History is one of the most desired academic degrees amongst students when it comes to pursuing a Bachelor of Arts.
History degrees are designed to teach you to move beyond yourself and envision other worlds, to explore the interplay between material circumstances and human character. History combines the careful analysis of evidence with compelling storytelling. Moreover, History degrees aim to increase cultural sensitivity and literacy.
This degree is divided into various areas of expertise such as Classical History or Art History, which will help students gain relevant knowledge for themselves.
History is one of the most versatile undergraduate majors, due to the fact that it touches upon all forms of human endeavour from arts and languages to science and economics.
Candidates studying a History course will also be taught how to effectively collect, analyse, interpret, and arrange a wide variety of sources into persuasive arguments. Thus, having these skills will increase the chance of any graduate finding a job, no matter if it is in this field or not.
A report from Georgetown University’s Center on Education illustrates that graduates from History majors have the highest salary amongst graduates from all other humanities majors.
History courses are usually a three-year commitment and offer many academic programmes ranging from foundational courses to specialised ones. Some universities even have site excavations, through which students gain more practical knowledge.
Like most of the degrees, any History course concludes with a dissertation in any chosen area of interest.
Recommending this college to anyone who wants to expand their learning in a cooperative and welcoming space. You will meet people from all different backgrounds and countries, with all different accents and stories, and you’ll continue meeting new people every time you step foot on campus. The choices to pick regarding to your studies are stupendous. I got to study Greek Myth, English Drama, Revolutionary Russia, Comics and Fantasy, International Politics, and many more polarising modules due to the impressive choice category.
View moreI started in UCD last September and was blown away by the facilities the universities had on offer. The campus is huge with 500-seat lecture halls, dozens of sports pitches, countless cafés and restaurants and four libraries. There are amenities that regular universities don’t have like a pharmacy and even a cinema! The campus is also very green, with swans and ducks in the three lakes and squirrels and foxes scurrying around the place. It’s a beautiful campus during warm weather. It has very good public transport links also and is very accessible. The nightlife is great with buses running to the city and back all night long.
Many of my lecturers have excellent reputations and are internationally recognised in their field. They are very engaging and will always help you if you need it. The workload is also very manageable.
However, life on campus is expensive. Profit is a main target of the University, and is too often prioritised over the needs of students. Accommodation in UCD is the most expensive in the country, and resit exam fees are also high. The Access centre are great in supporting low income students but UCD is definitely an upper class, somewhat elitist university.