Departments
Programs
Individualized Major Program
- Director Professor Robert F. Sutton, World Languages and Cultures, Classical Studies
- Professors Richard Bein, Geography; Thomas Davis, Religious Studies; John Parrish-Sprowl, Communication Studies; William Schneider, History/Medical Humanities; Richard E. Ward, Anthropology
- Associate Professors Enrica Ardemagni, World Languages and Cultures, Spanish; Dennis Bingham, English/Film Studies; Timothy S. Brothers, Geography; David Craig, Religious Studies; Kristine Karnick, Communication Studies; Karen Kovacik, English; Thomas Marvin, English; Nancy Robertson, History/Women’s Studies/American Studies; Susan Shepherd, English/Linguistics; Reiko Yonogi, World Languages and Cultures, Japanese.
- Assistant Professors Jing Wang, World Languages and Cultures, Chinese; David Weiden, Political Science
- Lecturers Erin Engels, Political Science; Sharokh Towfighi, Economics
- Faculty All members of the IUPUI faculty are eligible to teach courses and serve as Faculty Advisors for an Individualized Major.
- Academic Advising Cavanaugh Hall 540B, 317-274-7611
- Web site http://liberalarts.iupui.edu/index.php/academics/individualized_major_program
Unlike other majors, which prescribe a fixed area of study, the individualized major provides a structure that allows such students, in consultation with faculty members, to design their own majors on various topics and fields of study. Each major course of study varies in accordance with the needs and interests of individual students. Students work closely with faculty advisors, and all individualized majors are overseen and approved by a faculty committee that ensures each student-designed major has intellectual integrity and rigor.
Admission and Academic Progress
For information and initial counseling,students should should contact the Program Office in CA 540B, 317-274-7611. All students seeking admission to the IMP must be admitted to the School of Liberal Arts and normally have a minimum cumulative GPA of 2.5 and declare their major as prospective (Pre-Individualized Major) in CA 401. All liberal arts students, except those on academic probation, are eligible to apply for an Individualized Major Program. Before making formal application for admission to the Individualized Major Program, students should normally have completed at least 30 hours of general education requirements including English W132, Communication R110, and Mathematics M118 (or its equivalent).Students desiring to pursue an individualized major should confer with the director of the program who will provide assistance in identifying and securing the agreement of a faculty member to serve as advisor. Under the supervision of this advisor the student will take I360, a 1-credit hour tutorial course in which he or she prepares a proposal for an individualized major. A student is admitted into the Individualized Major Program when this major proposal is approved by a small committee appointed by the director. These committees are individualized for each student; they include the advisor, members of the faculty Committee for the Individualized Major, and other faculty members with appropriate expertise who may be recommended by the student and advisor. Once the major proposal is approved, students declare their major as Individualized Major in CA 401. The major plan may subsequently be amended only in consultation with the advisor and with approval of the student’s committee.
After gaining admission to the program, students must meet each semester with their advisors to register for courses and consider academic progress. A key component of the senior year is the variable credit capstone course I460, an independent study project in which students synthesize their work in the major. The project is approved and graded by the IMP Committee or a panel of experts appointed by the committee. The advisor and the IMP director certify students for graduation with the individualized major.
Requirements
The individualized major requires a minimum of 34 credit hours:1. Two courses are required of all students (4-7 cr.):
- I360 Individualized Major Plan (1 credit hour), a tutorial in which a student develops his or her plan for a major, including a list of courses, schedule, and rationale. This proposal must be more than a simple list of courses. Students proposing majors in traditional fields should discuss the history and nature of the discipline, describe its subfields and the methodologies it employs, and show how the proposed major fits within this framework. Those designing unique majors need to establish the intellectual unity of the proposed major and show appreciation of the different disciplinary traditions and methodologies on which it will draw. Upon approval of this plan by an advisor and the faculty Individualized Major Program Committee, the student is accepted into the Individualized Major Program.
- I460 Individualized Major Senior Project, a variable credit tutorial (3-6 cr.) preferably taken over two semesters as a 6-credit hour course devoted to a capstone project that culminates and integrates the individualized major. Normally this is a major research paper with an oral presentation. Other options, such as a performance, multimedia product, work of literature, film, or work of art, may be approved if appropriate for a particular plan of study. Normally the project is defended through a seminar or colloquium. Ideally the grade for this course is recommended by the advisor and approved by the faculty Committee for the Individualized Major. In practice, the committee grants authority to the director to appoint individual faculty committees to assist advisors in assigning grades.
- No lower- or upper-division courses applied to general education requirements may be included in the individualized major.
- At least 15 credit hours in the major must be at the 300 or 400 level (in addition to I360 and I460).
- No more than 6 credit hours of independent study may be counted in the major.
- All courses counted in the major must be taken for letter grade; no course receiving a grade below C may be counted toward the major.