Amherst College
39 majorsAmherst offers 39 majors under a fully open curriculum — no distribution requirements beyond the major itself. The college was a national pioneer in several interdisciplinary fields: it founded one of the first undergraduate departments in American Studies, Law Jurisprudence & Social Thought, and Neuroscience anywhere in the country. Theater & Dance is a combined major, and the college has separate majors in Greek, Latin, Classical Civilization, and Classics under one classics umbrella.
Law, Jurisprudence & Social Thought — one of the first undergraduate departments of its kind in the U.S., examining law not as professional training but as a humanistic and social discipline.
Babson College
1 majorBabson awards a single undergraduate degree: a B.S. in Business Administration. Every student graduates with the same degree, customized through 24 concentrations (think: majors within a major). This is an intentional model, not a limitation — the school has been ranked #1 in the country for entrepreneurship education by U.S. News for multiple consecutive decades.
The single-degree model itself is distinctive. Babson's Foundations of Management and Entrepreneurship (FME) course has every first-year student run an actual business during their freshman year.
Bates College
37 majorsBates offers 37 majors, all culminating in a required senior thesis or capstone seminar — one of the few colleges in the country where a thesis is mandatory across all majors, not just honors tracks. Notable programs include Dance, Rhetoric Film and Screen Studies, and a newly approved Digital and Computational Studies major (2025). Bates also offers an Engineering major as a dual-degree pathway with five partner universities including Dartmouth and Columbia.
Rhetoric, Film, and Screen Studies — an unusual combination that treats rhetoric and moving image as connected disciplines, not separate departments.
Bennington College
28 areas of studyBennington has no traditional majors. Students design their own "Plan" — an individualized course of study developed with a faculty committee. The 28 entries in the spreadsheet represent Bennington's official Areas of Study, which serve as building blocks rather than fixed programs. Every student also completes a seven-week off-campus Field Work Term each January. Bennington has deep roots in dance, writing, and the visual arts.
The Plan Process itself — there is no declared major at Bennington. Every student's degree is self-designed from scratch, making it one of the most individualized undergraduate programs in the country.
Bentley University
31 majorsBentley offers 18 business majors and 14 arts and sciences majors, with all students earning either a B.S. or B.A. — not a generic "business" degree. The school sits just outside Boston and is ranked #1 among regional universities in the Northeast by U.S. News. Bentley has been unusually forward-looking in creating new programs.
Diversity, Equity and Inclusion (DEI) — one of the first undergraduate DEI degrees in the U.S., offered as both a B.S. (through business) and B.A. (through arts and sciences). Also notable: Artificial Intelligence for Innovation (STEM-designated) and Finance and Technology (FinTech).
Boston College
37 majorsBC's Morrissey College of Arts and Sciences offers 39 majors alongside the Carroll School of Management (business), Lynch School of Education, and Connell School of Nursing. The Jesuit core curriculum is required of all students, meaning every BC undergraduate takes courses in theology, philosophy, history, literature, and natural sciences regardless of major. Islamic Civilization and Societies is one of the more distinctive liberal arts programs.
Human-Centered Engineering — a relatively new B.S. that integrates engineering practice with ethics, human needs, and social impact. One of the few engineering programs at a Jesuit institution with this explicit framing.
Boston University
44 majorsBU has 10 undergraduate schools and colleges, so its 44 majors span a wide range of professional and liberal arts programs. The College of Fine Arts has three divisions (Music, Theatre, Visual Arts). COM (School of Communication) is nationally recognized for journalism, PR, film/TV, and media science. BU also has an unusually strong health sciences track through Sargent College.
Data Science — offered through the new College of Data Sciences (CDS), BU's newest school and one of the first standalone undergraduate data science colleges at a major research university.
Bowdoin College
35 majorsBowdoin is consistently ranked among the top 5 liberal arts colleges nationally. It has no core curriculum requirements — students are free to design their own path within their major. The college has a strong tradition in environmental science given its coastal Maine location, and several interdisciplinary programs (Africana Studies, Gender and Women's Studies, Neuroscience) that are long-established.
Earth and Oceanographic Science — a Bowdoin-specific program reflecting the college's location on the Maine coast, integrating geology, oceanography, and climate science.
Brandeis University
44 majorsBrandeis is a research university with the feel of a liberal arts college. It has 44 majors and a strong tradition in social justice, Jewish studies, and international affairs. The Heller School for Social Policy has shaped many of Brandeis's social science offerings. Several interdisciplinary programs reflect the university's founding mission.
Peace, Conflict, and Coexistence Studies — an interdisciplinary program examining conflict resolution, peacebuilding, and human rights. Rare at this depth as an undergraduate major.
Brown University
68 majorsBrown's Open Curriculum means there are no required courses outside of the concentration (major). With 68 concentrations in the file, Brown has the largest major count of any school we've catalogued. Many are highly specialized: Egyptology and Assyriology, Contemplative Studies, Medieval Cultures, and Judaic Studies alongside the standard disciplines. Brown also has a joint program with RISD.
Egyptology and Assyriology — one of the very few undergraduate programs in the country where students can focus on ancient Egyptian and Mesopotamian languages and civilizations. Also notable: Contemplative Studies and Behavioral Decision Sciences.
Bryant University
22 majorsBryant's model requires students to complete both a major and a minor, with one from the College of Business and one from the College of Arts and Sciences (or vice versa). This interdisciplinary requirement is built into every degree. Sports Industries, Media and Promotion is a standout professional program reflecting Bryant's proximity to the New England sports market.
Sports Industries, Media and Promotion — combines sports business, media, and marketing in a program tailored for careers in the sports industry. One of the more professionally specific programs at a business-focused institution.
Clark University
33 majorsClark is a small research university with unusually strong programs in geography (a field that has largely disappeared from many colleges), environmental science, and psychology. The university has a distinct focus on "challenge convention, change our world" as a guiding philosophy and is known for its LEEP (Liberal Education and Effective Practice) curriculum that integrates real-world experience.
Geography — Clark is one of the few undergraduate institutions in the country where geography remains a full, serious department. The program spans human geography, GIS, environmental geography, and spatial analysis.
Colby College
43 majorsColby offers 43 majors, unusually large for a NESCAC school, and has invested heavily in new interdisciplinary programs in recent years. The college is known for a strong January term (Jan Plan), a month of intensive independent or course-based study. Colby opened a new arts and museum complex, Colby College Museum of Art, that influences some of its visual arts and art history offerings.
Computational Biology — an interdisciplinary program combining computer science and biological sciences. Relatively rare as a formal undergraduate major at a liberal arts college.
Connecticut College
37 majorsConnecticut College (Conn) uses a "Connections" curriculum that integrates coursework, internships, study abroad, and community partnerships. The college has 37 majors and allows students to design their own. Botany and Zoology are offered as distinct majors — unusual at liberal arts colleges where these typically fold into a single Biology department.
Botany and Zoology as separate standalone majors — reflecting a traditional biology curriculum structure rarely preserved at small liberal arts colleges today.
Dean College
14 majorsDean is a small college historically known for its two-year associate programs, though it now grants bachelor's degrees in a focused set of areas. The college has particular strengths in the performing arts and business, with a tight-knit campus community.
Dance — Dean has one of the stronger undergraduate dance programs in the region relative to its size, with performance and choreography opportunities typically found at larger conservatory-style schools.
Emerson College
23 majorsEmerson is one of the few colleges in the country devoted entirely to communication, the arts, and liberal arts. Every major connects to those three areas. The college has a Los Angeles campus, a castle in the Netherlands, and a Global BFA in Film Art based in Paris. Sports Communication and Comedic Arts are among the most unusual programs at any school in this list.
Comedic Arts — a full BFA in comedy writing and performance. There are very few places in the country where you can get an accredited undergraduate degree in comedy. Emerson's program has produced notable alumni in late-night television and stand-up.
Endicott College
19 majorsEndicott requires all students to complete at least one semester-long internship as a graduation requirement — a distinctive academic model. The college has strong programs in hospitality, nursing, education, and the visual arts, with a scenic campus on the Beverly shore.
Internship requirement embedded into every major — not a program per se, but Endicott's model of making a full-semester professional internship mandatory for graduation is unusual and sets it apart structurally.
Fairfield University
36 majorsFairfield is a Jesuit university with 53 undergraduate majors across five schools including a full engineering school (Biomedical Engineering, Software Engineering, and Electrical Engineering), Dolan School of Business (AACSB accredited), and Egan School of Nursing. The university is situated an hour from New York City, which strongly shapes its career programming.
Sports Media — a program spanning journalism, broadcasting, and public relations in the sports industry, positioned well given Fairfield's location in the NYC/Connecticut media market.
Fordham University
42 majorsFordham has two undergraduate campuses — Rose Hill in the Bronx and Lincoln Center in Manhattan — and programs are shaped by proximity to New York City. The Gabelli School of Business and Fordham College offer strong interdisciplinary programs. International Political Economy is a distinctive offering that reflects Fordham's urban and global orientation.
Theatre at Lincoln Center — Fordham's theater program at the Lincoln Center campus benefits from being literally adjacent to one of the world's top performing arts complexes, with access to professional productions, rehearsal space, and industry connections.
Framingham State University
15 majorsFramingham State is a mid-sized public university in the Massachusetts state system with historic strength in food and nutrition, teacher preparation, and liberal arts. The Food and Nutrition program is one of the strongest at any public institution in the state and has a long tradition going back to the school's home economics roots.
Food and Nutrition / Dietetics — Framingham State has one of the strongest undergraduate dietetics and food science programs in Massachusetts, with accreditation for dietetic internship pathways.
Harvard College
47 majorsHarvard calls its majors "concentrations" and offers 50 across all fields. There is no business, accounting, hospitality, or heavily pre-professional major — all undergraduate study is liberal arts and sciences. Three concentrations require an application from within Harvard to enter: Comparative Literature, Environmental Science and Public Policy, and History and Literature. The Open Curriculum requires only that students complete a concentration, a language, writing, and general education courses.
Folklore and Mythology — one of the rarest undergraduate programs in the country, examining oral traditions, folk culture, and mythology across global societies. Few universities offer this as a standalone concentration. Also notable: Social Studies (application required), an interdisciplinary social science program with no equivalent at most institutions.
Holy Cross
23 majorsHoly Cross is a highly selective Jesuit liberal arts college that grants only the B.A. degree — there are no professional schools or business programs. The curriculum is anchored in the Jesuit tradition of educating the whole person. The college recently added new interdisciplinary programs including Data Science.
The B.A.-only model — Holy Cross grants exclusively Bachelor of Arts degrees, making it one of the few selective colleges to maintain this position. Students in STEM fields still earn a B.A., emphasizing the liberal arts mission.
Husson University
25 majorsHusson is a small private university in Bangor with a focus on professional programs including nursing, pharmacy, physical therapy, criminal justice, and business. The university has a practical, career-oriented model and is the only independent university in Maine with a pharmacy school.
Pharmacy — Husson operates New England's College of Osteopathic Medicine through a partnership and has one of Maine's few dedicated pharmacy programs at the undergraduate pathway level.
Johnson & Wales University
23 majorsJWU is primarily known for its hospitality and culinary programs, which are nationally ranked. The university structures all programs around an experiential, career-first model. Culinary Arts and Baking & Pastry Arts are major programs here that don't exist as undergraduate majors at most institutions.
Culinary Arts and Baking & Pastry Arts — full bachelor's degree programs in the culinary arts. JWU is one of only a small number of accredited universities in the country offering a B.S. in these fields, making them genuinely unusual in this spreadsheet.
Keene State College
37 majorsKeene State is New Hampshire's public liberal arts college. With 37 majors, it offers a broad range of programs. The Safety & Occupational Health Applied Sciences program is the second-largest major on campus. Precision Optics is unique in the region. And Holocaust & Genocide Studies holds a historic distinction.
Holocaust & Genocide Studies — the first four-year B.A. program in Holocaust and Genocide Studies in the United States. Students may spend a semester at Jagiellonian University in Krakow, Poland. Also notable: Precision Optics, which offers hands-on training in diamond turning, lasers, coating, and metrology — unique among New England colleges.
Lasell University
18 majorsLasell requires every undergraduate student to complete at least one internship — it's built into the academic model ("Connected Learning"). The university has particular strength in fashion, communication, sport management, and health fields, with programs tailored for professional entry. Lasell sits near Harvard Square in Newton with a shuttle to the Green Line.
Fashion programs — Lasell offers three distinct fashion majors: Fashion Design and Production, Fashion Media and Marketing, and Fashion Merchandising and Management. This three-track structure is more granular than most institutions and reflects the industry's distinct career paths. Also notable: Esports and Gaming Management, one of the earlier programs of its kind at a New England institution.
Lesley University
11 majorsLesley has two undergraduate colleges: the College of Art and Design (formerly the Art Institute of Boston) and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The art and design programs are BFAs — professionally oriented studio degrees. All students participate in the Scholar Partner Program, which guarantees internships. Lesley also has graduate programs in expressive arts therapies, counseling, and education.
Illustration — Lesley's BFA in Illustration is nationally recognized, produced by the former Art Institute of Boston, which has a decades-long tradition in commercial illustration and editorial art. Also notable: the Game Art and Game Design programs, among the few BFA-level game programs at a liberal arts-adjacent institution.
Maine Maritime Academy
12 majorsMaine Maritime is a small public academy with approximately 950 undergraduate students. Programs are almost entirely maritime, engineering, and logistics-focused. Many students join the Regiment of Midshipmen and complete sea terms aboard the Training Ship State of Maine or the historic Schooner Bowdoin. The school has a 90% job placement rate within 90 days of graduation. Starting salaries range from $60,000 to $120,000 depending on program.
Marine Systems Engineering — leads to a USCG unlimited engineering license and naval architecture career pathway. MMA is one of only six state maritime academies in the U.S. authorized to train students for unlimited U.S. Coast Guard merchant marine licenses.
Massachusetts College of Art and Design (MassArt)
18 majorsMassArt is the only publicly funded independent art school in the United States, founded in 1873. All 18 undergraduate programs lead to a BFA, with a shared Foundation Year before students select a major. The breadth of studio disciplines is remarkable for a single-institution art school.
Studio for Interrelated Media (SIM) — a self-directed, interdisciplinary major combining sound, light, motion, digital tools, performance, installation, and event production. Students design their own pathway with one-on-one faculty advising. Also notable: Glass (one of a small number of undergraduate glass programs in the U.S.) and Fibers (weaving, dyeing, and textile practice).
Massachusetts College of Liberal Arts (MCLA)
22 majorsMCLA is ranked #6 nationally among public liberal arts colleges by U.S. News and offers the lowest tuition of any four-year public college in Massachusetts. The Berkshire location means students have access to Mass MoCA and other Berkshire arts institutions. Graduates carry the lowest debt levels of any Massachusetts college. MCLA has 22 majors with multiple concentrations within each.
Music Industry and Production — combines traditional music coursework with arts management and concert production. Students learn both how to make music and how to run the business that puts it in front of audiences — a genuinely integrated program that's uncommon at this scale.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
26 majorsMIT calls its majors "Courses" (Course 6 = EECS, Course 8 = Physics, etc.) and all lead to a B.S. degree. With 58 official courses of study, we captured 26 that are most distinct. The university has no business school at the undergraduate level, no pre-professional accounting or nursing, and no pre-law track. Every program is oriented around science, engineering, architecture, management, or the humanities/arts/social sciences.
Computation and Cognition — an interdisciplinary program examining how computational systems can model mental processes, sitting at the intersection of computer science, cognitive science, and philosophy. Also notable: Climate System Science and Engineering (one of the few places to major specifically in climate as an engineering discipline) and Brain and Cognitive Sciences.
Massachusetts Maritime Academy
7 majorsMMA offers exactly seven undergraduate majors — all maritime or engineering-focused. All students are members of the Regiment of Cadets, living under a structured, regimental daily schedule. Annual sea terms are part of several degree programs. The academy is situated at the edge of the Cape Cod Canal.
Marine Science, Safety, and Environmental Protection — an unusual combination that integrates marine science with environmental compliance and safety management. Few schools offer this specific nexus as a standalone degree. Also notable: Emergency Management, which is larger here than at most institutions and includes homeland security preparation.
Middlebury College
21 majorsMiddlebury offers 45 majors and is one of the most respected liberal arts colleges in the country, particularly renowned for language education. The 4-1-4 calendar (fall semester, January term, spring semester) gives students a month each year for independent research, intensive study, or internships. The Language Schools on campus attract students from around the world each summer for immersive instruction in more than a dozen languages. Middlebury's count in this file is 21 because many standard liberal arts majors were already in the spreadsheet from other schools and simply added Middlebury as an additional school.
Environmental Studies — Middlebury has the oldest undergraduate Environmental Studies program in the United States, founded in 1965. The program set the national template for how environmental education integrates policy, science, and human dimensions. Also notable: Food Studies (Vermont's agricultural landscape informs a program spanning food systems, sustainability, and culture) and International Politics and Economics (a combined major distinct from standard international relations or economics programs at most schools).
Mitchell College
7 majorsMitchell is a small private college with an unusually strong commitment to supporting neurodiverse learners. The Thames Academy Learning Center provides extensive support services. Program offerings are focused and career-oriented.
The Bentsen Learning Center — not a major, but Mitchell's nationally recognized support program for students with learning disabilities and ADHD is a defining characteristic that makes the college distinctive among New England schools.
Mount Holyoke College
48 majorsMount Holyoke is the oldest of the Seven Sisters (founded 1837) and describes itself as a women's college that is gender diverse, meaning transgender and nonbinary students are explicitly welcome. With 48 majors, it has one of the broadest catalogs among the Seven Sisters. Students have access to over 6,000 courses through the Five College Consortium with Amherst, Smith, Hampshire, and UMass Amherst. The college has a particular strength in the sciences — it has long graduated more women who go on to earn science PhDs than most institutions.
Reproductive Health, Rights and Justice — one of very few standalone undergraduate majors of this specific focus anywhere in the country. The program integrates public health, policy, history, and activism. Also notable: Bio-Mathematical Sciences (an unusual undergraduate combination of biology and mathematics) and Museums, Archives, and Public History (preparing students specifically for careers in public-facing historical institutions).
Nichols College
12 majorsNichols is an AACSB-accredited business college offering the BSBA (with 17 concentrations) and the BA (with 5 liberal arts majors). The school ranks 9th nationally among undergraduate business schools for salary potential (Payscale) and claims that 4 in 10 graduates become a president, CEO, or business owner. Every student has access to Bloomberg Terminals and the college's Center for Intelligent Processing Automation.
Intelligent Automation — a BSBA concentration in robotic process automation, AI tools, and business process optimization, underpinned by a dedicated on-campus automation center. This level of specialization is unusual at the undergraduate level. Also notable: Criminal Psychology as a standalone BA major (rare at a business-focused college) and the three-track sport business structure — Sport Management, Sport Marketing & Content Creation, and Sport Sales & Strategy — each as separate concentrations.
Northeastern University
56 majorsNortheastern is defined by its co-op model: most undergraduates complete one to three six-month paid work experiences embedded in the degree program. This produces graduates with significant real-world experience before they finish their bachelor's degree. With 56 majors in the file, Northeastern's breadth spans business, engineering, health sciences, social sciences, and the arts.
The co-op program itself — not a major, but Northeastern's co-op system is one of the oldest and largest in the country. Students work full-time in their field for 6-month periods, producing a resume that's hard to replicate elsewhere. Also notable: Behavioral Neuroscience, Game Design, and Health Science programs.
Providence College
39 majorsProvidence College is the only college or university in North America administered by the Dominican Order of Friars. With 39 majors across four schools (Arts & Sciences, Business, Education and Social Work, and Nursing and Health Sciences), PC combines a strong liberal arts core with professional programs. All undergraduates are required to complete the Development of Western Civilization program — a two-year, team-taught sequence covering philosophy, theology, literature, and history from ancient to modern times. PC is ranked #1 in U.S. News's Regional Universities North category.
Liturgical Music — one of very few standalone undergraduate Liturgical Music degrees in the country, integrating theology and music for careers in sacred music and ministry. Also notable: Catholic Studies (an interdisciplinary major rooted in the Dominican intellectual tradition) and Public and Community Service Studies (an experiential, civic-engagement-focused program that has sent students to work with partner organizations across Providence and beyond).
Quinnipiac University
50 majorsQuinnipiac has grown rapidly and now offers 50 majors across colleges of arts and sciences, business, education, health sciences, and communications. The School of Communications has strong journalism, public relations, and media production programs. The health sciences programs are extensive.
Physician Assistant Studies — a competitive undergraduate pathway into a nationally in-demand healthcare profession. Quinnipiac's PA program has strong clinical placement rates and is one of the better-known in the Northeast.
Roger Williams University
12 majorsRoger Williams has a strong architecture school, a law school, and professional programs oriented around careers in building, justice, and business. The campus overlooks Mount Hope Bay in Bristol.
Architecture — Roger Williams has one of the stronger undergraduate architecture programs in New England, with accreditation from NAAB and a design studio culture that produces strong portfolio graduates.
Smith College
48 majorsSmith is one of the Seven Sisters and the largest women's liberal arts college in the country. It has 48 majors and one of the most expansive engineering programs (Picker Engineering Program) at any women's college. Smith students can cross-register with Amherst, Hampshire, Mount Holyoke, and UMass Amherst through the Five College Consortium.
Engineering at a women's liberal arts college — Smith's Picker Engineering Program is unusual: a full ABET-accredited engineering program embedded in a women's college, producing the only women's college graduates with a B.S. in Engineering. The program emphasizes design, ethics, and community impact.
UConn
82 majorsUConn is Connecticut's flagship public university and has 82 majors in the file — the most of any school we've catalogued. Programs span business (School of Business is AACSB accredited), engineering, nursing, education, liberal arts, and fine arts. UConn is also a Division I athletics institution.
Marine Sciences — UConn's Avery Point campus on the Connecticut coast houses a dedicated marine sciences program with access to the Long Island Sound and research vessels. Also notable: Digital Media & Design, combining computing with creative production at the intersection of art and technology.
UMass Amherst
80 majorsUMass Amherst is the flagship of the Massachusetts state university system and has 80 majors in the file. It's a full research university with a Five College Consortium affiliation, meaning students can take courses at Amherst, Smith, Hampshire, and Mount Holyoke colleges. The Isenberg School of Management is one of the most respected public business schools in New England.
Stockbridge School of Agriculture — UMass maintains one of the few land-grant agricultural colleges with full undergraduate programs in horticulture, sustainable food systems, and landscape architecture. The school is also home to a 700-acre agricultural research farm.
UMass Dartmouth
23 majorsUMass Dartmouth has strong programs in engineering, business, nursing, and the arts. The College of Visual and Performing Arts is notably strong for a mid-sized public university, and the school has an active research presence in marine science and coastal engineering given its South Coast location.
Portuguese Language and Lusophone Cultures — UMass Dartmouth has one of the few undergraduate Portuguese programs in New England, reflecting the region's significant Portuguese-American community centered in New Bedford and Fall River.
University of Maine
55 majorsThe University of Maine is the flagship of the UMaine System and a land-grant and sea-grant university, giving it particular strength in agriculture, forestry, engineering, and marine sciences. With 55 majors in the file, it covers the full range expected of a flagship.
Forest Resources (Forestry) — as a land-grant institution in a state where forestry is economically central, UMaine's forestry and forest resources program is among the strongest in the Northeast, with access to research forests and industry partnerships across Maine.
University of New England
27 majorsUNE has a strong health sciences focus with one of the few osteopathic medical schools in New England. The undergraduate programs are oriented heavily toward pre-health, nursing, social work, and environmental science. The Biddeford campus sits on the Saco River and the Atlantic coast.
Marine Biology — UNE's coastal location gives its Marine Biology program direct access to the Gulf of Maine, one of the most rapidly warming ocean regions in the world. Students work alongside graduate researchers studying fisheries, whale populations, and ocean acidification.
University of Rhode Island
56 majorsURI is Rhode Island's flagship public university with 56 majors. It has a nationally recognized College of Pharmacy, an oceanography program with its own research vessel, and a well-regarded business school. URI is also known for its cooperative education program.
Ocean Engineering — URI sits at the edge of Narragansett Bay and has one of the few dedicated undergraduate Ocean Engineering programs in the country. The university also houses the Graduate School of Oceanography, one of the top-ranked ocean research institutions in the world, which shapes the undergraduate environment.
University of Southern Maine
28 majorsUSM serves the Greater Portland region and has a mix of professional, liberal arts, and health sciences programs. The Lewiston-Auburn campus and downtown Portland location give students access to Maine's most economically active metro area. Strong programs in social work, nursing, and computer science.
Applied Medical Sciences — USM prepares students for clinical laboratory science and healthcare careers in a region where allied health professionals are in significant demand.
UVM (University of Vermont)
69 majorsUVM is a public research university with a strong environmental mission, a medical school, and one of the few dedicated Environmental Studies colleges at any public university. Agriculture, natural resources, and sustainability are woven into many programs. Burlington's setting on Lake Champlain shapes much of UVM's character.
Environmental Studies (Rubenstein School) — UVM has a dedicated Rubenstein School of Environment and Natural Resources with programs that don't exist elsewhere in this form at public universities. The school integrates policy, science, and community practice around environmental challenges.
Vassar College
49 majorsVassar is one of the original Seven Sisters (now coed) and offers 49 majors, large for a liberal arts college. The college has no core requirements beyond the first-year writing seminar, giving students unusual freedom. Science and Technology Studies, Cognitive Science, and Media Studies are among the more contemporary interdisciplinary programs.
Science, Technology, and Society — Vassar's STS program examines science and technology not just as technical fields but as social and cultural phenomena. The program is unusually developed for a small liberal arts college and reflects Vassar's tradition of critical inquiry.