IGE Minor: Global Humanities
Description
Mission and Values
Minor Requirements
The Global Humanities Minor complements any major by developing critical thinking, teamwork, and transferable skills valued across industries, especially in an increasingly global and unpredictable job market. For STEM students, it highlights strong humanities competence and global awareness—key traits of well-rounded, competitive STEAM graduates.
- IGE 1200 - Faith, Passion, and Power: The Saga of the Ancient and Medieval Worlds (3) [A2 if taken with 1100 or C2 if taken solo]
- IGE 2250 - The Stranger: Encountering Difference and Creating Coexistence (3) [C2 or D1]
- IGE 2350 - Rival Empires: Representation and Resistance (3) [C1]
and
- IGE 2150 - A Sustainable Tomorrow: From Industrialization to Ethical Environmentalism (3) [C2 orD 1]
or
Note(s):
Students admitted before Fall 2021 may use IGE 2100, IGE 2200, and IGE 2300 for their minor.
IGE Upper Division
Select at least one IGE course
- IGE 3100 - Interdisciplinary Perspectives: Capstone Seminar (3) [C3 or D4]
- IGE 3300 - Demons, the Undead, and the Monstrous Other (3) [C3]
- IGE 3400 - Peoples and Cultures of Central Asia: Life along the Silk Road (3) [D4]
Non-IGE
Select from courses below to complete electives
- AH 3343 - Arts of Korea (3)
- AH 3311 - Art of Ancient Egypt and the Near East (3)
- AH 3341 - Art and Architecture of India (3)
- AH 3351 - Arts of Mexico, Central and South America (3)
- ANT 3050 - Archaeoastronomy (3) [B5]
- ENG 3011: Literature, Power, and Politics (3)
- ENG 4740: Chinese Civilization and Culture (3)
- ENG 4730 - Colonial and Postcolonial Literature (3)
- EWS 3800 - Women in Global Perspective (3) [D4]
- EWS 4100 - Art, Community, and Social Change (3)
- PHL 4750 - Global Justice (3)
- SPN 3420 - Latin American Civilization (3) [C3]
- TH 3110 - Developments in World Theatre I (3)
- URP 4220 - The Just City (3) [D4]
FAQ
The Global Humanities Minor is intended to compliment diverse majors across campus through its cultivation of “big-picture” thinking, its focus on teamwork and the transferable skills that employers desire, and its conscious integration of diverse polytechnic disciplines.
By adding a Global Humanities Minor to majors in STEM fields (as well as to other majors such as Hospitality Management and Agriculture), students demonstrate key skills that will make them more competitive in their fields. While it benefits all majors, the Global Humanities Minor is of particular interest to STEM majors at CPP. The acronym STEM has now been largely replaced by STEAM, a shift celebrating the renewed emphasis of the value of the arts and humanities for the sciences. Students who adopt the Global Humanities Minor signal to employers that they have strong competence in humanities skills and global awareness, making them true STEAM graduates.
Moreover, fields such as engineering have advocated a “T-shaped approach” to education. In this model, the vertical line represents the core of the engineering degree which must be closely integrated with the horizontal line that represents a strong Liberal Arts foundation. A Liberal Arts foundation bridges academic subjects such as literature, philosophy, mathematics, and social and physical sciences (as distinct from professional and technical subjects) to develop advanced skills in “ethics, global knowledge, intercultural literacy, and strong communication and [collaboration].”
The skills students develop through the Global Humanities Minor give them the flexibility and broader ability to navigate an increasingly unpredictable and global world of work. Students in STEM fields who wish to have the full range of their polytechnic skills evinced on their transcripts can pick up the minor at any point in their career at CPP.