Africana Studies Learning Goals
Students in Africana Studies at RIC are expected to be able:
- To recall historical chronology that gave rise to the field of Africana Studies.
- To identify the important contributors to the field, and explain the relevance of the field for both the academy and society.
- To recite major events, dates, and persons in the chronology of the global black experience.
- To demonstrate familiarity with the history and impact of resistance against racism, colonialism, enslavement, poverty, and injustice.
- To discuss sociological and psychological theories with reference to the global black experiences.
- To cite the principle contributions of the major literary, musical, and artistic figures in the black experience.
- To show how the experiences of blacks have been an integral part of American and world history.
- To demonstrate college-level skills in reading, writing, speaking, listening, researching, and reasoning.
In short, Africana students should be able to negotiate the transdisciplinary relationship among the anthropological, historical, psychological, religious, sociological, aesthetic/literary, linguistic, economic, political, medical, scientific, and technological areas of black life.