Academics
Comparative Religion Major
The Comparative Religion major is a flexible, interdisciplinary program of study, designed to work well as a second major. The major builds your cross-cultural skills; it also prepares you to address, professionally, the religious dimension of people's identities and social issues involving religion. Such issues intersect with a wide range of fields, including law, government, education, health services, business, and nonprofit work.
Most of our department's graduates are double-majors who decide to pursue a second major in religion because they recognize its relevance to their first major. Because our department is relatively small, our double-majors often find they can receive more individualized attention from faculty in Comparative Religion than they can from faculty in their other major.
What does the religion major give you for the job market?
- Exposes you to a diversity of religious traditions that may inform the identities of your future colleagues or clients.
- Introduces you more deeply to your choice of two religious traditions, or religions from two regions of the world.
- Teaches you theories and methods that you can apply to addressing issues, challenges, or opportunities in your field of work that arise from religion.
- Prepares you for work and leadership in a diverse world by giving you practice at engaging empathetically with beliefs, values, and cultural practices different from your own.
- Provides you 27 credit hours of coursework designed to develop your skills in writing, critical reading, critical thinking, inquiry & analysis, and intercultural competence. (You will complete additional courses, beyond those 27 hours, which may be designed to help you develop different skills.)
- Expands your intellectual toolkit across disciplines, by having you take courses in multiple fields.
- Offers you a mentored senior research experience, in which you produce a paper suitable for presentation in a professional setting.
Religion Minor
What does the religion minor give you for the job market?
- Exposes you to a diversity of religious traditions that may inform the identities of your future colleagues or clients.
- Introduces you more deeply to your choice of two religious traditions, or religions from two regions of the world.
- Teaches you theories and methods that you can apply to addressing issues, challenges, or opportunities in your field of work that arise from religion.
- Prepares you for work and leadership in a diverse world by giving you practice at engaging empathetically with beliefs, values, and cultural practices different from your own.
- Provides you with 18 credit hours of coursework designed to develop your skills in writing, critical reading, critical thinking, inquiry & analysis, and intercultural competence.
From a graduate:
"Minoring in religion gave me a unique perspective as a doctor. Interacting with patients is very much focused on the patient as a whole—including their religion, culture, what they think is important, and how they view the world and their own health."
Your options for studying religion at Miami
Depending on how intensively you want to expand your knowledge and experience in this area, you could incorporate the study of religion into your career preparation in any of these ways:
Learning Outcomes
At graduation, we expect that our majors can
Written Communication which is the development and expression of ideas in writing, including working in multiple genres and styles and using different writing technologies, and mixing text, data, and images;
Reading which is “the process of simultaneously extracting and constructing meaning through interaction and involvement with written language” [Snow, et al., 2002]);
Intercultural Knowledge and Competence which is ‘a set of cognitive, affective, and behavioral skills and characteristics that support effective and appropriate interaction in a variety of cultural contexts,’” (Bennett, J. M. 2008);
Effectively communicate scientific information to both non-specialist (popular) and specialist (technical)
All students in the Farmer School of Business must complete a Diversity Requirement as part of the required common core of business courses.
Your options
Any one of the following courses in the study of religion will satisfy the FSB diversity requirement. If you take one of these courses, it will also count for the Intercultural Perspectives requirement in the Global Miami Plan.