Integrated Studies

Programs offered
  • Integrated Studies: Health & Fitness Concentration (major)
  • Integrated Studies: Language Arts Concentration (major)
  • Integrated Studies: Mathematics Concentration (major)
  • Integrated Studies: Natural Sciences Concentration (major)
  • Integrated Studies: Social Sciences Concentration (major)
  • Integrated Studies: The Arts Concentration (major)

If you intend to complete Residency Teacher Certification with an endorsement in Elementary Education, you are required to major in Integrated Studies. Coursework for the major along with the Residency Teacher Certification program may be completed in four years.

Note: You may graduate with an Integrated Studies major without seeking Elementary Certification.

Such students will not be required to complete the Foundations Quarter, Methods Quarter, Integrated Quarter, and Internship quarter required for certification. Instead they must complete one or more concentration-specific capstone courses rather than the Education Capstone course.

Find out more about this program’s mission, vision, and outcomes.

Integrated Studies (BA)

The Integrated Studies major is a comprehensive interdisciplinary program designed for students who want to pursue a career as an elementary school teacher.

  • A minimum 91–98 credits are required for this major, including 23 upper-division credits.
  • This is the required major for you if you intend to complete the Residency Teacher Certification with an endorsement in Elementary Education as an SPU undergraduate.
  • Coursework for the major along with the Residency Teacher Certification program may be completed in four years.
  • This major allows you to develop depth of knowledge in the content areas in which you will teach: language arts, mathematics, natural sciences, social sciences, the arts, and health/fitness.

Core courses

The Core Courses were selected to enable you to develop both breadth of content knowledge across the subject areas you will teach (e.g., language arts, mathematics, natural sciences, social sciences, the arts, and health/fitness), and some depth of content knowledge in those areas. These courses simultaneously fulfill your Ways of Knowing requirements.

A number of these courses were specifically designed for future elementary teachers, including inquiry-based mathematics; inquiry-based science; children’s literature; the arts, music, theatre; and health/fitness education of children.

The courses are aligned with the six content areas of Washington state’s Endorsement Competencies for Elementary Education K–8 and will prepare you to take the state-mandated WEST-B® and WEST-E™ content skills tests. Further information about the tests can be found on the School of Education website.

Concentration in a discipline

You will select a discipline as an area of concentration early in your program. You take 24–35 additional credits of coursework in this discipline with the goal of acquiring greater depth of knowledge in one of the Core content areas.

When you are admitted into the major, you should work with your advisor for your selected concentration.

The six concentration areas, and their faculty contacts, include:

  • The Arts Concentration, Andrew Ryder, PhD, advisor
  • Health and Fitness Concentration, JoAnn Atwell-Scrivner, PhD, advisor
  • Language Arts Concentration, April Middeljans, PhD, advisor (If you choose this concentration, you must fulfill the requirement for proficiency in a second language.)
  • Mathematics Concentration, Jerilynn Lepak, PhD, advisor
  • Natural Sciences Concentration, Kara Gray, PhD, advisor
  • Social Sciences Concentration, Don Holsinger, PhD, advisor

Advising

It is extremely important for you to work closely with an advisor as you make decisions regarding your course selections for the Core courses, the Concentration, and the Residency Teacher Certification, and the University’s graduation requirements.

As an incoming freshman, you are assigned a University Colloquium advisor and an Integrated Studies faculty advisor. You will work with your Integrated Studies faculty advisor to select appropriate courses.

If you plan to participate in a study abroad program, you will need to work closely with your faculty advisor to determine the most appropriate quarter for such travel. This planning should be done during your freshman year, if  possible.

Transfer students

Work closely with your Integrated Studies faculty advisor to determine whether or not you have completed transfer courses that may substitute in the Core courses and in the Concentration.

Apply to the major

You may apply for admission to the Integrated Studies major upon completion of your freshman year. Typically you should have a minimum 3.0 GPA overall and must have decided on an area of concentration.

  • Apply to this program through the Major or Minor application form.
  • Once admitted, you should maintain a minimum 3.0 minimum GPA.
  • You must complete the major requirements in effect when you are admitted to the major.

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Integrated Studies

Find out more about Integrated Studies to see how this degree can help you achieve your goals as an educator and make a difference in the world.