The Rural Experience curriculum comprises community-engaged learning opportunities coupled with coursework to create an academic secondary emphasis designation with a study-away component that will give students a comparative perspective on life in rural communities.

Students will be involved in collecting oral histories, researching local archival data, and examining community dynamics to understand better the lived experience of people in the rural U.S. Courses will explore topics such as rural poverty, healthcare equity, environmental justice, labor and economic development, and much more.

photo of Selma, Alabama sign

Community-engaged learning is part of Juniata's mission to empower students to be engaged with themselves and the world.

photo of Selma, Alabama sign

The Rural Experience curriculum comprises community-engaged learning opportunities coupled with coursework to create an academic secondary emphasis designation with a study-away component that will give students a comparative perspective on life in rural communities.

Students will be involved in collecting oral histories, researching local archival data, and examining community dynamics to understand better the lived experience of people in the rural U.S. Courses will explore topics such as rural poverty, healthcare equity, environmental justice, labor and economic development, and much more.

Community-engaged learning is part of Juniata's mission to empower students to be engaged with themselves and the world.

photo of Selma, Alabama sign

The Rural Experience curriculum comprises community-engaged learning opportunities coupled with coursework to create an academic secondary emphasis designation with a study-away component that will give students a comparative perspective on life in rural communities.

Students will be involved in collecting oral histories, researching local archival data, and examining community dynamics to understand better the lived experience of people in the rural U.S. Courses will explore topics such as rural poverty, healthcare equity, environmental justice, labor and economic development, and much more.

Community-engaged learning is part of Juniata's mission to empower students to be engaged with themselves and the world.

photo of Selma, Alabama sign

The Rural Experience curriculum comprises community-engaged learning opportunities coupled with coursework to create an academic secondary emphasis designation with a study-away component that will give students a comparative perspective on life in rural communities.

Students will be involved in collecting oral histories, researching local archival data, and examining community dynamics to understand better the lived experience of people in the rural U.S. Courses will explore topics such as rural poverty, healthcare equity, environmental justice, labor and economic development, and much more.

Community-engaged learning is part of Juniata's mission to empower students to be engaged with themselves and the world.

Edmund Pettus bridge photo

Comparative Rural Experience

Featured Connections Course

What does rural life look like in different places? What structural factors shape rural life? How do rural communities respond to their particular histories and social contexts? In this course, you will use methods from the humanities and the social sciences to compare how people experience rural life in different areas of the United States. The semester-based course will conclude with a two-week study-away experience in the Black Belt region of Alabama during summer session.

Comparative Rural Experience

Featured Connections Course

What does rural life look like in different places? What structural factors shape rural life? How do rural communities respond to their particular histories and social contexts? In this course, you will use methods from the humanities and the social sciences to compare how people experience rural life in different areas of the United States. The semester-based course will conclude with a two-week study-away experience in the Black Belt region of Alabama during summer session.