum
  • Scott Joplin House
  • Ulysses S. Grant National Historic Site

Careers

  • History majors have gone on to fulfilling careers in law, public policy, education, business, medicine, and technology. They work in secondary education and government, for nonprofits and NGOs and as entrepreneurs.
  • History majors and minors learn to excel in writing, oral presentation, and research. These skills can be applied in a broad range of fields, including law, education, medicine and business.
  • Students interested in the sciences often discover that having a major or minor in history diversifies their academic training and makes their applications to graduate and medical schools even more competitive.Ìý
  • History majors learn to communicate effectively, reason creatively, and understand the human impact and issues connected to a career. People with these skills become leaders in their fields.

As one recent graduate said, "There are so many potential jobs to do when you are talented at writing, speaking and researching. History majors build all those skills on a daily basis!"

Admission Requirements

Begin Your Application

Â鶹´«Ã½ also accepts the Common Application.

Freshman

All applications are thoroughly reviewed with the highest degree of individual care and consideration to all credentials that are submitted. Solid academic performance in college preparatory coursework is a primary concern in reviewing a freshman applicant’s file.

To be considered for admission to any Â鶹´«Ã½ undergraduate program, applicants must be graduating from an accredited high school, have an acceptable HiSET exam score or take the General Education Development (GED) test.Ìý

Transfer

Applicants must be a graduate of an accredited high school or have an acceptable score on the GED.

Students who have attempted fewer than 24 semester credits (or 30 quarter credits) of college credit must follow the above freshmen admission requirements. Students who have completed 24 or more semester credits (or 30 quarter credits) of college credit mustÌýsubmit transcripts from all previously attended college(s).

In reviewing a transfer applicant’s file, the Office of Admission holistically examines the student’s academic performance in college-level coursework as an indicator of the student’s ability to meet the academic rigors of Â鶹´«Ã½. Where applicable, transfer students will be evaluated on any courses outlined in the continuation standards of their preferred major.

International Applicants

All admission policies and requirements for domestic students apply to international students along with the following:

  • Demonstrate English Language Proficiency
  • Proof of financial support must include:
    • A letter of financial support from the person(s) or sponsoring agency funding the time at Â鶹´«Ã½
    • A letter from the sponsor's bank verifying that the funds are available and will be so for the duration of study at the University
  • Academic records, in English translation, of students who have undertaken post-secondary studies outside the United States must include the courses taken and/or lectures attended, practical laboratory work, the maximum and minimum grades attainable, the grades earned or the results of all end-of-term examinations, and any honors or degrees received. WES and ECE transcripts are accepted.

Tuition

Tuition Cost Per Year
Undergraduate Tuition $54,760

Additional charges may apply. Other resources are listed below:

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Information on Tuition and Fees

Miscellaneous Fees

Information on Summer Tuition

Scholarships and Financial Aid

There are two principal ways to help finance a Â鶹´«Ã½ education:

  • Scholarships: Scholarships are awarded based on academic achievement, service, leadership and financial need.
  • Financial Aid: Financial aid is provided through grants and loans, some of which require repayment.

Â鶹´«Ã½ makes every effort to keep our education affordable. In fiscal year 2023, 99% of first-time freshmen and 92% of all students received financial aid and students received more than $459 million in aid University-wide.

For priority consideration for merit-based scholarships, apply for admission by December 1 and complete a Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) by March 1.

For more information on scholarships and financial aid, visit the Office of Student Financial Services.

  1. Graduates will be able to call to mind and explain significant historical facts in appropriate contexts.
  2. Graduates will be able toÌýcritically evaluate and analyze primary sources to produce reasoned historical interpretations.
  3. Graduates will be able toÌýcritically evaluate the strengths and weaknesses of historical narratives and interpretations.
  4. Graduates will be able toÌýproduce correct, cogent and effectively structured statements on historical topics.
  5. Graduates will be able toÌýproduce research in which they interpret primary sources in order to propose informed, original solutions to historical problems.
  6. Graduates will be able toÌýarticulate meaningful relationships between contemporary issues and historical facts, interpretations and skills.

ÌýHistory students must complete a minimum of 36 creditsÌýfor the major.

University Undergraduate Core32-35
Major Requirements
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1110Origins of the Modern World to 15003
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1120Origins of the Modern World (1500 to Present)3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý2800Historian's Craft: Methods Proseminar3
European History
Select one course with the European History attribute. Examples of such courses, which are commonly taught, are: 3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3020
The Roman Empire
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3030
The Byzantine World: Faith and Power in a Thousand-Year Empire
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3040
From Barbarians to Crusaders: Europe in the Early Middle Ages
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3046
Medieval Castles in History and Archaeology
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3050
From Cathedrals to Printing Presses: Europe in the Late Middle Ages
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3090
The Age of Renaissance
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3100
The Reformation Era
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3120
French Revolution and Napoleon, 1789-1815
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3140
Twentieth Century Europe: Era of World Wars, 1914-1945
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3280
Russia to 1905
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3290
Russia Since 1905
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3760
Medieval Spain
Pre-1865 U.S. History
Select one course with the Pre-1865 U.S. History attribute. Examples of such courses, which are commonly taught, are: 3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1600
History of the United States of America to 1865
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3480
U.S. Civil War and Reconstruction, 1850-1877
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3580
American Slavery
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3640
History of the American West
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3660
History of Nature in America
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3700
U.S. Constitutional History
Post-1865 U.S. History
Select once course with the Post-1865 U.S. History attribute. Examples of such courses, which are commonly taught, are: 3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1610
History of the United States Since 1865
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3250
World in Conflict Since 1945
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3480
U.S. Civil War and Reconstruction, 1850-1877
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3500
Progressive Era to the Jazz Age, 1890-1920
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3600
U.S. History in Film
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3640
History of the American West
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3660
History of Nature in America
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3700
U.S. Constitutional History
World History (Asian, African, Middle Eastern, or Latin American)
Select one course with the World History attribute. Examples of such courses, which are commonly taught, are: 3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1710
China and Japan Since 1600: Samurai, Revolutionaries, Entrepreneurs
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1740
Peoples and Pandemics in History
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý2730
Crossroads of the World: The Middle East and North Africa Through History
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3030
The Byzantine World: Faith and Power in a Thousand-Year Empire
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3170
Colonial Latin America
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3220
Jesuits and Their Worlds
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3250
World in Conflict Since 1945
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3720
Cultural Encounters 1500-1700
History Electives
Choose 12 credits for courses above 1120 with the HIST subject code.12
Senior Seminar
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4900Seminar in European History3
´Ç°ùÌý±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4901 Sem: American History
´Ç°ùÌý±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4902 Seminar in World History
General Electives49-52
Total Credits120

Senior Thesis

±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4991 History Senior Thesis (3 cr) will be conducted as an independent study/research course for writing an honors thesis. It is an opportunity for superior students who want to expand and revise a paper for a previous 3000 or 4000 level history course into an honors thesis. This option will give the student a chance to develop and demonstrate advanced research and writing skills. It will be excellent preparation for graduate or professional schools, some of which require applicants to submit a writing sample.ÌýThis course runs for one semester. Students wishing to spend a year on their thesis may sign up one semester earlier for ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4990 History Senior Thesis Prep (3 cr).

Internships

The Department of History offers a variety of internships ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4910 Internship/History in Practice (1-6 cr); for example, in an archive, a museum, a historical site, or on specific projects.

Continuation Standards

A 2.00 minimum GPA for all history courses.

Graduation Requirements

  • Complete a minimum of 120 credits (excluding pre-college level courses numbered below 1000).
  • Complete the University Undergraduate Core curriculum requirements.
  • Complete major requirements: minimum of 30 credits required.
  • Complete remaining credits with a second major, minor, certificate or electives to reach the minimum of 120 credits required for graduation.
  • Achieve at least a 2.00 cumulative grade point average, a 2.00 grade point average in the major(s), and a 2.00 grade point average in the minor/certificate or related elective credits.
  • Complete department- and program-specific academic and performance requirements.
  • Complete at least 50% of the coursework for the major and 75% for the minor/certificate through Â鶹´«Ã½ or an approved study-abroad program.
  • Complete 30 of the final 36 credits through Â鶹´«Ã½ or an approved study-abroad program.
  • Complete an online degree application by the required University deadline.

Roadmaps are recommended semester-by-semester plans of study for programs and assume full-time enrollmentÌýunless otherwise noted. Ìý

Courses and milestones designated as critical (marked with !) must be completed in the semester listed to ensure a timely graduation. Transfer credit may change the roadmap.

This roadmap should not be used in the place of regular academic advising appointments. All students are encouraged to meet with their advisor/mentor each semester. Requirements, course availability and sequencing are subject to change.

Plan of Study Grid
Year One
FallCredits
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1110 Origins of the Modern World to 1500 1 3
°ä°¿¸é·¡Ìý1000 Ignite First Year Seminar (Must be taken in first 36 credit hours at SLU / Cannot carry attributes. History Options: °ä°¿¸é·¡Ìý1000 A Medieval Murder Mystery: The World of AD 1327; °ä°¿¸é·¡Ìý1000 The Gods of the Others: The Sacred, Identities, and Communities) 2-3
°ä°¿¸é·¡Ìý1500 Cura Personalis 1: Self in Community (Must be taken in first 36 credit hours at SLU / Cannot carry attributes / Must be taken at SLU) 1
°ä°¿¸é·¡Ìý1900 Eloquentia Perfecta 1: Written and Visual Communication (Should be taken in first 36 credit hours at SLU / Cannot carry attributes. Or ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1200 Communicating Â鶹´«Ã½ History) 3
General Electives 6
ÌýCredits15-16
Spring
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1120 Origins of the Modern World (1500 to Present) (satisfies COREÌý3400) 1 3
COREÌý3200 Ways of Thinking: Quantitative Reasoning (Should be taken in first 45 credit hours at SLU) 3
COREÌý1600 Ultimate Questions: Theology 3
General Electives 6
ÌýCredits15
Year Two
Fall
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý2800 Historian's Craft: Methods Proseminar 3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1600 History of the United States of America to 1865 (satisfies COREÌý3400) 3
COREÌý1200 Eloquentia Perfecta 2: Oral and Visual Communication (Should be taken in first 60 credit hours at SLU / Cannot carry attributes) 3
COREÌý1700 Ultimate Questions: Philosophy 3
General Electives 3
ÌýCredits15
Spring
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1610 History of the United States Since 1865 (satisfies COREÌý3400) 3
HIST Elective above 1120: European History 4 3
COREÌý3800 Ways of Thinking: Natural and Applied Sciences 3
COREÌý2500 Cura Personalis 2: Self in Contemplation 0
General Electives 6
ÌýCredits15
Year Three
Fall
HIST Elective above 1120: World History 2 3
HIST Elective Upper Leveltaken any time 3
COREÌý2800 Eloquentia Perfecta 3: Creative Expression 2-3
COREÌý3400
or ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1120
or ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3120
or ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3640
Ways of Thinking: Aesthetics, History, and Culture
or Origins of the Modern World (1500 to Present)
or French Revolution and Napoleon, 1789-1815
or History of the American West
3
General Electives 4
ÌýCredits15-16
Spring
HIST Elective above 1120: U.S. Historytaken any time 5 3
HIST Elective Upper Leveltaken any time 3
COREÌý3600 Ways of Thinking: Social and Behavioral Sciences (taken any time) 3
COREÌý4000 Collaborative Inquiry 2-3
General Electives 4
ÌýCredits15-16
Year Four
Fall
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4900
or ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4901
or ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4902
Seminar in European History
or Sem: American History
or Seminar in World History
3
HIST Elective Upper Leveltaken any time 3
COREÌý3500 Cura Personalis 3: Self in the World 1
General Electives 8
ÌýCredits15
Spring
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4900
or ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4901
or ±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4902
Seminar in European History
or Sem: American History
or Seminar in World History
3
HIST Elective Upper Leveltaken any time 3
General Electives 9
ÌýCredits15
ÌýTotal Credits120-123
1

One, but not both, of these courses may be fulfilled by AP credit.

2

Fulfills World Distribution Requirement (for a full list of courses that meet this requirement, see the list below).Ìý

3

Fulfills U.S. pre-1865 Distribution Requirement (for a full list of courses that meet this requirement, see the list below).Ìý

4

Fulfills Europe Distribution Requirement (for a full list of courses that meet this requirement, see the list below).Ìý

5

Fulfills U.S. post-1865 Distribution Requirement (for a full list of courses that meet this requirement, see list below).Ìý

Program Notes

The history major requires successful completion of courses above 1120 in the following areas: pre-1865 U.S. history, post-1865 U.S. history, European history and World history. At least one course must be a 4000-level seminar. Please refer to the list of seminars for majors.

Senior thesis (three or six credits, counting toward electives) and internship options available.

European History (3 Credits)

Courses with the European history attribute. All are three-credit courses. Examples of commonly taught courses are:

HISTÌý3000
Ancient Greece
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3020
The Roman Empire
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3030
The Byzantine World: Faith and Power in a Thousand-Year Empire
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3040
From Barbarians to Crusaders: Europe in the Early Middle Ages
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3050
From Cathedrals to Printing Presses: Europe in the Late Middle Ages
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3090
The Age of Renaissance
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3100
The Reformation Era
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3120
French Revolution and Napoleon, 1789-1815
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3140
Twentieth Century Europe: Era of World Wars, 1914-1945
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3250
World in Conflict Since 1945
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3280
Russia to 1905
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3290
Russia Since 1905
HISTÌý3320
Early Modern History of Spain:1469-1818
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3720
Cultural Encounters 1500-1700
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3760
Medieval Spain

Pre-1865 U.S. History (3 credits)

Courses with the Pre-1865 U.S. history attribute. All are three-credit courses. Examples ofÌýcommonly taughtÌýcourses are:

±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1600
History of the United States of America to 1865
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3480
U.S. Civil War and Reconstruction, 1850-1877
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3580
American Slavery
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3640
History of the American West
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3660
History of Nature in America
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3700
U.S. Constitutional History

Post-1865 U.S. History (3 Credits)

Courses with the Post-1865 U.S. history attribute. Examples ofÌýcommonly taughtÌýcourses are:

±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1610
History of the United States Since 1865
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3250
World in Conflict Since 1945
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3480
U.S. Civil War and Reconstruction, 1850-1877
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3500
Progressive Era to the Jazz Age, 1890-1920
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3600
U.S. History in Film
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3640
History of the American West
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3660
History of Nature in America
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3700
U.S. Constitutional History

World History (3 Credits)

Asian, African, Middle Eastern, or Latin American

Courses with the World history attribute. All are three-credit courses. Examples ofÌýcommonly taughtÌýcourses are:

HISTÌý1700China and Japan To 1600: Histories, Cultures, Identities3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý1710China and Japan Since 1600: Samurai, Revolutionaries, Entrepreneurs3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý2730Crossroads of the World: The Middle East and North Africa Through History3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3030The Byzantine World: Faith and Power in a Thousand-Year Empire3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3170Colonial Latin America3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3220Jesuits and Their Worlds3
HISTÌý3240History of Africa since 18843
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý3250World in Conflict Since 19453

Senior Research Seminars (3 Credits)

±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4900Seminar in European History3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4901Sem: American History3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4902Seminar in World History3

Internship (3 creditsÌý- may be taken twice)

±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4910Internship/History in Practice3-6

Senior Thesis (3-6 credits)

±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4990History Senior Thesis Prep (optional)3
±á±õ³§°ÕÌý4991History Senior Thesis3

Students can complete all or part of the history major at SLU’s campus in Madrid.Ìý

Learn More

2+SLU programs provide a guided pathway for students transferring from a partner institution.Ìý

History, B.A. (STLCC 2+SLU)