SMU School of Social Sciences

School of Social Sciences
Established 2007
Type Private
Dean James T H Tang
Academic staff 35
Undergraduates 475
Location 90 Stamford Road, Singapore
Campus Urban
Website www.socsc.smu.edu.sg/

The School of Social Sciences (SOSS) is one of the six schools at the Singapore Management University. It offers a Bachelor of Social Science undergraduate degree with options to major in Political Science, Psychology or Sociology. Currently, the School represents one of the smallest and most tightly knit communities of Social Science students in Singapore with a student body of just 475 students and an expected average intake of under 140 freshmen every year.[1]

Contents

Milestones

Originally established as the School of Economics & Social Sciences (SESS) on 1 July 2002, the School launched the Bachelor of Science (Economics) programme, followed shortly by the Bachelor of Social Science undergraduate degree programme. Subsequently, due to expansion and strategic reasons, the SESS was restructured in 2007 into two separate schools namely, the School of Social Sciences and the School of Economics. The restructuring was made to allow both schools, which had encountered significant growth in student enrolment and faculty numbers, to gain greater focus on their individual strengths and develop distinctive curriculums at both the undergraduate and postgraduate levels.[2]

Shortly after, in July 2008, the School marked the graduation of its pioneer batch of Social Science students.[3]

Academics

Bachelor of Social Science Degree

Currently, the main offering of the School of Social Sciences is the Bachelor of Social Sciences undegraduate degree. Originally adapted from similar programmes offered at the University of Pennsylvania and Oxford University, the B Soc Sc programme features a four year meritorious honours path. Consisting of a combination of coursework as well as opportunities for empirical research supervised by professors, the programme allows students to major in the main disciplines of Political Science, Psychology and Sociology, and the option of doing a second major either from another Social Science or from any of the other five SMU schools.[4]

Concurrent Degrees

The School of Social Sciences offers a number of concurrent degree programmes with eligible undergraduate students able to pursue a second degree with any of the other SMU schools including programmes from Accountancy, Business Management, Economics, Information Systems Management and Law. Within the university as a whole, 25% of students typically qualify for a place within such programmes.[5]

Multidisciplinary Tracks

Within the Bachelor of Social Sciences degree programme, students may also choose to complete one of the two multidisciplinary tracks. These tracks are entirely optional and are not a requirement for graduation. In order to fulfill requirements for a track, students typically have to undergo one course from each of the seven specified course categories, namely, general Social Sciences, Psychology, Sociology, Political Science, Humanities & General Education, Economics and Business. At present, the two tracks offered are the Public Policy, Development, and Management (PDM) track and the Culture, Organizations and Behavior (COB) track.[6]

Admissions

Admissions to the SMU School of Social Sciences tend to be very competitive. As of 2009, the programme was reported to have been seventeen times oversubscribed,[7] meaning less than 6% of applicants were accepted. This record low acceptance rate was however, partly attributed to economic reasons with many applicants shunning business school for the Social Sciences.

Like other SMU schools, admissions to the School of Social Sciences is based on a variety of factors. School policy mandates a holistic approach towards applications with consideration based both on grades as well as extracurricular achievements. In addition, candidates who have taken the SAT I Reasoning Test are encouraged to submit their scores although this is mostly optional. All shortlisted candidates must undergo admissions interviews.[8]

Faculty

Starting from the seminal group of two faculty in 2003, the Social Sciences and Humanities faculty has grown to a total strength of 25 full-time faculty in 2007, with 12 in Psychology, 5 in Political Science, 6 in Sociology, and 10 in the Humanities. The School is currently expanding and will continue to recruit more faculty in the various disciplines.

Faculty members are claimed to hold PhDs from top ranking universities such as Harvard, Yale and Michigan. Several faculty serve as members on national councils, editors or editorial board members of prestigious scholarly journals, and are recipients of international scholarly awards.

Student life

Within the School of Social Sciences, student life tends to be vibrant with a large number of students actively participating in school activities. SOSS students often hold key positions within the University's Student Association, SMUSA, as well as within the various sports, outdoor activity and special interest clubs. Within the SOSS itself, students are represented by the SMU Social Sciences Student Society, known as SOSCIETY a student government body.[9] Soscistan, a magazine by SOSCIETY, publishes annually.

External links

Official university sites:

References

  1. ^ http://www.socsc.smu.edu.sg/students/current/index.asp School of Social Sciences – Current Students
  2. ^ http://www.socsc.smu.edu.sg/about_school/index.asp School of Social Sciences – About the School
  3. ^ http://www.smu.edu.sg/news_room/press_releases/2008/20080712.asp SMU Press Release - SMU celebrates fifth batch of 1,167 graduates
  4. ^ http://www.socsc.smu.edu.sg/about_school/index.asp School of Social Sciences - About the School
  5. ^ http://www.smu.edu.sg/admissions/SMUdegree/doubleDegreeMajors/index.asp - SMU Admissions Website 2009
  6. ^ http://www.socsc.smu.edu.sg/bsocsc/social_science/tracks.pdf - Tracks in the Social Sciences Programme
  7. ^ http://www.smu.edu.sg/news_room/smu_in_the_news/2009/sources/LHZB_20090502_1.pdf - News Clipping from Lianhe Zaobao, 2 May 2009
  8. ^ http://www.smu.edu.sg/admissions/applysmu/faqs/index.asp SMU Admissions Website 2009 - FAQ
  9. ^ http://www.socsc.smu.edu.sg/students/current/activity1.asp Social Science Society Webpage