The Africana Studies (BA) provides historical and cultural understanding centering around African descended people. Students who successfully complete the Africana Studies (BA) program will be able to:
1. Use disciplinary concepts, analytical skills, writing, and research methods that engage topics on people and cultures of African descent in the United States as well as the Caribbean, Latin America, Africa, and Europe.
2. Study cultural and historical aspects that include knowledge and interpretation of African, African American, and African diasporic traditions, periods, and geographies.
3. Correctly cite primary and secondary sources that center African descended peoples. Sources should demonstrate social, political, economic, historical, literary, artistic, or psychological interdisciplinarity.
4. Employ Africana Studies’ foundational concepts and paradigms to conduct interdisciplinary analysis of critical issues for Black communities both domestic and abroad. Work should demonstrate a firm understanding of the dynamics of race and culture and resultant effects on societies.
5. Demonstrate learning and oral communication skills via public presentation in an academic setting and to general audiences. Presentations should have social relevance for improving Black communities both domestically and globally.