Nov 23, 2024  
2024-2025 SLCC General Catalog 
  
2024-2025 SLCC General Catalog

Anthropology: AS


Associate of Science | 61 credits minimum

Program Website
Academic Advising

Program Description
Anthropology is the study of human and nonhuman primates. Anthropology is distinguished from other disciplines by its emphasis on a holistic, interdisciplinary, comparative, and evolutionary approaches to the study of humans and their relatives. Anthropology subfields include cultural anthropology, linguistic anthropology, archaeology, and biological anthropology, and anthropologists consider past and present culture, language, and biology essential for a complete understanding of humankind. The Anthropology Department provides a wide variety of courses that range from general surveys to specialized topics as well as internships and a field school. The program goes beyond an emphasis on coverage and content; it is designed to teach students to think critically and communicate effectively. Additionally, most core course requirements carry the General Education designation. This means that this program is also a vehicle for students to broaden their perspectives and deepen their understanding of the world around them.

Career Opportunities
Higher education, research, non-profit organizations, businesses (sensitivity training, international relations), human resource departments, marketing, cultural translation organizations, museums, local, state, government, private, or Cultural Resource Management archaeological or preservation firms, state historical departments, national and state parks/monuments, medical field, public health, zoos, labs, law enforcement, etc.

Transfer/Articulation Information
Please refer to the Student Resources section of the SLCC University Transfer webpage.

Estimated Cost for Students
Tuition and student fees: http://www.slcc.edu/student/financial/tuition-fees.aspx

NOTE: Fees may vary based upon specific registration and are subject to change.

General Education Requirements


Complete all General Education courses. Refer to Notes for program specific requirements and recommendations. 

  

Program General Education Notes


RECOMMENDED:

Quantitative Literacy (QL): MATH 1040

American Institutions (AI): HIST 1700 or
                                               POLS 1100

Courses that meet General Education requirements may be used to meet program requirements. If this option is chosen, student must complete additional elective courses to meet the total credit hour requirement. Please meet with an academic advisor to discuss options.

Program Requirements


Time to Completion & Graduation Map


  • Anthropology AS: Full-time  
  • Time to completion is four semesters based on a full-time minimum of 15 credits per semester. Less than 15 credits per semester will increase time to completion.

Program Learning Outcomes


Program learning outcome alignment with Student Learning Outcomes  in brackets.

  • Students will demonstrate that they understand and can apply the theories and methods used by anthropologists (e.g. the holistic approach, fieldwork, the scientific method, etc.) [1,3,4,8]
  • Students will demonstrate that they understand cultural diversity and can communicate about cultures using cultural relativity. They will employ ethnographic research methods in the community and interpret data. [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9]
  • Students will demonstrate that they understand and can communicate about archaeological methods and techniques and how archaeologists interpret cultural remains and data to reconstruct past life-ways. [1,2,3,4,7,8]
  • Students will demonstrate that they understand and can interpret the biological variation of past and present humans and their closest relatives, as well as evolutionary theories and processes. They will effectively communicate their understanding of the evidence for human evolution. [1,2,3,4,7,8]
  • Students will have the skill to post a signature assignment and reflection on an electronic portfolio; use scholarly publications in their research with regard to the writing; use credible sources in their work and properly cite them, analyze empirical data, make observations, and generate and test hypotheses; and compare, contrast, interpret, and weigh multiple disparate lines of evidence and points of view. [1,2,3,4,8]