History, Anthropology, and Philosophy

North Georgia College & State University offers a Liberal Arts program that provides a sound foundation for a variety of professions including law, business, teaching and government service.  While flexibility and fun are important strengths of the history major, employability and practicality are equally valued. As a history major it is important that you consider future "profits" in more ways than just starting salaries or the immediate state of the job market.

There are many aspects of your total college experience that will prepare you for employment. Your chances for employment will be enhanced more by the experiences that enable you to develop marketable skills, than by the courses you choose. Moreover, the benefits of education do not come automatically. To build skills for employment, you must be an active participant in the total educational process, rather than only passive recipients of college degrees and courses.

With this in mind, the value of a history degree becomes clearer. Consider, first of all, that very few people stay in the same line of work over a lifetime. Most switch jobs an average of seven times and even change entire careers. Thus, what is initially crucial for advancement is not specialized training, but a field of study that emphasizes general understanding, intellectual inquiry and a cultivated curiosity.

People need knowledge that teaches them how to learn and how to set goals that they can attain. The ability to think critically and judge wisely are skills that are at the heart of a traditional liberal arts degree. Because of the difficulty of predicting which skills will be in demand even four years from now, let alone over a lifetime, a student's best career preparation is one that emphasizes the basic skills of initiative, literacy, analytic thinking, and an adequate understanding of human behavior and world events.

The preparation to meet that challenge is what the History, Anthropology, and Philosophy Department offers you.

Department News

HIST, ANTH, & PHIL DEPT. 2-Year Course Schedule

STUDENT SPOTLIGHT  Nicole Bronsted,former History major who graduated last semester, won “first place for her social sciences presentation” (history paper on Kaiser Wilhelm—also published in etudes historiques).  Please see attached article. (http://ung.edu/news/articles/2013/02/ung-students-earn-recognition-at-honors-conference.php).  Also, the Alumni Association presents the Paul M. Hutcherson Outstanding Student Awards each year to a male and female student who demonstrates the highest ideals of citizenship through their accomplishments on campus or in home or community life.  We are proud to announce that Nicole Bronsted is also the recipient of this award.  Congratulations Nicole!

 
Faculty Spotlight

Bricker

Dr. George Wrisley, Assistant Professor of Philosophy, gave a presentation entitled "The Buddha Still Rides a Bike: Wittgenstein, Dōgen, and the Entanglement of Language and Enlightenment" at Komaba Campus in Tokyo on December 19, 2012.   Please see the following article, 
http://utcp.c.u-tokyo.ac.jp/blog/2013/01/george-wrisley-the-buddha-stil/index_en.php