With over 60 student-led clubs and organizations, including a Student Programming Board that sponsors competitions and guest appearances, our campus is a community. From Athletes to Zumba enthusiasts, there is a place for you at Doane University.
Doane’s CORE Connection curriculum and academic requirements provide the framework to sample interest and find your passion while both keeping options open AND maintaining a pathway to a degree in four years – or less.
At Doane University, we reward students for their achievements both in and outside of the classroom. Through scholarships, grants, work-study, and on-campus employment, our students look forward to starting jobs, not payment plans.
Students studying history learn to think objectively, develop advanced research skills, craft complex written and oral arguments, and cultivate diverse ways of seeing the world. To study history, students read a variety of works, including novels, government documents, diaries, newspapers, letters, and other primary sources that offer insight into how people lived and thought in the past.
History informs and integrates all other academic disciplines. To study Renaissance Italy, for example, is to explore art, anatomy, engineering, literature, architecture and more. The study of history can reveal the complexity of the most narrow topics and capture sweeping developments that are part of the human experience.
Historians are trained to both focus on the details and to interpret broader social situations. A history major who works in a museum will engage with the public through exhibits, tours, and educational activities and events. History majors can use their critical thinking skills to develop solutions to real world problems in government and business and in education.
Students studying history learn to think objectively, develop advanced research skills, craft complex written and oral arguments, and cultivate diverse ways of seeing the world. To study history, students read a variety of works, including novels, government documents, diaries, newspapers, letters, and other primary sources that offer insight into how people lived and thought in the past.
History informs and integrates all other academic disciplines. To study Renaissance Italy, for example, is to explore art, anatomy, engineering, literature, architecture and more. The study of history can reveal the complexity of the most narrow topics and capture sweeping developments that are part of the human experience.
Historians are trained to both focus on the details and to interpret broader social situations. A history major who works in a museum will engage with the public through exhibits, tours, and educational activities and events. History majors can use their critical thinking skills to develop solutions to real world problems in government and business and in education.