History Education

Individuals interested in teaching in K-12 schools must complete a degree in the content area they want to teach plus the teacher preparation program through the Department of Curriculum and Instruction. Individuals must complete the teaching major/teaching track within that degree program, which may contain different course requirements than the academic major since the sequence of courses is designed to meet state standards. Upon completion of the degree program with the teaching track and the secondary licensure program, one will be eligible for a standard Montana teaching license in this content area.

Students may earn a teaching major in history by completing the requirements for the BA in history, to include the following:  HSTA 101 or 102; HSTR 101 or 102; HSTR 200; HSTA 255; 9 credits in world history; 6 upper-division credits in American history; 6 upper-division credits in European history; 6 additional credits upper-division history electives; one HSTA/HSTR 400-level approved writing course; and EDU 497 (C&I 428).   All requirements for the history major apply.  Students with a teaching major in history must also complete a teaching major or minor in a second field.  For the history teaching major, students must be formally admitted to the Teacher Education Program and complete all of the professional education licensure requirements.  Students may also earn a teaching minor in history.  See the Department of Curriculum & Instruction for more information.

Bachelor of Arts - History; History Education Option

College Humanities & Sciences

Catalog Year: 2014-2015

Degree Specific Credits: 45

Required Cumulative GPA: 2.0

Note: A maximum of 60 credits in History are allowed. Penalties will apply for more than 60 credits. Students must be formally admitted to the Teacher Education Program and complete all of the professional education licensure requirements. See the Department of Curriculum & Instruction in the College of Education and Human Sciences for more information. A major GPA of 2.75 is required to be eligible for student teaching. Students who choose to complete a teaching major in history must also complete a teaching major or minor in a second field.


Lower Division Core Courses

Rule: Must complete the following subcategories

Minimum Required Grade: C-
12 Total Credits Required

American History Introductory Course

Rule: Must complete 1 of the following courses

Note: AP Policy: Those students scoring a "5" on the American History AP exam can be excused from the survey course requirement. Another American history course must then be taken in place of the survey course. Please consult with the Humanities Advisor with questions.

Show All Course Descriptions Course Credits
Show Description HSTA 101H - American History I
(AM) Offered autumn.  A comprehensive introductory history of Colonial, Revolutionary and 19th century America, to 1877. Lecture-discussion. Credit not allowed for both 101H and 103H.
4 Credits
Show Description HSTA 102H - American History II
(AM) Offered spring.  A comprehensive introductory history of the U.S. since 1877. Lecture-discussion. Credit not allowed for both 102H and 104H.
4 Credits
Minimum Required Grade: C- 4 Total Credits Required

European History Introductory Course

Rule: Must complete 1 of the following courses

Note: AP Policy: Those students scoring a "5" on the European History AP exam can be excused from the survey course requirement. Another European history course must then be taken in place of the survey course. Please consult with the Humanities Advisor with questions.

Show All Course Descriptions Course Credits
Show Description HSTR 101H - Western Civilization I
(EU) Offered autumn.  A comprehensive, introductory history of western civilization from classical antiquity to 1648. Lecture-discussion. Credit not allowed for both 101H and 103H.
4 Credits
Show Description HSTR 102H - Western Civilization II
(EU) Offered spring.  A comprehensive, introductory history of western civilization from 1648 to the present. Lecture-discussion. Credit not allowed for both 102H and 104H.
4 Credits
Minimum Required Grade: C- 4 Total Credits Required

Montana History

Rule: Complete the following course.

Show All Course Descriptions Course Credits
Show Description HSTA 255 - Montana History
(AM) Offered autumn.  An introductory and interpretive history from Lewis and Clark to 2000.
3 Credits
Minimum Required Grade: C- 3 Total Credits Required

Historical Methods Course

Rule: Complete the following course.

Show All Course Descriptions Course Credits
Show Description HSTR 200 - Intro: Historical Methods
Offered autumn and spring.  Enrollment limited to history majors or by consent of the instructor.  This course introduces students to the practice of history and prepares them for upper-division courses in the field. It is required for recently declared history majors and minors. Students will learn to critically read secondary sources, research in primary sources, analyze documents, and write clear and convincing historical essays.  Students should take this course before taking upper-division history courses.
1 Credits
Minimum Required Grade: C- 1 Total Credits Required

American History Upper Division Electives

Rule: Choose at least 6 credits from the following courses

Note: null

Show All Course Descriptions Course Credits
Show Description HSTA 311 - Early America
(AM) Offered even-numbered years.  Emphasis changes from year to year. Can touch upon the political economy of Puritanism, through gender and family to the preconditions for the American Revolution.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 314 - Nature, Knowledge & Empire
(AM) Offered alternate years. This course examines the entangled processes of human and environmental change in America and the Atlantic world from prehistoric times through the nineteenth century. We will examine the ways Native Americans and Europeans interacted with land and sea and the social and ecological repercussions that ensued. We will also look at the ways Atlantic world systems of exchange, including the movement of animals, disease, commodities, manufactured goods, and slaves effected environmental change. Finally, we will also explore the ways Renaissance and Enlightenment thought shaped the ways people understood the natural world and how that radically changed with industrialization and the shift to Romanticism.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 315 - Early American Republic
(AM) Offered spring odd-numbered years. Democracy, nationalism and sectionalism, the War of 1812, the second party system, social order and disorder, the capitalist revolution.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 316 - American Civil War Era
(AM) Offered autumn odd-numbered years.  Civil War and Reconstruction; the triumph of the industrialist and capitalist ethic.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 320 - Birth of Modern US
(AM) Offered autumn odd-numbered years.  The history of the U.S. from 1877 to 1920 is largely the story of Americans responding to profound social, cultural and economic change.  In an effort to bring order to their changing world, Americans created new institutions, retooled their ideologies, and improved the nation's infrastructure.  The order they created is, in modified form, still with us today.  Students will explore the myriad changes that transformed the United States during this period and study the social, political, and cultural struggles that shaped the emergence of Modern America.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 321 - America in Crisis
(AM) Offered autumn. This era in U.S. history was marked by a series of crises: the contested transition to modernity during the 1920s, the Great Depression, and World War II and its aftermath.  This course will explore how Americans responded to these crises, why they responded to them the way they did, and how their responses altered the society in which they lived.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 322 - American History: WWII to Pres
(AM) Offered spring.  The Cold War and its consequences, the civil rights revolution, affluence and anxiety, counter-culture, political radicalism, feminism, the Nixon years, Watergate and after.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 323 - U.S. in the 1950s
(AM) Offered alternate years, Examines the political, social, cultural, intellectual developments of America in the 1950s.  Particular emphasis is placed on cultural history. 
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 324 - U.S. in the 1960s
(AM) Offered alternate years, Examines the political, social, cultural, intellectual developments of America in the 1960s.  Topics include the Great Society, political radicalism, the counter culture, black radicalism, and Vietnam. 
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 327 - Atlantic World Slavery
(AM) Offered alternate years. This course will examine the development and demise of slavery in the early modern Atlantic world, from the late fifteenth to the late nineteenth centuries. Specifically, we will explore the ways the transatlantic slave trade forged economic and cultural connections between Europe, Africa, and the Americas, thereby causing immeasurable suffering while conditioning conceptions of race, reshaping politics and religion, and transforming the ecology of nearly a third of the globe.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 333 - Key Events in American Militar
(R-6) (AM) Offered intermittently. The French and Indian Wars to Vietnam and beyond; chronological and topical accounts.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 335 - Movie America
(AM) Offered intermittently. This course examines major topics and themes in United States history from the early twentieth century to the present using movies as primary sources.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 342H - Afr Amer Hist to 1865
(AM) Offered intermittently. Same as AAS 378. Survey of the African American experience from the African background to the end of the Civil War.  Focus on Black American quest for the American Dream, and how Blacks attempted to deal with the challenges of enslavement and racism.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 343H - Afr Amer Hist Since 1865
(AM) Offered intermittently.  Same as AAS 343H.  Study of the African American experience since the Civil War.  Change and continuity in the African American experience, the fight against Jim Crow, the struggle for civil rights, and post-civil rights economic, political, social and cultural developments and challenges.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 347 - Voodoo, Muslim, Church
(AM) Spring, odd years. The African American religious experience encompasses Islam, Christianity, Santeria, voodoo, and many others. In this course, students will examine the history of religious expression within the African-American community from the colonial era through the twentieth century. Central to the course question, "How did religion shape the experience of the African-American community?" Students will also examine the ways in which religious practice influenced social, political, and cultural changes in American history.  Same as AAS 347.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 354X - Ind MT Since Reserv Era
(AM) Offered autumn odd-numbered years.  Same as ANTH 324X and NAS 324X.  Examination of the history of Montana Indians since the establishment of the reservations, contemporary conditions, and issues among both reservation and non-reservation Indian communities in the state.  Special attention given to social and economic conditions, treaty rights, tribal sovereignty, and legal issues.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 358 - Images of the Amer West
(AM) Offered even-numbered years.  The roles that artists, artistic works and illustrations, and symbolic images have played in the history of the American West.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 361 - The American South
(AM) Offered intermittently.  Social history of the American South with particular attention to race, class, and gender.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 370H - Wmn Amer Colonial to Civil War
Offered autumn.  Interpretive overview of major themes and events in U.S. womens history to 1865. Same as WGS 370H.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 371H - Wmn Amer Civil War to Present
Offered spring. Interpretive overview of major themes and events in U.S. women’s history from 1865 to the present. Same as WGS 371.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 372 - The American Revolution
(AM) Offered alternate years. Delving into the history of the early modern Atlantic world, this course examines the transnational ramifications of the American Revolution. Specifically, it examines the Revolution’s economic and ideological origins, European involvement in the Revolutionary War, as well as the Revolution’s impact on African American slavery and the slave trade. We will also consider its implications for Haitian and Latin American independence. And finally, we will discuss the creation of the U.S. Constitution, America’s struggle for political sovereignty, and the Revolution’s impact on Native Americans, women and families, and conceptions of American identity during the Early National period.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 380 - AmericanConstitutional History
(AM) Offered intermittently. An examination of major issues in the American constitutional past. Topics include the creation of the U.S. Constitution and the problem of ?original intent,? courts and judicial review, slavery and anti-slavery, the bill o frights, industrial capitalism and the welfare state, and majority rule and minority rights in American democracy
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 382H - History of American Law
(AM) Offered intermittently. Issues in the social history of law from the colonial period to the present.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 385 - Families & Children in America
(AM) Offered intermittently.  Historical overview of families and children in the United States from the colonial era to the present.  Topics include changing patterns of family life, the evolution of attitudes toward children and youth, the relationship between the American family and the nation-state, and debates over "family values" from the nation's founding to the present.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 391 - Special Topics
(R-12) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.
1 To 12 Credits
Show Description HSTA 415 - The Black Radical Tradition
(AM) Offered autumn, odd years. From slave revolts through to the Move rebellion in Philadelphia, this course examines how the African-American community has engaged in radical efforts to change the status quo in the name of seeking justice. Formally cross listed with AAS 415.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 417 - Prayer & Civil Rights
(AM) Offered autumn, even years.  Same as AAS 417 and RELS 417.  This course explores the meaning of public prayer in the Civil Rights Movement.  Built around the question, "Does religion help or hinder the pursuit of social change?" this class combines historical and religious studies inquiry to trace changes in civil rights activists' efforts to make use of religion.  By focusing on a particular religious practice - in this case prayer - in a specific, but limited period of time, this course challenges students to consider how meaning is formed through historical action and study the social significance of religious practice.  This formed through historical action and study the social significance of religious practice.  This course complicates prevailing ideas about the normalcy of  African-American religious practitioners' prayer, invites students to examine their assumptions about the nature of prayer, and traces how religion spilled out of sanctuaries into the streets during the civil rights era.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 418 - Women and Slavery
(AM) Same as WGS 418. Offered intermittently.  Prereq., upper-division standing.  Study of the connection between women's status and slavery in antebellum America, looking at slave women, slaveholding women, and antislavery women. Upper division writing course for the history major.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 419 - Southern Women
(AM) Same as WGS 419. Offered intermittently.  Examination of the connections between race, class, and gender in the South.  Conflict and cooperation among black and white women in politics, reform, and work. Upper division writing course for the history major.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 420 - America Divided, 1848-1865
(AM) Offered intermittently.  Same as AAS 420.  This course explores the period in American history from the close of the Mexican War through the conclusion of the Civil War.  Topics include slavery and sectionalism; race and racism; immigration and ethno-religious conflict; military mobilization and wartime dissent; the meaning of freedom in the age of emancipation.  This course is intended to hone skills fundamental to the historical discipline: the critical analysis of primary sources; independent primary research and historical writing; engagement with and assessment of historical scholarship; the construction of a historiographical essay. Upper division writing course for the history major.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 422 - Research: U.S. After WWII
(AM) Offered alternate years. This course offers students an opportunity to do original research and produce an article-length research paper on a topic in post-war American history. It meets the department’s requirement of an upper-level research seminar as well as the upper-division writing expectation in the major.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 455 - Indian, Bison, & Horse
(AM) Offered autumn odd-numbered years.  Historical interaction between Native American societies, horses and bison in North America. A writing intensive course. Upper division writing course for the history major.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 461 - Research in Montana History
(AM) Offered intermittently. This course is a research and writing seminar in Montana history. Students will learn advanced research methodology in history and will be exposed to a variety of databases and source collections in Montana history that are available locally and online. Students will research and write a primary-source based paper on a topic in Montana history. This course fulfills the upper-division writing requirement for the history department and the university.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 462 - Regionalism & Rocky Mtn West
(AM) Offered spring odd-numbered years. Same as GEOG 401.  Investigation of regionalism as a concept and its future in the Rocky Mountain West.  Regionalism as a geographical, economic, political and cultural entity. An intensive writing class.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 469 - Atlantic America Research
(AM) Offered alternate years. This seminar is designed to teach advanced undergraduate and graduate students the fundamentals of original research in the fields of early American and Atlantic world history. Every student will pursue an original research project, based on primary materials, and focused chronologically within the period of early contact to the U.S. Civil War. You will read texts that will serve as models of historical writing and others that will help you develop your skills as a researcher, writer, and editor. We will hone our writing skills through drafting and discussion. Consent of instructor required.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 471 - Writing Women's Lives
(AM) Offered intermittently. Consent of instructor required. Upper-division writing-intensive seminar in women’s history. Students will write an original research paper based on primary source materials.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 491 - Special topics
(R 12) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one time offerings of current topics.
1 To 12 Credits
Show Description HSTA 494 - Seminar
(R 6) Offered intermittently. Prereq., consent of instr.
1 To 6 Credits
Show Description HSTR 364 - Environmental History
(AM) Offered intermittently. Prereq., lower-division course in Perspective 5 or consent of instr. A history of the human-nature interaction in the United States.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 367 - 19th Cent Amer West
(AM) Offered intermittently. Euro-American movement and conflict in the nineteenth century trans-Mississippi west.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 369 - 20th Cent Amer West
(AM) Offered spring.  The contemporary trans-Mississippi West.
3 Credits
Minimum Required Grade: C- 6 Total Credits Required

World History Electives

Rule: Choose at least 9 credits from the following courses

Show All Course Descriptions Course Credits
Show Description HSTR 146H - The Silk Road
(WRLD) Offered autumn and spring. Same as AS and ANTH 106H.  Introduction to the study of the human communities, cultures, and economies in Central and Southwest Asia along the ancient four thousand mile-long Silk Road.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 191 - Special Topics
(R-6) Offered intermittently.  Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.
1 To 6 Credits
Show Description HSTR 230H - Colonial Latin America
(WRLD) Offered autumn.  Latin America from the conquest to wars for independence.  Focus on social relations, imperial and local politics, hegemony, resistance, and change.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 231H - Modern Latin America
(WRLD) Offered spring. Latin American history from wars of independence to the present.  Focus on social relations, development models, politics, and popular movements.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 240 - East Asian Civilizations
(WRLD) Offered autumn.  Same as AS 201.  An interdisciplinary, pluralist, and exploratory introduction to civilizations of East Asia.  Primary focus on China, Japan, and Korea, the relations among them and their patterns of interaction with the outside world in pre-modern and modern periods.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 241H - Central Asian Cult & Civ
(WRLD) Offered autumn. Same as ANTY 241H. Introduction to Central Asia's history, culture and ways of thinking. Focus on the political and social organization of Central Asia and cultural changes as expressed in art and interactions with China, India and the Middle East.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 262H - Islamic Civil: Classical Age
(WRLD) Offered autumn. A concise history of the Islamic world from the 6th century to the fall of the Abbasid Empire in the 13th century, focusing primarily on the teachings of Islam and the causes for the rapid expansion of the Islamic empire.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 264 - Islamic Civ: Modrn Era
(WRLD) Offered spring. History of the Islamic world and particularly the Persian, Arabic, and Turkish speaking lands between 1453 and 1952.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 272E - Terrorism:Viol Mod Wrld
(WRLD) Offered autumn.  Prereq., lower-division course in Perspective 5 or consent of instr. The rise and spread of terrorism in the modern world, from the French Revolution to the present.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 291 - Special Topics
(R-12) Offered intermittently.  Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.
1 To 12 Credits
Show Description HSTR 334 - Latin America: Reform and Revo
(WRLD) Offered intermittently.  Different ideologies and projects in Latin America aimed at gradual or radical transformation of political systems and/or socio-economic relations.  Case studies range from the Haitian Revolution to the Bolivarian vision of Hugo Chavez.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 345H - Modern China
(WRLD) Offered autumn. China since 180, emphasizing internal weaknesses of the Manchu dynasty, confrontation with the west, and the emergence of Nationalist and Communist regimes.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 380H - Foreign Relations of the Great
(WRLD) Offered intermittently.  Begins with a discussion of the classical system of diplomacy and then moves into the causes and results of the First World War, the rise of Hitler and the Second World War, America's emergence as a superpower, the Cold War, the influence of Asia, the implications of the 9/11 attack and terrorism, and the continuing search for peace and stability in a world of conflict.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 384 - Hist Internat Human Rights
(WRLD) Offered intermittently.  A treatment of the powerful global influence of visions of human rights upon the historical and contemporary world in which movements such as abolitionism, women's rights, humanitarian law, racial equality, decolonization and democratization, and the impact of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 391 - Special Topics
(R-12) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.
1 To 12 Credits
Show Description HSTR 392 - Independent Study
(R 12) Offered intermittently.
1 To 12 Credits
Show Description HSTR 435 - Lat Am Human Rgts & Memory
(WRLD) Offered intermittently. The legacy of state violence and ongoing struggles for truth and justice in select Latin American case studies.  Different uses of memory and narration in bearing witness to social and political conflict and human rights violations. 
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 437 - US-Latin America Relations
(WRLD) Prereq., history majors or minors or consent of instr. Research and writing seminar on U.S.-Latin American relations from the late 18th century through the 20th century.  Upper division writing course for the history major.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 449 - Revolution & Reform in China
(WRLD) Offered autumn.  A history of the rise and fall of the Maoist regime and the complicated impact of the epochal post Mao reform movement.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 472 - Problems of Peace and Security
(WRLD) Offered intermittently.  Prereq., lower-division course in Perspective 5 or consent of instr. Contemporary and historical problems of civilian policy and military strategy, power and technology, intelligence operations in democratic societies, human rights and security issues, conscription, and ethics in statecraft.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 491 - Special Topics
(R 12) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one time offerings of current topics.
1 To 12 Credits
Show Description HSTR 492 - Independent Study
(R 12) Offered intermittently. Prereq., consent of instr.
1 To 12 Credits
Minimum Required Grade: C- 9 Total Credits Required

European Upper Division History Electives

Rule: Choose at least 6 credits from the following courses

Note: null

Show All Course Descriptions Course Credits
Show Description HSTR 302 - Ancient Greece
(EU) Offered intermittently. Same as MCLG 301H. Greek history from the earliest times through the Macedonian ascendancy, based on the writings of the Greek historians. Cannot receive credit for both HSTR 302 and MCLG 301H.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 312 - Age of Absolut 1648-1789
(EU) Offered intermittently.  The political, economic, intellectual, and social development of Europe 1648-1789.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 320 - Europ Social & Intellect Hist
(EU) Offered autumn. The influence of the Renaissance, Baroque and Classical Ages, and the Enlightenment on early modern history.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 323 - Europ Social & Intellect Hist:
(EU) Offered autumn. Romanticism, Realism, and the Avant-Garde against the historical background of the Industrial Revolution and urbanization.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 348 - Britain 1485-1688
(EU) Offered autumn. Social, political, religious, and intellectual history of the British peoples during the tumultuous period of reformation, exploration, constitutional crisis, and civil war.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 349 - Britain from Rev - Reform 1688
(EU) Offered spring. The social, political, cultural, and intellectual consequences of British expansion, financial and industrial revolutions, and revolutionary movements.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 352 - France Revol 1789-1848
(EU) Offered autumn.  Political, economic, and social upheaval and development.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 353 - Modern France
(EU) Offered intermittently. Political, economic and social development.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 354 - Italy: 1300-1800
(EU) Offered autumn odd-numbered years.  The emergence of the Italian states with an emphasis on cultural achievements in the late Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, and Neoclassical periods.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 355 - Italy: 1800-Present
(EU) Offered spring even-numbered years.  The emergence of a united Italy, the triumph of fascism and contemporary Italian society.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 357 - Russia to 1881
(EU) Offered autumn.  Emphasis on the autocratic political tradition, Westernization, and territorial expansion.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 358 - Russia Since 1881
(EU) Offered spring.  Emphasis on modernization and the revolutionary movement; the Bolshevik Revolution and Stalinist era; the decline of Soviet system.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 361 - Germ:Augsburg-Bismarck
(EU) Offered intermittently.  Political, economic and social development of the states of the Holy Roman Empire from 1555-1866.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 363 - Eastern Europe
(EU) Offered spring. Main currents in the history of Eastern Europe from earliest times to the present. Focus on the lands of Poland, Bohemia, Hungary, and the Balkan region.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 391 - Special Topics
(R-12) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one-time offerings of current topics.
1 To 12 Credits
Show Description HSTR 392 - Independent Study
(R 12) Offered intermittently.
1 To 12 Credits
Show Description HSTR 418 - Britain 1500 - 1800
(EU) Offered spring alternate years. Prereq., consent of instr. HSTR 348 or 349 recommended. Students will discuss specific issues in the historiography of the early modern period in British history (c1500-1800) and produce research papers grounded in primary sources.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 491 - Special Topics
(R 12) Offered intermittently. Experimental offerings of visiting professors, experimental offerings of new courses, or one time offerings of current topics.
1 To 12 Credits
Show Description HSTR 492 - Independent Study
(R 12) Offered intermittently. Prereq., consent of instr.
1 To 12 Credits
Minimum Required Grade: C- 6 Total Credits Required

Upper Division History Electives

Rule: Complete two additional upper division history courses

Note: Courses can be selected from HSTA or HSTR 300-level and above.

Minimum Required Grade: C-
6 Total Credits Required

Teaching Methods Requirement

Rule: Complete the following course.

Note: The EDU 497 course number is used for multiple courses. Students should register for EDU 497 Methods: 5-12 Social Studies.

Show All Course Descriptions Course Credits
Show Description EDU 497 - Teaching and Assessing
(R-15) Offered autumn and/or spring. Prereq. admission to the Teacher Education Program. This course number is used for multiple elementary and secondary methods courses. Check the class schedule or with your advisor regarding appropriate sections. 5-8 Mathematics: 3 cr. Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., EDU 222; M 135 and 136. Special note: Refer to Program Description. This class must be taken concurrently with Level 3 Block courses and is restricted to students who have completed coursework in Levels 1 & 2. Methods of teaching, assessing, and evaluating mathematics in the 5-8 middle grades including number and operations, rational numbers, ratio and proportion, measurement, algebra, expressions and equations, geometry, probability, statistics, and functions. K-8 Social Studies: 3 cr. Offered autumn and spring. Prereq., HSTA 255, GPHY 121 or 141. Special note: Refer to Program Description. This class must be taken concurrently with Level 3 Block courses and is restricted to students who have completed coursework in Levels 1 & 2. Emphasis on developing teaching and assessing social studies teaching/learning opportunities that incorporate literature, primary sources and other developmentally appropriate activities. Overarching themes address diversity, integration across the curriculum and understanding state and national curriculum standards. K-8 Science: 3 cr. Offered every fall and spring. Pre-req., SCI 225, SCI 226;SCI 350, M135, M136, HHP 223, HHP 339, ARTZ 302A, DANC 346, THTR 339, MUSE 397, EDU 222, EDU 331, EDU 345, EDU 395, EDU 370, EDU 397, EDU 407 and all general education/content/specialty courses. Coreq., EDU 450/451, 497, 497, 497, 497, 340. Emphasis on developing, teaching, and assessing science teaching/learning opportunities that are inquiry-based, developmentally appropriate, integrated across the curriculum, and aligned with state and national curriculum standards. 4-8 Reading: 3 cr. Offered autumn and spring. Prereq. EDU 397, EDU 395, Coreq., 497 block, EDU 340, EDU 451. Preparation for teaching reading in a 4-8 setting so that all students are successful. Emphasis on reading to learn. Focus on using assessment to guide instruction, learning from trade books, textbooks, and electronic texts, activating prior knowledge, studying texts, and developing student enthusiasm for reading. 5-12 Science: 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., EDU 221 (C&I 303), a science teaching major or minor. Methods and materials to teach science in grades 5-12. Techniques of evaluation. 5-12 Social Studies: 3 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., EDU 221 (C&I 303). Foundations and purpose of the middle and secondary social studies curriculum. Elements of lesson design, including instructional methods, materials and assessment. 5-12 Mathematics: 4 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., EDU 202 and 221 (C&I 200 and 303), and at least two-thirds of the teaching major or minor in mathematics. Methods for teaching mathematics in grades 5-12 focusing on presentation of mathematics concepts and procedures through models, problem solving, and technology. Development of instructional strategies and classroom organizational models, discourse in the classroom, and multiple means for assessing student progress. 5-12 Business Subjects: 4 cr. Offered autumn. Prereq., EDU 221 (C&I 303), business teaching experience. Methods of unit and lesson planning methods of instruction and presentation including learning theory computer applications student assessment micro teaching test design and evaluation of business courses and students.
0 To 4 Credits
Minimum Required Grade: C- 3 Total Credits Required

History Upper Division Writing Requirement

Rule: Must choose one of the following courses:

Show All Course Descriptions Course Credits
Show Description HSTA 420 - America Divided, 1848-1865
(AM) Offered intermittently.  Same as AAS 420.  This course explores the period in American history from the close of the Mexican War through the conclusion of the Civil War.  Topics include slavery and sectionalism; race and racism; immigration and ethno-religious conflict; military mobilization and wartime dissent; the meaning of freedom in the age of emancipation.  This course is intended to hone skills fundamental to the historical discipline: the critical analysis of primary sources; independent primary research and historical writing; engagement with and assessment of historical scholarship; the construction of a historiographical essay. Upper division writing course for the history major.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 461 - Research in Montana History
(AM) Offered intermittently. This course is a research and writing seminar in Montana history. Students will learn advanced research methodology in history and will be exposed to a variety of databases and source collections in Montana history that are available locally and online. Students will research and write a primary-source based paper on a topic in Montana history. This course fulfills the upper-division writing requirement for the history department and the university.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 469 - Atlantic America Research
(AM) Offered alternate years. This seminar is designed to teach advanced undergraduate and graduate students the fundamentals of original research in the fields of early American and Atlantic world history. Every student will pursue an original research project, based on primary materials, and focused chronologically within the period of early contact to the U.S. Civil War. You will read texts that will serve as models of historical writing and others that will help you develop your skills as a researcher, writer, and editor. We will hone our writing skills through drafting and discussion. Consent of instructor required.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTA 471 - Writing Women's Lives
(AM) Offered intermittently. Consent of instructor required. Upper-division writing-intensive seminar in women’s history. Students will write an original research paper based on primary source materials.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 400 - Historical Research Seminar
Offered autumn and spring.  Topics vary according to the instructor.  Enrollment for history majors and minors, graduate students in history, or by consent of the instructor.  Undergraduates enrolling in this course must have completed HSTR 200: Introduction to Historical Methods.  The goal of this course is for students to propose and execute a substantial research project. Upper division writing course for the history major.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 418 - Britain 1500 - 1800
(EU) Offered spring alternate years. Prereq., consent of instr. HSTR 348 or 349 recommended. Students will discuss specific issues in the historiography of the early modern period in British history (c1500-1800) and produce research papers grounded in primary sources.
3 Credits
Show Description HSTR 437 - US-Latin America Relations
(WRLD) Prereq., history majors or minors or consent of instr. Research and writing seminar on U.S.-Latin American relations from the late 18th century through the 20th century.  Upper division writing course for the history major.
3 Credits
Minimum Required Grade: C- 3 Total Credits Required