Cultivate an appreciation for other lifestyles and examine your own lifestyle through UFV's Bachelor of Sociology and Anthropology. Pairing these two disciplines provides an ideal framework to explore how society and culture influence your perspectives, prejudices, and worldview.
In your freshman and sophomore years, you explored the basic concepts of sociology and anthropology. You will think about what it means to be a human being: look at the life of a hunting band or a Himalayan village, bringing the life of your city into a new focus. Studying the challenges faced by indigenous and third-world people will help you become a better citizen of the world.
In the third and fourth years, you will face in-depth courses. Examine the ideas of famous theorists, discuss contemporary issues such as globalization and social change, and learn the skills of quantitative and qualitative research and analysis. During his career, he has developed a keen interest in Canada's diversity and Aboriginal culture.
By the end of your degree, you will have a broad understanding of your society, improve your intercultural skills, and be fully developed after research, analysis, and writing skills.
Career expectations:
Traditionally, anthropologist positions have mainly existed in academic, teaching, and research fields. However, WorkBC predicts that in the new environment, there will be more openings for professional social scientists: large organizations such as research institutions, global marketing, and analytics firms, non-profit associations, government agencies, and private companies.
These large entities require employees with research and analytical skills to manage and interpret large amounts of human behavior data. The job may involve providing experience in different cultures, conducting market research, evaluating social policies, or developing educational or research plans. Anthropology graduates also used their communication, critical thinking, and cross-cultural skills to become researchers, teachers, evaluators, or project managers in other fields such as international aid, education, marketing, public relations, protection, human resources, and business.
Anthropology also provides you with a solid foundation for studying international law, public administration, public health, international relations, global development, or other graduate courses in the social sciences and humanities.
High School Applicants, please provide a copy of:
Post-Secondary Applicants, please provide a copy of:
Option 1: Secondary school (for students with secondary school graduation only)
B.C. applicants
B.C. secondary school graduation or equivalent.
A minimum grade of C+ in English Studies 12 or English First Peoples 12 (see Note) and a minimum of a B average in two additional Approved Grade 12 courses.
Note: Students may also present English 12, English Literature 12, English 12 First Peoples, AP English, or IB English A (standard level or higher level), or out-of-province equivalent.
Out-of-province applicants:
Students will be considered on the basis of courses equivalent to Approved B.C. Grade 12 courses. See the Admissions section of the calendar for more information on equivalents to B.C. secondary school graduation.
Option 2: University entrance (for students who have attended some post-secondary school)
One of the following:
Completion of a minimum of 30 credits in courses numbered at the 100 level and above, with a minimum CGPA of 2.00 on all credits attempted.
Completion of a minimum of nine credits at the 100 level and above, transferable to a degree program, with a minimum GPA of 3.00 on all credits attempted.
Completion of a post-secondary career or technical diploma (minimum of two years post-secondary credit) from a recognized Canadian or International post-secondary institution, with a minimum CGPA of 2.50 (equated to the UFV grading scheme), calculated on all courses taken.
Completion of a three- or four-year Bachelor's degree from a recognized Canadian or international institution, with a minimum GPA of 2.00 (equated to the UFV grading scheme). Students who have completed a previous degree are governed by UFV's Subsequent and Concurrent Bachelor Degree policy (98).
Students who have attended or are currently attending a post-secondary institution, have fewer than 30 credits applicable for BA entrance at the time they apply for admission and have a minimum GPA of 2.00 on all post-secondary courses attempted, may be considered for admission based on secondary school requirements.
Students who do not meet these requirements might consider Qualifying Studies and/or a meeting with an Academic Advisor.
The English Language Proficiency (ELP) requirements for Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology in Canada: are:
N.B: ELP is not mandatory for all international students. You could apply without ELP if your previous degree's medium of instruction were in English. Students of Ghana, Nigeria, Liberia, for example, are not required to take the ELP test.Items | Costs | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Application Fees | CA$150.00 | ||||||
Tuition Fees | Click Tuition fee | ||||||
Living Cost | CA$12,000.00/year (CA$1,000.00/month) |
||||||
Student Earning | CA$18,688.00/year |
||||||
You will earn CA$18,688.00/year by working (20h * 4 weeks * 8 months * CAD 14.50/h) + (40h * 4 weeks * 4 months * CAD 14.50/h) at minimum wage of CA$14.60/hour. |
Items | Costs | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Application Fees | CA$49.69 | ||||||
Living Cost | CA$12,000.00/year (CA$1,000.00/month) |
||||||
Student Earning | CA$18,688.00/year | ||||||
This is just an estimate. You don't have any work hour limit. You will earn CA$18,688.00/year by working (20h * 4 weeks * 8 months * CAD 14.50/h) + (40h * 4 weeks * 4 months * CAD 14.50/h) at minimum wage of CA$14.60/hour. |
Please sign up to send email directly to universities.