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Ready to find out what MSU Denver can do for you? We’ve got you covered.
Born out of the Chicano Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s and ’70s, MSU Denver’s bachelor degree program in Chicana/o Studies is a rich, interdisciplinary major that is as much about community involvement as it is about individual learning.
MSU Denver’s Chicana/o Studies Department is the only full-fledged Chicana/o Studies program in Colorado. While emphasizing research and the development of strong critical thinking and creative skills, your Chicana/o Studies major will take you on an immersive journey through the language, history, culture and social justice roots of this dynamic and emerging discipline.
It will also take you into the world. Whether through events like the Richard T. Castro Distinguished Visiting Professorship with activist Chicana/o scholars and Lalo Delgado Poetry Festival or service learning experiences and community-based internships, you will develop a deep sense of the challenges and opportunities confronting the Chicana/o community today.
Choose the Social Practice concentration if you’re considering a career working with the Chicana/o community in civic engagement and nonprofit organizations. Select the Cultural Studies concentration if you want a career related to art, film, music, literature, pop culture or religion. Or opt for a Chicana/o program with teacher licensure, if teaching is in your future.
Whether you want to pursue a graduate degree or begin a career, your Chicana/o major will provide both the intellectual and professional foundation to do so.
Located on the Auraria Campus, MSU Denver is a vibrant and multicultural university, which has strong historical connections to Denver’s Chicana/o Movement. MSU Denver is approaching Hispanic Serving Institution status and is near the locus of Denver City Government and the Colorado State Capitol.
The Chicana/o Studies program offers internships at the Colorado State Legislature as well as Denver nonprofits such as: Padres/Jovenes Unidos, Servicios de la Raza, Statewide Parent Coalition, Café Cultura, the Gang Rescue and Service Program (GRASP) and Victim Offender Reconciliation Program (VORP).
Students can also take part in the Richard T. Castro Professorship, which brings famous Latina and Latino scholars to MSU Denver to teach, perform and give lectures to the campus community.
What can you do with an MSU Denver bachelor’s degree in Chicana/o Studies from MSU Denver?
Politics, law, government, social services, business, education, politics, journalism, education and the arts. These are just some of the sectors open to you as a major in Chicana/o Studies.
Chicana/o Studies majors can become:
Professor and Chair Ramon Del Castillo is an award-winning activist scholar with professional experience in the fields of mental health, community and economic development and education. He is also a published poet and musician.
Assistant Professor Chalane E. Lechuga has a sociology background and is an expert on race and identity, youth of color, Latina teens and empowerment, among other topics. She encourages students to bring their life experiences into the classroom, understanding that everyone is an active teacher-student and co-investigator in her classes.
Associate Professor Adriana P. Nieto grew up in Denver and has research interests in the Latina/o religious experience, borderlands history and religions, U.S. Latina/o protestants, Chicana feminisms and women of color feminisms. She has been working on developing courses about the acequia irrigation methods in the San Luis Valley.
Associate Professor Adriann C. Wycoff serves as director of the MSU Denver Family Literacy Program and is co-principal investigator of the College Assistance Migrant Program. She has spent years working in community-based, non-traditional education settings and is an expert on the role of Chicana/o Studies in higher education, issues facing adult learners, migrant farmworkers and other non-traditional students and the feminization of poverty.
Affiliate faculty members Jose Quintana, M.A., Christina Sigala, M.S.W., M.A.R. and Tony Garcia teach classes in poetry, folklore and drama and Amanda Gonzales, J.D., teaches a course in law.
Graduates from MSU Denver’s Chicana/o Studies program have gone on to become:
Chicana/o Studies alumni have been accepted for graduate study at the following schools:
Phone:
303-615-0711
Fax:
303-556-3178
Campus Location:
Rectory Building
1156 9th Street
Denver, CO 80217
Mailing Address:
Campus Box 41
P.O. Box 173362
Denver, CO 80217-3362