Our Academic Program | Hampshire College Hampshire College Closure Announcement Find information Our Academic Program A curriculum relevant to the world we live in... And the one we want to live in. Graduates encounter opportunities and problems that don’t fit neatly into fixed majors or departments. Their education shouldn’t either. Employers overwhelmingly agree that broad learning and skills that cut across disciplines are the best preparation for long-term career success. We launched a bold new curriculum and student experience, fundamentally reshaping a liberal arts education to match the needs of today’s students and the world. Hampshire’s model educates students for the challenges of jobs, graduate schools, entrepreneurship, and life. Global challenges. Resources to address them. The world has big problems. Today’s students want to go to college to do something about it. Hampshire is taking up these big problems and figuring out how to address them. Traditional models of departments and schools can’t address these challenges effectively. So we developed Learning Collaboratives, structures unbounded by majors, designed to address timely topics. Through these collaboratives, we bring multiple academic disciplines together to address the pressing issues facing society today. And we will not remain static. Themes will evolve as needs and interests shift, and new problems and questions emerge. Learning Collaboratives Launch Experience Learning Collaboratives Environments and Change How should we act on our responsibilities in the face of changing climate? In/Justice How do we disrupt and dismantle white supremacy? Arts and Politics How can art and politics intersect to challenge dominant narratives and create new visions for community? Divisional System At Hampshire, there are no freshmen, sophomores, juniors, or seniors. Rather, Hampshire students advance through three divisions. Academic pursuits move students from course-based projects in Div I through semester-long collaborative projects in Div II toward a year-long, self-designed independent project in Div III. Each division concludes with a portfolio review, including narrative feedback from all courses, final papers, or projects, as well as Community-Engaged Learning and a retrospective. This divisional framework guides students in building their academic concentration or focus of study and supports them through more and more ambitious projects. Div I The first year emphasizes learning across a wide range of critical, scientific, and creative approaches through our multidisciplinary curriculum, gaining skills for learning in community with others, and engaging in project-based learning in supported contexts. Students are mentored by an advisor and supported through our advising networks of students, staff, and faculty. Div II The second and third years are all about students' deep inquiry into their own interests. Guided by a team of advisors, they design a unique academic path, strengthen connections in communities of learners, and grow toward independent project-based learning. Advisors help students select classes, internships, studying abroad, and other opportunities to pursue their passions. Div III The fourth year is a student's opportunity to push their learning further, take risks, and tackle a meaningful challenge they’ve envisioned from concept to completion. Often as rigorous as graduate-level thesis projects, Div IIIs include scientific research no one has ever done, innovative technological developments, daring artistic exhibitions, philosophical writing, original documentary films, and anything else our students can imagine. At Hampshire, students will: Actively grapple with pressing questions and issues starting in their first semester. Explore and innovate freely across multiple methods and practices and all fields of knowledge: the arts, sciences, technology, social/political inquiry, and humanities. Develop lifelong skills central to a liberal arts education: creative problem-solving, applied critical thinking, entrepreneurialism, and agility for dealing with complexity and uncertainty. Integrate learning in and out of the classroom through courses, workshops, independent study, field study, community learning, study abroad, internships, co-curricular activities, and more. A better way to learn. Narrative Evaluations Instead of letter grades, written evaluations are delivered to students. These parallel professional performance reviews, helping students identify their areas of growth potential along with their areas of strength. Student-Designed Curriculum Instead of asking our students to conform to inflexible majors, they are tasked with building a program that aligns with 
their interests, passions, questions, and goals. Community-Engaged Learning The study of theory is combined with direct "real-world" experience like an internship, project with community organizations or peers, field research involving community agencies, and more. Stay In Touch With Office of the Dean of Faculty 413.559.5378 dof@hampshire.edu This block requires the "Enable floating privacy settings tab and withdraw consent banner" to be enabled in EU Cookie Compliance settings