The path from undergraduate major to career is not as linear for history and anthropology majors as it is for pre-professional majors.  In order to position yourself to translate the knowledge and transferrable skills you learn as a student to the rest of your life, it’s all the more important to seek internships and other real-world experiences while still in college.

History and anthropology majors are strongly encouraged to take internships for course credit. Not only do internships give students invaluable professional experience, but they also allow them to apply their research, writing, and analytical skills in the world outside of academia.

The Department of History and Anthropology encourages all of its majors to take advantage of our Washington, D.C. location by interning at one or more of the museums, think tanks, governmental offices, galleries, or non-profits located in the area. In recent years, history and anthroplogy majors have earned course credit for internships at the Smithsonian Museum of American History and National Museum of the American Indian; at the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia; at the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration; on Capitol Hill as Congressional interns; and in D.C.-area lobbying firms.

History and anthropology majors can also take advantage of the summer months to conduct internships and field schools further afield. In recent years our students have interned at the Franklin Delano Roosevelt Libraries in Hyde Park, New York; for the New Zealand Labour Party; in the British Parliament; and in Washington-area museums such as the National Building Museum and the Hillwood Estate, Museum, and Gardens. Others have participated in archaeological field schools in New York, Virginia, Italy, Peru, and Greece.

Help in finding relevant internships is also available from Catholic University's Center for Academic and Career Success. To receive credit for an internship (HIST/ANTH 495), fill out the application form (available here pdf logo and send it to the department's Director of Undergraduate Studies (DUGS) in History, Dr. Samuel Fisher, or Anthropology, Dr. Laura Masur. To learn more about the importance of internships for history and anthropology students, see the “Useful Links” section on our “Career Paths” page.  Internships for course credit must be unpaid, have historical or anthropological relevance, and include an academic component, consisting of reading and writing in consultation with the undergraduate advisor. For more information, contact the Director of Undergraduate Studies.

Academic and Career Success

The Center for Academic and Career Success provides programs, services, and resources designed to assist students in obtaining internships and employment.