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Liberal Arts

Combine a breadth of knowledge with a depth of understanding

Focused yet flexible, Bachelor of Liberal Arts programs at UAS provides academic depth to a general course of liberal arts study. Humanities, communications, literature, writing, philosophy, and languages can be combined with social sciences fields such as anthropology, economics, history, political science, psychology, and sociology. With the guidance of a faculty advisor, students choose which liberal arts and social sciences disciplines they wish to combine to match their own career and academic goals. The BLA at UAS can be completed on-campus or online, making this degree an excellent choice for transferring students.

Liberal Arts Degrees

Student Experience

Marie and X̱'unei: A Conversation on Language

A conversation between Elder Marie Olson and Lance X̱’unei Twitchell, Associate Professor of Alaska Native Languages. Recorded in September 2017.

Outdoor Studies Students in Japan

Come along with the Outdoor Studies Capstone class while they explore backcountry skiing in Japan's Hakuba region.

Learning Environments

Interdisciplinary Studies

B.L.A. Emphasis

Students have an opportunity to design an Interdisciplinary Bachelor of Liberal Arts (B.L.A.) degree with the guidance of a faculty advisor. Students choose which disciplines to combine. This program provides a focused, yet flexible course of study in the humanities with additional study options in languages, mathematics, natural sciences, and social sciences.

Student studying in the library

Alaska Native Languages and Studies

B.L.A. Emphasis

The Alaska Native Languages and Studies program focuses on three primary components of modern and historical Alaska Native life: Language, Art, and Society. Students learn and document the languages of Southeast Alaska, including Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian, with the goal to keep them alive for generations. The focus in art includes Northwest Coast formline design, carving, weaving, and textiles. Society looks at what makes up Alaska Native cultures and organizations — from historical migration patterns and contact with other cultures to modern day tribes, ANCSA corporations, consortia, and civil rights organizations.

Four Alaska Language students

Outdoor and Adventure Studies

B.L.A. Emphasis

Students learn and practice the foundational skills of rock and ice climbing, hiking, camping, kayaking, backcountry skiing and snowboarding, and mountaineering, as well as swift-water rescue and wilderness medicine — courses that provide skills needed to act responsibly in the backcountry. These classes often require full-day and multi-day outings. Students must be in good physical condition and be prepared to spend many weekends in the field.

Students have the opportunity to reflect on our interaction with nature and each other with academic courses such as perspectives on wilderness, and small group communication and team building.

Avalanche class

Tidal Echoes Literary and Arts Journal

UAS students, mentored by a professor, edit and produce Tidal Echoes, a literary journal showcasing the art and writing of Southeast Alaskans. The journal fills a unique literary niche — a forum for an eclectic blend of readers and artists to meet and engage.

Tidal Echoes aims to bring together the voices and visions of Southeast Alaska. Each year, students have the opportunity to intern with the journal, gaining skills in design, editing, project management, networking, communication, and broadcasting.

Tidal echoes cover

“Intellectual debate is encouraged; struggling with problems presented in the courses made me academically stronger.”