Master of Arts in Military History

 Graduate Catalog | Master's

The Master of Arts in Military History degree allows you to choose a concentration that best suits professional aspirations and interests. The core and required courses ensure that you will learn historical research methods, historiography, and historical perspectives before concentrating in American Military History or the American Revolution, the Civil War, World War II, and War since 1945. The curriculum not only focuses on strategy, command, leadership, battles, tactics, and weapons systems, but also on social structures, military attitudes, relationships between officers and the rank-and-file, and on the interrelations between military and civil society. The degree emphasizes reading, discussion, writing, and research and prepares students for advanced graduate study.

There are two exit options for each concentration: American Military History, American Revolution, Civil War, World War II, and War since 1945.

Comprehensive Examination Option
This option requires a minimum of 36 hours of coursework. A minimum of 21 hours must be taken within the concentrations and 6 credits in electives. A non-thesis student receives the MA degree upon successful completion of the required coursework and passing MILH698 / MH700 -Comprehensive Examination.

Capstone Seminar Option
The capstone seminar option requires a minimum of 36 hours of coursework. A minimum of 21 hours must be taken within the concentrations and 3 credits in electives. The student must prepare a thesis proposal and complete an original thesis by the conclusion of the program prior to granting the degree. The thesis (MILH699 / MH798 - Master’s Capstone Seminar in Military History) requires 3 semester hours (16 week class format).

In addition to the institutional and degree level learning outcomes objectives, the Master of Arts in Military History also seeks the following specific learning outcomes of its graduates. With reference to each of the respective areas of military studies, graduates in this degree program will be able to:

  • Appraise different approaches to history and historical method in order to evaluate and propose a specific methodology for a particular project. 
  • Define, classify, and articulate in oral or written form the major trends, events, and people that have shaped military history, and evaluate them in context by comparison and contrast. 
  • Define, classify, and articulate in oral or written form the major trends, events, and people that have shaped U.S. military history, and evaluate them in context by comparison or contrast. 
  • Examine, analyze, and evaluate at least one specialized historical sub-discipline such as the American Revolution, Civil War, and World War II, and the War since 1945. 
  • Synthesize historical issues into a coherent and comprehensive paradigm of the human condition. 
  • Analyze data, information, and concepts pertinent to various methodologies of historical research. 
  • Create an historical research proposal in which data, information, and concepts can be evaluated and synthesized. 

Degree Program Requirements
Core Courses (12 semester hours)
Major Courses (18 semester hours)

Concentration in the American Military History

This “general” concentration in American military history focuses on the major conflicts from the Revolution to the Cold War period.  The course selection includes the methodology and historiography of the military periods under study as well as an examination of theoretical concepts including the nature of warfare, strategy, and leadership as well as civil-military relations and foreign relations. The courses offer students a clear understanding of key historical events and human behavior in relation to the history of American warfare, to include the economics, politics, and social issues.

Objectives
Upon completion of this program students will be able to: 

  • Analyze of the characteristics of leadership common to great military leaders and decision making skills that are inbred and/or learned by the great leaders throughout military history.
  • Dissect and critique the American Revolution from its antecedents to its legacy to include events leading to the revolt, Declaration of Independence, strategy and tactics, campaigns, and the aftermath of war on the new nation. 
  • Discern and assess the political, economic, cultural, social, and military aspects of the Civil War to specifically include their impact on causative factors, conduct of the war, and post-war aftermath. 
  • Compare and contrast all theaters of World War II and events in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Southeast and Southwest Asia, the Pacific, and Latin America as well as the role of diplomacy and strategy, the impact of war upon society, and the fighting on land, at sea, and in the air.
  • Examine the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States, with emphasis on the actual scene of superpower conflict in the Third World and an analysis of the varied levels of power and their interrelationships that made the Cold War unique.

Concentration Requirements (18 semester hours)

Complete five (5) courses on the list below:

AND choose one (1) of the following:

Concentration in the American Revolution
APUS offers one of the nation’s only graduate concentrations on the American Revolution. Students study the philosophies, personalities, strategies, leadership, and other factors that led to, influenced, and resulted from the United States of America’s foundation and permanent break from Great Britain. As a major event in the larger sweep of the Enlightenment, the following aspects of the American Revolution are analyzed: principles of colonialism, monarchy, democracy, republic, and “nation-building;” military leadership, strategies and individual soldiers on each side; international diplomacy; economics; and American culture.

Objectives
Upon completion of this program students will be able to:

  • Dissect and critique the American Revolution from its antecedents to its legacy to include events leading to the revolt, Declaration of Independence, strategy and tactics, campaigns, and the aftermath of war on the new nation. 
  • Analyze the American Revolution in reference to the operational contributions of American and British military leadership using selected land battles as examples of the strategies and tactics involved. 
  • Evaluate an early and pivotal campaign in the American Revolution by critiquing the strategy, tactics, and results of campaign on the subsequent course of the Revolution and post-war Anglo-American relations. 
  • Explain the perspective of the American Revolution from the British viewpoint in relation to colonial policies, diplomacy, military leadership, and other influences in Great Britain during and after the war. 
  • Assess and critique the conclusive military strategy of the American Revolution and why the strategy was distinctive from other military theatres of operation. 

Concentration Requirements (18 semester hours)

AND choose one (1) of the following:


Concentration in the Civil War

Oftentimes referred to as the "seminal event" in American history, the Civil War concentration is designed to study the political, cultural, economic, and military issues related to the War Between the States. The degree covers (1) major figures, such as Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson Davis, Robert E. Lee and U.S. Grant, (2) obscure figures unknown to the casual observer yet critical to how one understands of the war, and (3) minor figures that are rarely provided the coverage deserved of history, such as the common soldier on each side of the conflict. The major campaigns are analyzed through the use of cutting edge texts and professors’ expert analysis. The war itself is viewed in context; the issues leading up to it and resulting from it are critically analyzed. Graduates of the program can expect to be on their way to becoming "experts" in the Civil War; several graduates of this program have published books and/or articles related to the war.

Upon completion of this program students will be able to:

  • Place events of the Antebellum period, the Civil War, and Reconstruction into the broader scope of American History by assessing the similarities and differences in social, cultural, economic, and political developments in North and South. 
  • Discern and assess the political, economic, cultural, social, and military aspects of the Civil War to specifically include their impact on causative factors, conduct of the war, and post-war aftermath. 
  • Examine the operational contributions of Union and Confederate military leaders by critiquing selected land battles of the war as examples of the strategies and tactics involved. 
  • Compare and contrast the national, theater, and operational command structures of the Union and Confederacy in relation to leadership styles of key military leaders on both sides and the evolution of command and control during the war. 
  • Identify, assess, and explain the diverse historical assessments and interpretations of the Antebellum, Civil War, and Reconstruction eras as presented in the writings of prominent and influential historians.

Concentration Requirements (18 semester hours)


Concentration in World War II
Students in the World War II concentration study the history, politics, leaders, strategies, and campaigns under which the 20th Century's history, (and some would argue, the modern world's), seminal events unfolded. The World War II student takes a course of study that includes study of the major political and military leaders of both Allied and Axis powers as well as study of the war's major theaters. Students then have the opportunity to study of major and lesser campaigns and battles, military strategy and leadership, and World War II political and military institutions.

Concentration Objectives

Upon completion of this program students will be able to:

  • Discern and critique the strategies, tactics, leaders and lessons learned during the fighting in the China-Burma-India Theater, New Guinea, the Solomon Islands, the Aleutians, and in the Philippines. 
  • Explain and assess the strategy, tactics and leadership from the blitzkriegs into France, the Balkans, and the Soviet Union to the campaigns in North Africa and Italy. 
  • Explain and assess the Allied victory in Europe to include the generalship and decisions concerning the amphibious invasions, airdrops, and the crossing of the Rhine. 
  • Distinguish the politics, political leadership, and diplomacy in Germany, Japan, and Italy that enabled the rise of the respective countries’ Axis leadership that ruled during World War II. 
  • Distinguish the political leadership that defined the Allied powers of the United States, Great Britain, and Russia before, during, and post-World War II.  

Concentration Requirements (18 semester hours)

AND choose one (1) of the following:


Concentration in War since 1945
Students in the War since 1945 will focus on the American culture of war from World War II to the present. It traces the history and evolution of American strategic, operational, and tactical doctrine during the Cold War as well as United Nations peace-keeping operations in this time period. Topics cover national security interests including foreign policy and military operations and their relation to domestic political, economic, and social components as well as the major foreign wars and the emergence of the United States as a world power. In addition, students have the opportunity to examine our response to selected regional issues in the Balkans, Middle East, and other threat situations in the world.

Concentration Objectives
Upon completion of this program, students will be able to:

  • Examine the Cold War between the Soviet Union and the United States, with emphasis on the actual scene of superpower conflict in the Third World and an analysis of the varied levels of power and their interrelationships that made the Cold War unique.
  • Contrast the evolution and functioning of United Nations peacekeeping operations during the Cold War period to include comparative assessments of each peacekeeping operation as a tool of conflict management.
  • Analyze of the origins and structures of insurgency and revolution to include the actual history of specific groups of insurgents and revolutionaries such as the Chinese Communists, the Viet Minh/Viet Cong, and the militant Islamist insurgents.
  • Assess great and middle power military interventions into civil wars during the 1990s and extraordinary security enjoyed by the great and middle powers of the Western world in the Cold War's aftermath.
  • Evaluate turbulent areas in the history of the world, with emphasis on modern political and military issues, to include the Balkans, Israel, Iraq, Afghanistan, and other regions.

Concentration Requirements (18 semester hours)

AND choose one (1) of the following:

Graduate Electives (Select 6 semester hours for COMP EXAM Program Option or 3 semester hours for CAPSTONE Program Option)

Student may select any graduate level courses to fulfill elective requirements.


End of Program Requirement - Select either Comprehensive Exam OR Capstone 

Total 36 semester hours



 Graduate Catalog | Master's

 

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