Public history uses the past to serve a variety of contemporary needs.
It entails the application of the skills and methods of history to the
study, management, preservation, and interpretation of historical records
and artifacts. A public historian is a professional who can put
his or her knowledge and skills to use in our society in such diverse
activities as museum, historical society or archival work; neighborhood
or community history projects; historic preservation and cultural resource
management programs; and local, state, or federal research projects.
Working with architects, librarians, business people, government policy
analysts, exhibit designers, or history enthusiasts, public historians
contribute to our knowledge and understanding of the past.
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The Public History Curriculum
Public historians possess the desire and ability to understand and
explain past human behavior in a variety of different contexts.
The three public history program options at Loyola rest upon a combination
of solid historical training and skill development in applied history
research. Loyolas curriculum serves to (1) introduce students
to the skills necessary to successfully undertake applied research;
(2) provide students with in-depth knowledge in a traditional field
of history both to increase their knowledge about the past and acquire
a sophisticated understanding of the historical process; (3) acquaint
students with the different career options available in public history;
(4) offer students practical experience in public history; and (5)
make students aware of the professional and ethical dimensions of
public history.
Applied Coursework
479 Public History
Media
480 Public History: Method and Theory
481 Management of Historical Resources
482 Archives and Records Management
483 Oral History: Method and Practice
487 Management of History Museums
581 Practicum in Public History
582 Public History Internship
Master's Program in Public History
The Masters Program in Public History is a thirty-three hour
program in which students must complete fifteen hours of public history
courses: 480, 481, 482, 483, and 487. Because practical experience
in an area of public history activity is an important component of
public history training, all students must also complete an internship
(HIST 582). Internships are tailored to fit the needs of individual
students as well as those of the host agency or organization.
Additional depth in an area of public history can be secured through
a public history practicum (HIST 581).
In addition to their public history courses, students must take HIST
400 and three courses in a minor field. The minor field may
be United States History, Medieval History, British/Irish History,
or Modern European History. At least one, preferably two, of
the courses in this field should be 400-level courses. These
courses provide background in current historical research on particular
subjects. Original research projects are pursued in 500-level
seminar courses.
Public history students will prepare a masters essay (HIST
599) on a topic within their major or minor field under the supervision
of a history faculty member. Students should work out their
topic with the supervising professor before advancing beyond their
eighteenth hour of coursework (normally at the beginning of the second
year of study). Three credit hours are earned for the essay
by registering for HIST 599. The essay will be a substantial
research paper based largely on primary sources.
The distribution of hours for the Masters degree is as follows:
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History 400
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3 hours
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Hist 599
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3 hours
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Internship
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3 hours
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Public history courses
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15 hours
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Minor field courses
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9 hours
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Total
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33 hours
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Examination
Toward the end of their studies, public history students must pass
a two-hour oral examination in the field of public history.
There is no examination in the minor field, but students must maintain
at least a B average (3.0) in the three minor field courses.
There is no research tool requirement.
Master's Program in Public History and Library Information Science
The joining of two applied degree programs, Public History and Library
Science, provides interested students with the opportunity to combine
historical training with a more focused educational background in
archives and library science. Students receive two separate degrees:
an M.A. in public history from Loyola University and an M.A. in Library
and Information Science from Dominican
University in River Forest, Illinois. The joint program allows
students to complete work on the two degrees in a shorter time than
if each degree were pursued separately. In addition, it provides a
more focused and structured education in archives than either degree
program does individually.
General requirements
The Department of History of Loyola University and the Graduate School
of Library and Information Science (GSLIS) of Dominican University
cooperate to offer a joint program leading to the two degrees: Master
of Arts in Public History and Master of Arts in Library and Information
Science.
A total of fifty-four semester hours is required for the two degrees.
A minimum of thirty semester hours must be taken in the GSLIS, and
a minimum of twenty-four semester hours must be taken in the History
Department of Loyola University Chicago, including twelve of those
semester hours in specified public history courses. All requirements
in the joint program must be completed within seven years.
Students in the dual degree program must apply to each program separately
and must be accepted as classified students by both programs. Application
for admission to the dual degree may be made at any time while students
are enrolled in either program. No advance assurance can be given
that admission to both programs will be granted.
A detailed description of the curriculum is available from
the Public History Program Director.
The Graduate School of Library and Information Science can be reached
at (708) 524-6845 or GSLIS@email.dom.edu.
Joint Doctoral Program in American History/Public History
Building on Loyola's already strong Public History Master's Program,
this sixty-hour (60) degree program will give students the opportunity
to compete for positions calling for a doctorate, such as teaching
public history at the university level, curating or administrating
at governmental institutions such as the Smithsonian Institution or
the National Park Service, or serving as a principal in a consulting
firm. In essence, this program is similar to the standard American
history Ph.D. program but requires a double major in American history
and Public history instead of a major field in American history and
two minor fields. Students will leave Loyola with a firm grounding
in American history as well as in the skills and theory of public
history and its practice. Loyola is one of the few universities to
offer a Public history degree at the doctoral level and hopes to continue
to attract strong non-traditional students already working in the
public history profession as well as students interested in history
at the doctoral level.
Required or Core courses
Students who have not taken HIST 400 or an equivalent course at the
masters level must do so in the Ph.D. program. They must
also successfully complete at least one seminar (i.e., a formal course
at the 500-level) in their American history field. They must take
History 598 in which they develop their dissertation proposal under
the supervision of their major field advisor.
Major field: American History
In consultation with their major adviser, students develop a doctoral
field in American history focused on a specialized area of concentration
through coursework and research. Such a definition might be,
for example, twentieth-century American cultural history.
Students are required to complete 21 hours from among the formal
offerings in their selected field.
Major Field: Public History
Students build their doctoral field in Public History from the six
basic applied courses in Public History (480, 481, 482, 483, 487,
and 582) and one additional course selected from one of the following:
479 - Public History Media, 492 - U.S. Local History, or 581 - Practicum
in Public History.
Dissertation Research
The remaining hours in the joint doctoral program are to be devoted
to dissertation research. Normally, three hours are fulfilled
through 598, the Dissertation Proposal Seminar, and the remaining
hours from Directed Study and Dissertation Research.
Distribution of Courses
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History 400
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3 hours
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American History field
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21 hours
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Public History field
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21 hours
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Dissertation Proposal/Seminar
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3 hours
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Directed research and readings and electives
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12 hours
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Total
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60 hours
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Admission
Students enter the Joint Program in one of two ways: (1) admission
to the accelerated Ph.D. track or (2) admission to the Joint Program
after receiving the M.A. degree.
(1) Accelerated Joint American history/Public history program (60
hours)
Admission to this program is highly selective and limited to a few
outstanding undergraduates. Students will be chosen on the basis
of the regular criteria for the accelerated track by the public history
program director and three faculty members who are involved in reviewing
application materials.
(2) Joint American History/Public History Doctoral Program (33 hours)
Students enter this program with a M.A. with a Public History concentration
or with a concentration in American History. Students who must
complete History 400 will have a thirty-six (36) hour requirement.
Research Tool Requirement
The research tool requirement may be fulfilled in two ways.
(1) A reading knowledge of two foreign languages.
(2) A reading knowledge of one foreign language and a special
skill required by the students doctoral research. HIST 583,
Quantitative Methods in Social History, and HIST 483, Oral History,
may fulfill the special skills requirement. When taken for the
research tool requirement, HIST 583 cannot be counted as a seminar
nor can HIST 483 be counted toward the major field in Public history.
With the approval of the Graduate Programs Committee, students may
also demonstrate mastery in statistics, computer science, and paleography.
To fulfill the requirement in statistics or computer science, students
must take six hours of courses in appropriate departments and pass
an examination administered by that department. Paleography
may be taken at the Chicago Inter-University Consortium for Advanced
Studies in Renaissance and Early Modern History at the
Newberry Library.
Examinations
Near the end of their doctoral studies, students must pass a five-hour
written examination and a two-hour oral examination in their
American history field and a two-hour oral examination in their Public
history field.
Dissertation Proposal Review and Dissertation
Students will develop a "dissertation field" within their American
history field. They will present a dissertation topic and prospectus
to their major advisor (History 598 Dissertation Proposal Seminar)
and the graduate program director for review and approval. Students
formalize their proposed committee with the submission of the Dissertation
Committee Recommendation form to the Graduate School. Following the
successful completion of doctoral examinations, students will make
a public presentation of their dissertation proposal to a review panel,
which will include the dissertation director and at least two other
faculty members acquainted with the research areas of the dissertation.
In discussing the proposal, students and members of the review panel
should work out problems and address questions the reviewers may have.
Upon successfully completing the dissertation proposal review, students
submit a formal dissertation outline to the graduate dean. Following
its approval by the Graduate School and the successful completion
of all other degree requirements, students are admitted to Ph.D. candidacy.
Oral Defense
The Ph.D. dissertation must be completed, approved by the designated
readers, and successfully defended orally at a public defense.
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