Anthropology is a strong major in the liberal arts tradition. Like other liberal arts graduates, the graduate in anthropology can offer employers the skills that are listed by liberal arts alumni across the USA as most critical to their jobs: oral communication, written communication, interpersonal skills, problem-solving, and critical thinking.
Graduates have used their anthropological training in a variety of ways: The undergraduate degree provides strong preparation for entry-level positions in business, government, and social service. A variety of surveys have indicated that employers look for the skills that undergraduate training in anthropology provides. The subject matter of anthropology is intrinsically fascinating; as such, it offers valuable preparation for careers in journalism, politics, public relations, or public administration -- fields that involve investigative skills and working with diverse groups. Many students use anthropology as the liberal arts foundation for professions such as law, education, medicine, social work, and counseling.
A degree in anthropology can be the first step toward the attainment of more advanced training in order to become a professor, researcher, or applied anthropologist. Archaeology is a growing area for jobs, because public service archaeology is required by legislation designed to protect our cultural heritage. Physical anthropology is a gateway to a wide range of career path opportunities, including forensics, medicine (especially anatomy and genetics, and primatology..
2007-03-17 20:18:01
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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A degree in any field lends credance that you are qualified in that field. The higher degree you get the better the pay check. A bachelors gets you many jobs. A masters gets you more a phd gets you top jobs like teaching at A university level or head of A large museum etc. Those jobs in the anthropology field require a degree of some sort. My son is finishing his thesis for his masters degree and has allready gotten job offers. If your marks are good the head hunters will find you. You will not have to find them
2007-03-17 16:33:14
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answer #2
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answered by Jerry G 4
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many anthropology classes deal with the culture and religions of the people being studied. Anthropology sheds light on the rise of civilizations and how city and city states developed.
Many of the greatest discoveries of mankind were based on archaeological finds. The main reason is it is just an absolutely fascinating field of study.
2007-03-17 11:23:30
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answer #3
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answered by israelphoenix 2
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Interaction of biology and culture in the shaping of humanity
Exploring the interaction of biology and culture and its relations to the shaping of humanity.
Course topics include the physical characteristics of the human body; physical evolution of human beings; society and culture; physical senses across cultures (different ways of seeing, hearing, smelling, touching, tasting); reflections on cultures; cultural stereotyping and effects of media intervention.
As the course explores reality as it exists in context, it will allow the students to reflect more critically on what the human being really is and what he can really become.
Interactive methods will be used, tapping into the new information technologies (from cell phones to Internet) to help students recognize the potentials and pitfalls of these technologies in understanding culture and humanity.
2007-03-17 00:14:58
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answer #4
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answered by Pseudosophy 3
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For getting a placement.
2007-03-16 22:54:39
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answer #5
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answered by Tony Sebastion 2
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