Students
Tuition Fee
Not Available
Start Date
Not Available
Medium of studying
Not Available
Duration
Not Available
Details
Program Details
Degree
Bachelors
Major
Anthropology
Area of study
Social Sciences
Course Language
English
About Program

Program Overview


Program Overview

Faculty: Faculty of Arts Degree Type: Bachelor of Arts Delivery: In-person Department: Anthropology Department


About Anthropology

Anthropology is the study of humans. Of course, scholars working in other disciplines also study humans: sociologists study human societies; medical researchers study human bodies; philosophers study human thought. Anthropologists draw on ideas and knowledge from all of these fields and then add their own particular perspective. As a StFX Anthropology student, you will look at the social world and ask fundamental questions about the development and behaviour of human societies. Exceptional faculty members guide you to think critically about the development and behavior of human society, explore the way human cultures differ, and explain what it is that makes humans different from other animals.


Why study Anthropology at StFX?

Here, you’ll engage with big issues in small classes taught by a team of academics committed to providing a the very best education. You’ll join like-minded students engaging in projects that take on social justice issues at StFX, in the community, and beyond.


As the majority of research is field work, both local and international, learning often extends beyond classroom walls. StFX professors have active projects across the world and annually involve and welcome students in their research.


First year at a glance

In your first year, you will begin by being introduced to anthropological perspectives and methods in human evolution, archaeology, social anthropology, and linguistic anthropology. We introduce students to all four fields of anthropological study — physical anthropology, archaeology, social anthropology, and linguistic anthropology — in Introduction to Physical Anthropology/Archaeology (ANTH 111) and Introduction to Socio-cultural Anthropology (ANTH 112).


Future opportunities

The study of people can take you into almost any career path, anywhere in the world, including education, health care, museum curation, social work, international development, government, organizational psychology, non-profit management, publishing, and forensics. Anthropologists work in local or international development, in diverse careers related to First Nations peoples, mediating cultural and social interactions, social activism, political, legal, education, tourist or business arenas and archaeological cultural resource management.


  • Education / Teacher
  • Film
  • Lawyer
  • Policy Maker

Residences

Bishops Hall

Bishops Hall was opened as a student residence in 1963. It is so named because of the individual residences it encompasses: Burke, Fraser, and Plessis, named in honour of three bishops who had early connections with the Diocese of Antigonish. Students in residence at Bishops Hall will feel right at home and live in comfort. Various amenities include shared kitchen facilities on the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th floor, laundry facilities, room storage, common areas and a tv lounge.


Governors Hall

The Governors Hall is a stately student residence located close to the Charles V. Keating Centre. In addition to the Hall Lounge and Dining room, students will find such amenities as full shared kitchen facilities on the 2nd, 3rd, and 4th floors, and in-building laundry facilities. Study lounges can also be found throughout the building, as well as a TV lounge on the 2nd floor.


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