Dec 04, 2024  
Undergraduate Catalog 2023-2024 
    
Undergraduate Catalog 2023-2024 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Latin American and Latinx Studies Concentration


Aiala Levy, Ph.D., Director

The Latin American and Latinx Studies (LALS) concentration is designed to advance students’ awareness and understanding of Latin America and people of Latin American heritage. It seeks to provide general knowledge of Latin America and its diaspora alongside in-depth knowledge of specific countries, regions, cultures, and communities. The concentration is open to all majors and consists of courses from a variety of disciplines with a primary focus on Latin America and/or its diaspora.

LALS courses fulfill general education requirements in the Humanities (World Languages, History, and Literature), Social Sciences, Natural Sciences, and Philosophy/Theology.  Many courses also carry Cultural Diversity and Level II EP Writing (EPW) designations along with other general education requirements.

The LALS concentration complements many existing majors, helping to prepare students for a wide range of careers. LALS concentrators have gone on to work in business, education, government, law, medicine, ministry, and the non-profit sector, among other fields.


 Language Requirement

Demonstrate familiarity by earning a grade of “C” or better in SPAN 212  or beyond or by challenge exam.

Core Courses (9-18 credits):

Supporting Spanish Language Courses (no more than 9 credits):

Spanish proficiency beyond SPAN 212  is not required but students can apply up to three courses (9 credits) towards the concentration from the following Spanish language offerings.

Additional Information

1May be used as a supporting course when course content is specific to Latin America and/or its diaspora.

2Restricted to senior History majors or students with a Latin American and Latinx Studies concentration or major, when course content is specific to Latin American and/or Latinx history.

3A three-credit intersession travel course to Mexico. Credit load and tuition are applied to Spring Semester.

*Students who study abroad or take other appropriate classes with an emphasis on Latin America and/or its diaspora may petition to substitute classes and are encouraged to speak with the director of the program.