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The Master of Arts Program in the Social Sciences (MAPSS)
Director: John MacAloon, P 302, 702-8317
Preceptors: Dan Cook, P 324A, 702-2540; Elizabeth Davies, P 324A,
702-8319; Greg Downey, P 320A, 702-9230; Jill Dupont, P 320A,
702-5885; Sung Ho Kim, P 326, 702-5166; Michael Scott, P 326,
702-8318
Student Affairs Administrative Assistant: Betty McCarthy, P 306, 702-8312
The Master of Arts Program in the Social Sciences (MAPSS) makes it possible
for highly qualified students in the College to combine a B.A. program in
an undergraduate concentration with an interdisciplinary M.A. program in
the social sciences. Students are thereby enabled to augment their undergraduate
studies by placing their knowledge of a particular field in an interdisciplinary
context and continuing specialized work on a graduate level.
MAPSS concerns itself with general education at the graduate level by (1)
offering required core and methods courses (Social Sciences 300 and 301),
(2) facilitating programs of study crossing disciplinary lines, and (3)
encouraging M.A. papers with an interdisciplinary approach.
Application. Interested students must apply for the joint B.A./M.A.
program by February 1 of their third year in the College by submitting an
application to the Office of the Dean of Students of the Division of the
Social Sciences (F 108). The application must include a B.A. program worksheet
obtained from the College B.A./M.A. adviser. Applicants are expected to
have completed most of their Common Core requirements, to have entered their
concentration, and to have no more than three and no fewer than one course
remaining to complete the B.A. in what would normally be their fourth year
in the College. The application will be evaluated by the director and staff
of the M.A. program on the basis of the student's academic record, letters
of recommendation, GRE scores if available, and personal statement of intellectual
and academic goals. Admission to the M.A. program is highly competitive
and is also subject to approval by the College. Information may be obtained
from the program office, the director, or one of the preceptors.
Decisions are announced by early May. Students admitted to MAPSS enter joint
residence for the three quarters preceding the anticipated date of graduation,
during which time they are charged tuition at graduate rates.
Course Requirements. Students selected to participate in the joint degree
program fulfill all the normal Common Core, elective, and concentration
requirements for the B.A. On admission to the joint degree program, they
are allowed to simultaneously apply course credit from up to three graduate-level
courses in the social sciences, completed with a grade of B or better,
toward College requirements and toward the nine courses required for the
M.A. degree. The nine courses must include the core and methods courses
or an approved alternative as described below.
The MAPSS core course, Social Sciences 300 (Perspectives in Social Science
Analysis), follows an intellectual program similar to the present Common
Core social sciences sequences 101-102-103 and 121-122-123. B.A./M.A. students
who have taken either of these sequences are sometimes exempted from the
MAPSS core requirement. Social Sciences 300 is offered only in the autumn
quarter and a grade of B or better is required.
The MAPSS methods requirement is normally met through Social Sciences 301,
which deals with philosophical and operational aspects of various social
research methods. There is no mathematics or statistics prerequisite for
this course. Students who wish to develop specific methodological skills,
such as statistical, linguistic, or policy analysis, may petition to replace
Social Sciences 301 with a course meeting these criteria. Social Sciences
301 is offered only in the winter quarter.
Please note that students who are exempted from one or both of the required
MAPSS courses must select alternative courses to meet the requirement of
nine graduate-level courses for the M.A. degree.
The balance of the program is worked out by the student in consultation
with the MAPSS director and preceptor. Students should note that they must
have a B average in their graduate work. Two of the nine required
graduate courses may be taken on a P/N basis; the others, including
the core and methods courses, require letter grades.
The M.A. Paper. In addition to their course requirements, all students
in the B.A./M.A. program must complete an M.A. paper. Joint students in
a concentration program where a B.A. paper is required may--subject to the
approval of their B.A. paper adviser, M.A. paper adviser, undergraduate
adviser, and the director of the M.A. program, and with the understanding
that it will be based on substantial additional research and analysis--submit
an M.A. paper proposal related to their B.A. essay. Students may not, however,
receive credit for the B.A. and the M.A. degrees for the same piece of work.
The usual criteria for evaluating both B.A. and M.A. papers apply. In the
case of the M.A. paper, this involves (1) approval of the paper proposal
by a regular faculty member and the MAPSS preceptor, (2) supervision of
the work by that faculty member and preceptor, and (3) approval of the paper
by the faculty member and preceptor--the paper must meet requisite scholarly
standards and receive a minimum grade of B.
Interdisciplinary Concentrations. Consult the MAPSS brochure for sample
course listings for these concentrations: Individual and Society, Urban
Studies, Cultural Dimensions of Social Change, Area Studies, Philosophy
and History of the Social Sciences, Policy Dimensions of Social and Economic
Change, and Individualized Study.
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