General Requirements for the Major or Minor

General university degree requirements stipulate that 1) at least four units of the major or three units of the minor be taken in residence at Puget Sound; 2) students earn at least a cumulative GPA of 2.0 in courses taken for the major or the minor; and 3) all courses taken for a major or minor must be taken for graded credit. Any exceptions to these stipulations are indicated in the major and minor degree requirements listed below.

Requirements for the Major in Science, Technology, Health, and Society (BA)

A major in Science, Technology, Health, and Society consists of 12 units:

  1. Foundational Courses: 3 units.
    1. STHS 200: History of Modern Science and Technology
    2. PHIL 232: Philosophy of Science
    3. SOAN 250: Sociology of Science and Technology
  2. Electives: 5 units.
    Students choose five electives from one of the three designated tracks, or work in concert with an STHS advisor to choose electives according to their topical area of interest as described below. The tracks are:
    1. Health, Medicine, and Society; 
    2. Science and Society; 
    3. Technology in the Modern World;
    4. A student-designed track. 

At least two of the five electives must be STHS-labeled courses. SOAN 360 and 365 may also be used to meet this requirement in the “Health, Medicine, and Society” track. 

  1. One of the following Methods Courses: 1 unit.
    1. HIST 200
    2. PHIL 220, 230, or 250
    3. SOAN 298 or SOAN 299
  2. Ancillary Courses: 2 units. 
    Two courses in the natural sciences, mathematics, or computer science (preferably in the same field of study).
  3. Capstone Course: 1 unit.
    STHS 480 Senior Practicum in Science, Technology, Health, and Society Studies.

For the student-designed elective category track: during the sophomore year or by the first semester of the junior year, a student who intends to major in Science, Technology, Health, and Society should meet with the director of the Program to select a faculty member as an advisor. The student and advisor form a committee with other members of the Advisory Board for the Science, Technology, Health, and Society Program. The student works with their committee to select a coherent set of electives that advance the student's educational goals. The committee will also ensure that there is a sufficient concentration in STHS courses. The elective category will go into effect after the agreement is signed by the student, the committee members, and the director of the Program and is filed in the Office of the Registrar. The elective category agreement can be modified later, if needed

Notes

  1. Students must have a grade of C or higher in all courses for the major and minor. 
  2. Students must complete at least four units of the required upper-division (300-400 level) courses at Puget Sound. One of these 4 units may be a course taken as part of a study-abroad program, subject to approval in advance by the program director.

Each year, the STHS program will name a graduating major a Mott Greene Research Scholar for a distinguished senior capstone project. Each year, the program will also present one James Evans Research Award to a major in recognition of exceptional research skills. All graduating majors are eligible to be considered for Honors in the Major.

 

Requirements for the Minor in Science, Technology, Health and Society

A minor in Science, Technology, Health, and Society consists of 5 units:.

  1. Two of the following foundational courses:
    1. STHS 200: History of Modern Science and Technology
    2. PHIL 232: Philosophy of Science
    3. SOAN 250:  Sociology of Science and Technology
  2. Three STHS-labeled Electives:
    • SOAN 360 and 365 may also be used to meet this requirement
       

 

Health, Medicine, and Society

BIOE/REL 255 Pandemic Ethics, Laws, and Health Inequities

BIOE/REL 272 Public Health Ethics

BIOE/REL 292 Basics of Bioethics

BIOE/PHIL 292 Basics of Bioethics

CONN 320 Health and Medicine

CONN 354 Hormones, Sex, Society, & Self

ENGL 348 Illness and Narrative: Discourses of Disease

GLAM 323 Sex and Gender in Ancient Greece and Rome

PHIL 333 Philosophy of Emotions

PSYC 325 History and Systems of Psychology

REL 298 Reproductive Ethics

SOAN 360 Sociology of Health and Medicine

SOAN 365 Global Health

SOAN 370 Disability, Identity, and Power

STHS 201 Alchemy, Astronomy, and Medicine before 1700

STHS 302 Cancer and Society

STHS 318 Science and Gender

STHS 366 Medicine in the United States: Historical Perspectives

 

Science and Society

CONN 357 Exploring Animal Minds

CONN 393 The Cognitive Foundations of Morality and Religion

CONN 410 Science and Economics of Climate Change

ECON 225 Environmental and Natural Resource Economics

ENGL 374 Literature and the Environment

ENVR 335 Thinking About Biodiversity

HIST 364 American Environmental History

PG/PHIL 390 Gender and Philosophy

PHIL 105 Neuroethics and Human Enhancement

PHIL 285 Environmental Ethics

PHIL 340 Philosophy of Cognitive Science

STHS 100 Apes, Angels, and Darwin

STHS 201 Alchemy, Astronomy, and Medicine before 1700

STHS 325 Natural History Museums and Society

STHS 330 Evolution and Society Since Darwin

STHS 333 Evolution and Ethics

STHS 340 Finding Order in Nature

STHS 344 Ecological Knowledge in Historical Perspective

STHS 345 Science and War in the Modern World

STHS 347 Alchemy and Chemistry: Historical Perspectives

STHS 361 Mars Exploration

STHS 370 Science and Religion in the United States: From Evolution to Climate Change

 

Technology in the Modern World

CONN 410 Science and Economics of Climate Change

ECON 225 Environmental and Natural Resource Economics

ECON 351 Industrial Organization: Market Structures and Strategic Behavior

ENVR 328 Nuclear Narratives of the American West

GLAM 339 Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Antiquity

HIST 335 Intelligence and Espionage in Europe and the US

IPE 389 Global Struggles Over Intellectual Property

PHIL 105 Neuroethics and Human Enhancement

PHIL 286 Ethics, Data, and Artificial Intelligence

SOAN 352 Critical Studies of Organizations, Work, and Management

STHS 301 Technology and Culture

STHS 344 Ecological Knowledge in Historical Perspective

STHS 345 Science and War in the Modern World

STHS 347 Alchemy and Chemistry: Historical Perspectives

STHS 348 Strange Realities: Physics in the 20th and 21st Centuries

STHS 354 Murder and Mayhem under the Microscope

STHS 361 Mars Exploration

STHS 375 Science, Technology, and Politics