91Ô­´´

Arts and Sciences Academic Programs

What Majors Can You Find in the College of Arts and Sciences? 

The programs we offer — in the natural sciences, social sciences and humanities — provide the foundation you'll need to solve problems in the 21st century, especially as AI revolutionizes how humans and technology work together.

The College of Arts and Sciences has a degree for you if:

Check out our 100+ undergraduate majors and minors plus master's degrees and Ph.D. programs that offer in-depth research and scholarly opportunities.

Program Finder

Explore all of our undergraduate and graduate programs below. Find what you’re looking for by using the filters and search bar.

Degree Level
Program Type
Undergraduate
English - Creative Writing English - Creative Writing
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
English - Literature, Culture, & Writing English - Literature, Culture, & Writing
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
English - Pre-Law English - Pre-Law
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Environmental and Plant Biology Environmental and Plant Biology
undergraduate minor
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Environmental and Plant Biology Environmental and Plant Biology
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Environmental Biology Environmental Biology
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Environmental Chemistry Environmental Chemistry
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Environmental Geoscience Environmental Geoscience
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Environmental Geoscience Environmental Geoscience
undergraduate minor
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Environmental Science and Sustainability Environmental Science and Sustainability
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
European Studies European Studies
undergraduate certificate
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Field Ecology Field Ecology
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Food and Society Food and Society
undergraduate certificate
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Forensic Chemistry Forensic Chemistry
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
Forensics Studies Forensics Studies
undergraduate certificate
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
French French
undergraduate minor
  • on-campus
Undergraduate
French French
bachelors degree
  • on-campus
Graduate
Geographic Information Science Geographic Information Science
graduate certificate
  • on-campus
Showing 55 to 72 of 189 entries
 

An Education Beyond Your Desk

91Ô­´´ students learn by doing. Extending educational experiences beyond the classroom gives insights and experience needed to hit the ground running after college. From day one, we offer dedicated career development, extensive internship opportunities, and access to one of the strongest alumni networks in the country.


We also have extensive study abroad and study away opportunities that are open to all students!

Get to Know Us

What Does a Liberal Arts Education Mean in the Age of AI?

For starters, the ancient term "liberal arts" has nothing to do with modern politics. But it has everything to do with preparing leaders and innovators who have a broad base of knowledge beneath a specialized field of study. 

This formula has worked for leaders across the ages — through the Age of Enlightenment, the Industrial Revolution, and the Information Revolution. Now those with a foundation in communication skills, the underpinnings of civil society, and scientific processes will rise in the age of Artificial Intelligence with the skills to discern truth, show compassion and discover new knowledge.

If you were to study Latin courses (which we still do in our college), you'd find that liberales artes means studies for people with leisure to engage in them.

In recent decades, Arts and Sciences students would often say they wanted to change the world. Now AI is changing the world, and "liberal arts" students continue to develop the intellect needed to direct that change.

Like the mythic Greek Goddess our town was named after, Athena's powers included intelligence and strategic thinking — just like students in the College of Arts and Sciences. And yes, we still teach classical Greek courses — just as we have scientists probing the first trillionth of a second after the Big Bang and taking the first Xray of a single atom.

In the College of Arts and Sciences, you're free to join the Monsters in Literature club analyzing zombies and vampires with Dr Fred Drogula. You can work on projects headed to the International Space Station with Dr. Sarah Wyatt. Or you can study environmental politics with Dr. Nancy Manring.

And in case you were wondering what they do with their brains trained to be critical thinkers and leaders, Arts and Sciences alumni are CEOs, digital leaders, renowned authors, doctors and lawyers, and hands-on changemakers in our national parks, the state's classrooms, and business boardrooms – we even have a Nobel Prize winner!