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About Arts (Undergraduate)

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Note: This is the 2018–2019 eCalendar. Update the year in your browser's URL bar for the most recent version of this page, or .

About the Faculty of Arts (Undergraduate)

The ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù campus is an oasis in the heart of the business, cultural, and entertainment centres of downtown Montreal. At the centre of the Downtown campus is the Arts Building, the oldest building on campus and the University’s flagship. It houses classrooms, administrative offices, and Moyse Hall, an historic and superbly equipped theatre. For years, the front steps of the Arts Building have been a favourite spot to meet and to take a respite from the rigours of coursework. In addition to the Arts Building, the Faculty of Arts is housed in 22 other buildings across campus, including historic houses and former apartment buildings across campus.

The Faculty of Arts, the faculty that lies both literally and figuratively at the heart of the University, has enjoyed steady growth since it was established in 1843 and remains by far the largest faculty at ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù. The Faculty is home to 15 departments, the School of Religious Studies, two professional schools (Information Studies and Social Work), four institutes, and 10 centres, and has over 275 tenured or tenure-track scholars, over 7,000 undergraduates, over 1,200 graduate students, and offers several hundred courses. Despite the numbers, the majority of classes in Arts are smaller than those offered by any other large research university in Canada. The humanities and social science disciplines that constitute the Faculty share a common endeavor: to understand the human condition in order to improve it.

The Faculty maintains bilateral exchange programs with many universities around the world and encourages students to spend a term or two studying abroad, either through an exchange program or independently. Internships have also now become an integral part of an undergraduate degree. The Faculty of Arts Internship Office (AIO) assists students who wish to pursue short-term internship opportunities before completing their studies. The Faculty of Arts stands alone nationally in the scope and extent of services its established infrastructure and comprehensive support system makes available to students before, during, and upon their return from, their internship. Each year over 200 students intern with organizations around the globe.

²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù is known throughout the world as one of Canada’s premier institutions of learning and as one of the leading research universities in the world. Professors at ²»Á¼Ñо¿Ëù are leaders in their fields and leaders in education, many of whom have been the recipients of numerous awards for both research and teaching. The Faculty of Arts prides itself on being immediately responsive to developments and changes within and outside academia and develop its curricula in response to these new realities.

Location

Location

  • Arts Office of Advising and Student Information Services (OASIS)
  • Dawson Hall
  • 853 Sherbrooke Street West
  • Montreal QC H3A 0G5
  • Canada
  • Telephone: 514-398-1029
  • Fax: 514-398-2157
  • Faculty of Arts website: www.mcgill.ca/arts
  • Faculty of Arts Office of Advising and Student Information Services (OASIS) website: www.mcgill.ca/oasis

Mission Statement: The mission of the Faculty of Arts Office of Advising and Student Information Services (OASIS) is to ensure the integrity and coherence of the Arts undergraduate degree. We provide advice and support to our students regarding their academic trajectory, from entry to graduation. We do so valuing principles of fairness, accessibility, respect, engagement, confidentiality, and collaboration with key stakeholders.

Arts OASIS, and the Office of the Associate Dean (Student Affairs) of the Faculty of Arts, are located on the ground floor of Dawson Hall. For questions, our counter service is located at Room 110. Arts OASIS serves undergraduate students in the Faculty of Arts.

Programs, Courses and University Regulations—2018-2019 (last updated Aug. 16, 2018) (disclaimer)
Faculty of Arts—2018-2019 (last updated Aug. 16, 2018) (disclaimer)
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