The History Major at Hanover


Members of the History Department welcome students to the study of history at Hanover College. History majors, in consultation with their advisers, are expected to develop a well-balanced major program combining breadth and depth and including both introductory and upper-level courses from different areas of the history curriculum. History majors are required to complete nine history courses, including the Independent Study (History 471) but not including Foundations of the Modern Age (History 111), and to complete the comprehensive exam with a passing grade. Majors, especially those who did not participate in Eurasia (Id 111, 112, 211), are encourged to take courses in the Western Civilization "core" sequence (History 211-214). The history program includes: The major program allows considerable room for flexilibity and choice. The department endorses the development of independent plans of study, including directed studies and internships.

History majors are also encouraged to pursue studies in disciplines related to history and to seek to integrate their work in those disciplines with their work as historians. The department recommends that students participate in the expanding number of multidisciplinary courses offered at Hanover and that majors continue work in a foreign language beyond the expectations of the general degree requirement.

History majors who plan to teach history and social studies in secondary schools should fulfill the teaching certification requirements established by the Education Department, including requirements for primary and supporting fields in World Civilization and U.S. History.

The history faculty are committed to providing majors with assistance in developing coherent and thoughtful academic programs and in formulating post-graduate plans. They believe that quality advising is central to the mission of the department and of the liberal arts. Advising should not simply be a matter of registering for classes, acquiring signatures, and shuffling papers; advising should complement and extend the objectives of teaching. Students, together with their advisers, can discuss, for example, the relationship between different courses and disciplines, the coherence of academic programs, the relationship between particular requirements, courses, or programs and the bearing that academic options will have on post-graduate plans. Good advising must also include giving help to students experiencing difficulties inside or outside of class. Together with the Career Center, major advisers will assist students in identifying and exploring post-graduate education and career options. The history department is also developing an Alumni Career Network to provide students with opportunity to discuss educational and career plans with former Hanover history majors currently employed in a variety of occupations.

The History Department seeks to promote and sustain a community among history faculty and students. The History Club, a student organization open to majors and non-majors alike, sponsors a variety of activities to bring history enthusiasts together. In recent years, for example, the History Club organized a day trip to a local monastery, invited historians to speak on the Hanover campus, and sponsored visits to local Madison historic sites. The Hanover Historical Review, a student-edited journal of student history papers, seeks to extend interest in research and writing beyond the classroom and to promote quality undergraduate scholarship. The History Department seeks to maintain contact with and support history majors after they have graduated from Hanover. The Alumni section of the department's web site is the most recent effort to encourage conversations between and among alumni, faculty, and current students, in this case using the technology of the internet. The History Department wishes to celebrate the community that has emerged among history faculty and students in recent years, a community founded upon mutual respect, enthusiasm for history, and a shared commitment to the enduring value of teaching, scholarship, and the liberal arts tradition.