Overview

The BA program in Chicana and Chicano Studies is committed to the practice of different forms of scholarship and pedagogy and to the promotion of critical thinking about such issues as gender, sexuality, social action, language, race, ethnicity, class, assimilation/acculturation paradigms, and indigenous traditions. The literary and visual arts often … For more content click the Read More button below.

Capstone Program

The Chicana and Chicano Studies major is a designated capstone program. Students have options for completing a senior honors thesis, individual research, or senior project under the direction of a faculty member. Alternatively, students may elect to complete an upper-division course that includes additional coursework culminating in completion of a … For more content click the Read More button below.

Learning Outcomes

1.
Demonstrated skills and expertise, including research, analysis, and writing
2.
Demonstrated familiarity and competence in a range of interdisciplinary methodologies and approaches
3.
Demonstrated ability to identify and analyze appropriate primary and secondary sources, material evidence, and other primary documents
4.
Demonstrated mastery and integration of knowledge and learned abilities
5.
Demonstrated ability to use knowledge gained in classroom to conceive and execute projects
6.
Demonstrated broad knowledge of fundamentals acquired through coursework, as informed by race, class, gender, and sexuality paradigms
7.
Conception and execution of an original research project that identifies and engages with a topic relevant to the student’s area of concentration
8.
Presentation of work to peers for discussion and critique

Entry to the Major

Transfer Students

Major Requirements

The Major

Honors Program

Optional Multidisciplinary Senior Thesis

Policies

The Major Policies

Honors Program