History, asked by Kelvinkiptum94, 1 year ago

why is stydying archeology expensive

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Answered by Sharvari8945
3

Thinking about studying Archaeology at university but still need a bit of gentle persuasion? You've come to the right place. Our reasons to study Archaeology are sure to leave you with an appetite for discovery:

1. Archaeologists play a huge role in uncovering the secrets of human history

Archaeologists play a vital role in historical enquiry and by studying an Archaeology degree you'll learn how. The analysis of physical remains informs a lot of our knowledge of how human society has developed and what could be more fascinating than that?

2. Archaeologists graduates have transferable skills

The skills you'll learn studying an Archaeology degree can be applied to a variety of career choices. You'll gain analytical skills, reasoning skills, practical skills (think of all that digging), the ability to work within or as the leader of a team, and so much more. Study Archaeology and the career world's your oyster.

3. Archaeology students apply their leaning

It's not all lectures and books for archaeology students, you'll get plenty of opportunity to get outdoors and apply your learning. Universities guarantee their students a certain number of days in the field, after all it's the only way one can truly learn best archaeological practice. Interested in our past but burying your head in a book doesn't quite cut the mustard, archaeology may well be the one for you.

4. Archaeology students get to travel

Human history isn't confined to one place so neither is archaeological enquiry. Whether it's just day trips to historical sites across the UK, or a weeklong field trip to Rome it's fair to say that archaeologists sure do get out.

5. Many archaeology degrees offer a year abroad

If you're interested in a higher education experience hand-in-hand with time spent living and breathing another country and another culture, Archaeology may well suit. Search through the long list of Archaeology degrees which include a year spent studying abroad.

6. Combined courses

Archaeology informs a number of other areas of study, and vise versa, so it stands to reason that dual honours archaeology degrees are so common. Archaeology and Ancient History, and Archaeology and Anthropology are just a couple of examples of complementary dual honours degrees. Perhaps you've another interest all together, some universities offer opportunities to combine archaeology with something else entirely, for example the University of Glasgow runs a Archaeology and English Literature course...

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