2015-2016 Graduate catalog [Archived Catalog]
History Department
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Return to: Departments & Programs
Department Chairperson: Kurt H. Hackemer, Ph.D.
Graduate Program Director: David I. Burrow, Ph.D.
Department of History
East Hall, Room 207
414 East Clark Street
Vermilion, SD 57069
Phone: 605-677-5218
history@usd.edu
www.usd.edu/history
FACULTY
Professors:
Steven J. Bucklin, Ph.D., University of Iowa. Specialization: Modern U.S., Diplomatic, Cold War, Vietnam.
Kurt H. Hackemer, Ph.D., Texas A&M University. Specialization: 19th-Century U.S., Military, Civil War.
Clayton Lehmann, Ph.D., University of Chicago. Specialization: Ancient, Medieval and Early Modern Europe.
Associate Professors:
Scott Breuninger, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin. Specialization: European Intellectual, Early Modern, Modern British, Irish, and Atlantic.
David I. Burrow, Ph.D., University of Wisconsin. Specialization: Russia and Modern Europe.
Molly P. Rozum, Ph.D., University of North Carolina. Specialization: U.S. Women, Great Plains and Canadian Borderlands, South Dakota.
Assistant Professors:
Elise Boxer, Ph.D., Arizona State University. Specialization: American Indian Studies/History, Mormon History and 19th/20th Century History.
Nicole Hamonic, Ph.D., University of Toronto. Specialization: Medieval Europe, Society and Religion.
Sara E. Lampert, Ph.D., University of Michigan. Specialization: Colonial and Early America, Women and Gender, Race and Ethnicity, Popular Culture, Religion, Reform.
DEGREE
Program Description
The Department of History offers the only graduate program in History in the state of South Dakota. Students can focus on a variety of areas in American and European History. Library holdings for graduate research are especially strong in regional, Native American, and 20th-Century United States history. Opportunities exist for master’s students to present papers at the annual Student History Conference and multiple regional history conferences. Students already enrolled in the School of Law may pursue a joint M.A./J.D. degree.
ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS
- Completed Graduate Application form found at: https://usd-web.usd.edu/apps/grad-app/login.cfm and a non-refundable application fee of $35.
- One official transcript verifying receipt of an undergraduate degree and previous graduate credit (in English or with translation) must accompany an application. Official transcript of all academic work at the undergraduate and graduate levels are required for international students. The USD Graduate School and/or academic departments retain the right to require an Educational Credential Evaluators/World Education Services (ECE/WES) evaluation for a student if such an evaluation is deemed necessary.
- Baccalaureate degree must be from an institution with full regional accreditation for that degree. A minimum undergraduate cumulative GPA of 3.0 on conferred degree and/or graduate cumulative GPA of 3.0 or better, based on a 4.0 scale, on all graduate coursework is required for full admission. Each graduate program may admit students on provisional status per university policy.
- Applicants with degrees from countries other than the United States who have obtained an undergraduate or graduate degree from a regionally accredited American college or university are not required to submit an approved English proficiency exam score. For all other applicants, a minimum score of 79 on the Internet-Based TOEFL (iBT) or 550 on the Paper-Based TOEFL (PBT), a minimum IELTS score of 6.0, or a minimum PTE score of 53 is required for graduate admission. Applicants from or who have obtained an undergraduate or graduate degree from these English-speaking countries (UK, Australia, Canada [except Quebec], Ireland, or New Zealand) are not required to submit an approved English proficiency exam score if their academic records indicate that English was the classroom language for the majority of their schoolwork.
- Applicants are required to submit a statement of purpose.
Additional Program Admission Requirements:
- The GRE General test is required; the score is considered along with the other application materials. Applicants may substitute the LSAT for the GRE General test.
- Applicants should have a minimum of 18 credit hours of undergraduate History coursework (12 hours of which must be upper division).
- Three (3) academic (preferred) or professional letters of recommendation are required.
Subject to faculty approval, those who do not meet one or more of the criteria above may be admitted on a provisional basis. Provisional status disqualifies applicants for Graduate Assistantships. Graduate transfer credits are limited to six hours and must be approved by the Department.
Academic Standards
The History Department adheres to the academic standards and measures of progress set forth by the Graduate School.
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