2023-2024 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
History, Politics, and International Studies Department
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Department Faculty
History
Richard Follett
Jay Green
Alicia Jackson
Paul Morton, Department Chair and History program coordinator
Political Science
Peter Hill, Visiting Professor
Cale Horne, Political Science and International Studies programs coordinator
International Studies
In addition to the above faculty, the International Studies Program uses faculty members from other departments.
Department Goals
The Department of History, Politics and International Studies believes that historical thinking is an essential feature of faithful living. In our history classes, we aim to help cultivate in students the skills, knowledge, and virtues necessary for thinking historically. To think historically is to read all dimensions of the creation with a keen and subtle awareness of how they were shaped by processes rooted in the remote and the recent past. It also involves understanding past events, ideas, institutions, and civilizations within their thick and varied contexts. The department offers both a major and minor in history, and a concentration in art history, to achieve these goals. We also believe in the importance of civic thinking for a vibrant society.
Our political science classes develop civic thinking by providing students with the theories, analytical skills, empirical methods, and research opportunities to understand the patterns of conflict and cooperation that characterize relations within and between states and peoples. The department offers a major and minor in political science to achieve these goals.
By its very nature-complex, interconnected, change-prone, and operating across both levels of analysis and time-the academic study of international phenomena is not amenable to traditional disciplinary boundaries. In recognition of this reality, the international studies (INS) major is multi-disciplinary, with an emphasis in the core disciplines of political studies, history and economics, together with intensive training in foreign languages and research methods. In keeping with the commitment to integrated learning and a biblical consciousness of Christ’s preeminence over all things, the international studies program seeks to unfold the implications of this preeminence by studying the history, politics, and economics of the created order in global context, and by treating the international dimension of human behaviors and institutions as a distinct and critically important area of inquiry.
For General Education
The department will help students taking history or political science courses within the core curriculum to understand the shape, political dynamics, and historical roots of the modern world and to ask questions within their own major fields informed by the realities of historical development.
For the History Major
Majors are further assisted in developing a deeper understanding of certain aspects of the past and in thinking critically about the issues and problems of teaching and writing history as Christians. To that end, Introduction to History, Historiography, Senior Seminar in History, and the Capstone Project are required for all history majors. Majors in history at Covenant have led to vocations in teaching, journalism, law, government service, pastoral ministry, academic scholarship, and a host of other fields that benefit from a strong foundation in research skills, writing aptitude, and general training in the liberal arts. For further information, interested students may contact Dr. Paul Morton (paul.morton@covenant.edu).
For the Political Science Major
Majors study the actors and institutions that generate cooperation and conflict in society and among states. The starting point for this study is an acknowledgment of human beings as fallen image-bearers and government as an ordained institution, and requires that students be taught the discipline’s scientific basis, values, constraints, theoretical foundations and debates, ethical considerations, content across disciplinary fields, methods of inquiry, and analytical skills.
Watch as Dr. Cale Horne, Dr. Peter Hill, and Dr. Anna Rannou describe the Political Science major in this video playlist:
For the International Studies Major
Majors will develop a deeper understanding of various international phenomena and will be challenged to think and write critically about these phenomena as Christians. To this end, a common international studies core is required for all international studies majors. Students will emerge from the international studies program with a grasp of the major theories, methods and substantive issues pertinent to the study of international political, social and economic phenomena, coupled with advanced training in a foreign language that will prepare the individual for a career with international dimensions. Specifically, the major will prepare students to pursue careers in government, law, journalism, international non- or inter-governmental organizations, business, the military or academia, among others.
Students interested in a POL or INS major may contact Dr. Cale Horne (cale.horne@covenant.edu) for more information.
Teacher Certification
History Pre-MAT
Students interested in teaching history for grades 6-12 should complete a BA degree with a major in history and then enroll in the one-year Master of Arts in Teaching at Covenant College. It is recommended that the Education Minor be completed. Three of the courses in the minor, EDU 121 Introduction to Teaching , EDU 222 Educational Psychology and EDU 361 Education of Exceptional Children , are required for admission to the MAT. For information about certification, see Teacher Certification under the Education section of the catalog.
Additionally, pre-MAT history majors are encouraged to take the following specific courses as part of their history major:
HIS 218 Studies in U.S. Constitutional History , or
HIS 305 History of Political Theory , or
HIS 340 20th Century U.S. Foreign Relations , or
HIS 217 Presidential Politics and Elections
For more information, contact:
mat@covenant.edu or lindsey.fain@covenant.edu
706.419.1406
grad.covenant.edu
Political Science Pre-MAT
Students who are interested in teaching political science for grades 6-12 should complete the political science major or the history major and then enroll in the one-year Master of Arts in Teaching at Covenant College. It is recommended that the Education Minor be completed. Three of the courses in the minor, EDU 121 Introduction to Teaching , EDU 222 Educational Psychology and EDU 361 Education of Exceptional Children , are required for admission to the MAT. For information about certification, see Teacher Certification under the Education section of the catalog.
In addition, they are encouraged to take the following History and Political Science courses:
HIS 218 Studies in U.S. Constitutional History
HIS 305 History of Political Theory
POL 200 Comparative Politics
POL 202 American Government
POL 210 International Relations
POL 217 Presidential Politics and Elections
For more information, contact:
mat@covenant.edu or lindsey.fain@covenant.edu
706.419.1406
grad.covenant.edu
ProgramsMajorMinorPre-ProfessionalCoursesHistory CoursesInternational Studies CoursesPolitical Science Courses
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