Students in our courses explore the origins of scientific theories, technological innovations and medical systems and the way they have shaped human societies. In our courses we show that historical perspective is critical to addressing contemporary issues like climate change, global pandemics, and the social and institutional forces that continue to keep women and people of color from full participation in science, engineering, and medicine.
The history of science is not simply a list of discoveries and inventions. Rather, we study the sciences as an integral part of culture and society as a whole. We are not just studying when and how people found answers to specific scientific problems, but also why and when such issues became problems in the first place.
The history of technology explores the entanglement of technology with social, political, economic, and environmental change across human history. By investigating the diverse ways that human societies have engaged in processes of making and doing and how these change or stabilize over time, historians of technology offer vital context to inform our responses to the challenges and opportunities associated with technology in the contemporary world.
The history of medicine examines the ways people in different times and places have defined, understood and responded to disease, disability, and public health crises. The history of medicine connects medical ideas and medical practices to the broader social and cultural contexts in which they were developed.
Students in our classes have the opportunity to use the world-renowned History of Science Collections, located in Bizzell Memorial Library. The Collections is a premier research collection of its kind, holding almost 100,000 volumes from every field and subject area of science, technology, and medicine ranging chronologically from 1467 to the present. It is unique in its mission to support undergraduate education.
Our program emphasizes essential skills valuable for diverse career paths: the ability to write well, to persuasively convey your ideas to others, and to assess and integrate new knowledge. Graduates can apply their education and training in a wide variety of professions including public policy, journalism, public health, and education. A degree in the History of Science, Technology, and Medicine also provides an excellent foundation for graduate work in many fields, including education, history, law, and medicine.