Requirements: Integrated Program in Humane Studies
Interdisciplinary
The Integrated Program in Humane Studies (IPHS) concentration is an interdisciplinary program that integrates all four branches of a liberal arts education. We believe that asking and answering many of our big questions requires moving beyond boundaries and combining ideas and approaches from multiple disciplines. What makes our interdisciplinary approach unique is the blending, within each and every course, of disciplinary perspectives from all four branches of the liberal arts.
The Kenyon College faculty voted to change from Kenyon units to semester hours. This change will go into effect for all students who start at the College in the fall of 2024. Both systems will be used throughout the course catalog with the Kenyon units being listed first.
The Curriculum
IPHS offers a range of courses, each of which explores the "humane" in the human experience from an interdisciplinary perspective. The 100-level class offers a blend of lecture, seminar, and tutorial. The 200-level and above courses often feature project-based learning by pairing interdisciplinary reflection with real-world application. Students choose from the range of offerings to create their own individual course of study.
Note: Completion of the first-year, introductory seminar in IPHS counts toward the IPHS concentration and may also fulfill up to one unit of diversification in humanities or social sciences.
More details are available in the IPHS diversification credits table.
Requirements for the Concentration
The concentration in IPHS requires four courses
The concentration consists of four IPHS courses followed by IPHS 484 (Senior Research Seminar), during which students pursue self-designed projects in a seminar setting. IPHS 111Y-112Y counts as two courses toward the concentration. IPHS 484 can be taken as a junior with permission from the IPHS director.
For one of the four core courses, students, in consultation with their IPHS advisor, may choose an elective drawn from outside the program. Typically, these courses are interdisciplinary offerings taught by faculty who teach or guest lecture in the program.