combined concentrations
Joint Concentrations
with Government as a Primary or Secondary Field
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Requirements and Instructions for Petitioning
Some students find that pursuing a joint concentration, which combines Government with another field, better accommodates their interests. A joint concentration is a combined pursuit in which the student develops a program that integrates two fields in a coherent plan of study; it is not the equivalent of majoring in one subject and minoring in another.
Any student wishing to create a joint concentration of Government with any field must submit a petition to the Undergraduate Program Office for consideration by the Faculty Concentration Committee. The committee reviews petitions once each semester; the petition deadline is a couple of weeks before Add Day.
This review process is intended to ensure that you have given careful thought to both the opportunities and potential problems that may accompany being a joint concentrator. It will help you to identify more clearly why you wish to pursue a joint concentration and what will be involved in fulfilling your objectives. In general, the most persuasive petitions come from students with superb grades whose proposed plan of study has been endorsed by a faculty member in the Government Department.
The Undergraduate Program recommends that you take the following steps if you plan to petition for a joint concentration:
FIRST: Discuss your plans with your Concentration Advisor. He or she will be able to give you some perspective on the special burdens placed upon joint concentrators, as well as the intellectual rewards of joining disciplines. The Concentration Advisor can also assist you in bringing more focus to your plans.
SECOND: Write a petition for a joint concentration. The petition should have two parts:
(1) A cover letter of two to five pages that addresses the following questions:
(a) What are the goals you hope to achieve through a joint concentration?
(b) Why is it not possible to achieve your goals by working within an existing concentration and supplementing your work with elective courses from the other discipline? What will your joint concentration allow you to do that you could not do within an existing concentration?
(c) Does the joint concentration you propose have the same qualities--in particular, breadth and depth--as the existing concentrations?
(2) Two proposed programs of study, each listing courses by semester, using both course numbers and titles, and reporting the grades received or expected in the courses already completed or nearly completed.
(a) One program should lay out the courses (including courses you already have taken) you propose to make up your joint concentration.
(b) The other program should lay out the courses you would take (including courses you already have taken) if you were confined to an existing concentration.
(3) A copy of your transcript (does not need to be official).
THIRD: Have your Concentration Advisor read through your petition and offer comments before it is submitted to the Faculty Concentration Committee.
Government Concentrators will receive an e-mail announcement each semester with the deadline for petitions. This deadline is generally a couple of weeks before the add/drop deadline (the fifth Monday of the semester). Decisions will be sent out just before that deadline so that students have the opportunity to adjust their courses accordingly. Again, successful petitions usually require that students have excellent grades and have the endorsement of a faculty member in the Government Department.
For Classes of 2004 and any class later than 2004:
Joint concentration, Government Primary (15 half-courses, 9 in Government)
A. Field Requirements: one half-course in each of the four subfields. The four subfields are:
1.Political Theory
2.Comparative Government
3.American Government
4.International Relations
B. Tutorial Requirements:
1.Gov 97: Sophomore Tutorial, 1 semester, students will choose between Gov 97a and Gov 97b in the Spring semester of their sophomore year
2.Gov 98/90: 2 semesters of junior tutorial or junior seminar, may be drawn from either department
3.Gov 99: senior thesis writing tutorial 2 terms
C. Additional Government Courses/Junior Tutorial (two half-courses)
The primary concentrator must take two government half-courses in addition to the field requirement, sophomore tutorial, and the senior thesis. (If the student takes one or both of the junior seminars or tutorials in the Gov Department, they will also count for the two additional Government courses)
D. Secondary concentration courses:
Primary concentrators must take at least 6 half-courses in the secondary field.
SUMMARY: Joint concentration, Government Secondary (5 half-courses in Government)
A. Sophomore Tutorial: Government 97, one semester
B. Field requirement: Two half-courses in each of two subfields (American, IR, Comparative, Theory)
C. Reminder: Secondary concentrators must write a senior thesis.
Page Last Updated: June 15, 2007, 11:50 am |