📖Introduction

Albright College is a distinguished private liberal arts college located in Reading, Pennsylvania. Founded in 1856, it offers a transformative educational experience that combines rigorous academics with a strong emphasis on experiential learning and global engagement. Albright College offers a wide range of undergraduate programs in fields such as arts and sciences, business, and education. The college's dedicated faculty are committed to mentoring students, fostering critical thinking, and preparing them for successful careers and lifelong learning. With a focus on interdisciplinary studies and a vibrant campus community, Albright College provides a nurturing environment where students can explore their passions, expand their perspectives, and develop the skills necessary to thrive in a rapidly changing world.

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📚About the Program

Bachelor’s in African American Music at Albright College

The African American music minor provides students the opportunity to explore interdisciplinary connections between music and Black culture through histories and repertoires that define U.S. culture and have wide-ranging implications around the world. Since the arrival of enslaved Africans in the United States, African American music has served as oral history, social commentary, political protest, expressions of communal belonging and hope for better futures. In addition to elements of musicianship and characteristics of musical style, studying African American music requires explorations of the music’s value and meaning within African American communities, in the United States, and around the world. Show less
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📖Program Curriculum

MUS 103C: Jazz Combos

The Jazz Combos rehearse weekly and performs at least one concert per semester. These groups focus on a variety of jazz styles, performing music representative of many eras of jazz history, with emphasis on small ensemble performance and improvisation. The bands perform contemporary as well as classic tunes from the jazz repertoire, with attention to proper performance techniques. Membership and placement are determined by audition. Students wishing to participate in a Jazz Combo as a non-credited course must fulfill credited class requirements and have permission of the director.

MUS 103D: Rap Collective

The Albright Rap Collective (ARC) is a multidisciplinary workshop consisting of rappers, producers (beatmakers), visual artists, and dancers. Members of the group meet three times a week, developing skills in their respective areas of practice through creative workshops, peer review sessions, critical listening sessions, and performance preparation. ARC performs original compositions, as well as repertoire from the history of hip-hop from the late 1970s and early 80s to the present. Each semester, the group will perform at two to three on- and off-campus events.

MUS 113: Rags, Rock and Rap: Popular Music and American Culture

This course explores the genesis of popular music in English-speaking North America from the colonial period to the present, with emphasis on the period beginning in the 1890s just before the breakout of jazz, to the present-day multi-billion dollar industry of rock, pop, R&B, rap/hip-hop, country, dance/electronica and the emergent world styles that also form part of the evolving contemporary American musical scene. Lectures place equal emphasis on the musical styles themselves and their social context, including the role of composers, audiences, promoters, money, and music industry organizations. Lectures and discussion are enlivened by diverse music listening experiences. Satisfies General Studies: Foundations (Fine Arts) requirement.

MUS 121: Black Popular Music

This course surveys, investigates, & analyzes black popular music from the 19th century to the present. Through critical listening habits & analytical thinking skills, students will explore black popular culture as means of expression, communication, & collective identity, attending to issues of representation, identity, values, & aesthetics through a wide range of interdisciplinary sources & methodologies. This course material will emphasize intersections of creativity, technology, & performance, along with the impact of music industry, audience reception, & cultural politics. In addition to daily exercises, students will complete discussion forums in which they will apply critical thinking to synthesize material, complete comparative analyses, relate individual lessons to key course themes, & connect the curriculum to their own experiences & musical listening practices. Satisfies General Studies: Foundations (Humanities) requirement.

MUS 125: All That Jazz

This course covers jazz history from its obscure origins in the post-Civil War period to the present. The focus is on important instrumentalists and vocalists of the 20th century, and how they helped to create the different jazz and jazz-related styles, including: ragtime, blues, hot jazz, Dixieland, swing, bebop, cool jazz, free jazz and jazz fusion. Among the key performers and composers to be discussed are Louis Armstrong, Jelly Roll Morton, Duke Ellington, Billie Holiday, Benny Goodman, Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Dave Brubeck, Herbie Hancock and Keith Jarrett. Basic concepts of jazz performance and various jazz styles are explored through independent research, listening and discussion. When possible, field trips to live jazz performances are incorporated. Satisfies General Studies: Foundations (Fine Arts) requirement

MUS 284: Popular Music and Digital Culture

This course explores the interrelationships between commercial popular music and digital culture in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Students will explore issues such as gender and identity in popular music, the remix as cultural practice, the politics of digital sampling, hip-hop and dance music in Post-Ferguson America, the relationship between music and interactive media such as video games, and globalization in the age of cloud computing. By combining critical listening skills with original research and writing, students will engage core debates within popular music and digital media studies. General Studies: Connections-Global-Humanities

ENG 210
African-American Literature
A survey and analysis course divided into rubrics of period, activity and/or genre designed to acquaint the student with the formal links and traditions within African-American literature, including drama, the short story, poetry and nonfictional prose. Offered alternate fall semesters. CONNECTIONS-HUMANITIES

ENG 235
Major Authors and Topics
The premise of these courses is that writers make connections between their traditions and ways of thought in order to define the value systems that produce their particular culture and identity. Each section of the course provides students with the opportunity to focus on and to understand a distinct group, defined by geography, by historical period, or by class, race, ethnicity, gender, or nationality. May be repeated with a new topic. Prerequisite: ENG 102 CONNECTIONS-HUMANITIES

ENG 390
Topics in British and American Literature
This course explores a topic or central problem of current importance in literary study. This course may focus on the work of major writers such as Virginia Woolf, Henry James or Joseph Conrad. In some semesters the course will focus on themes, genres, and traditions in American and British literature such as “The Gothic,” “Harlem Renaissance,” “Mythology,” and “Women’s Fiction.”

HIS 212
African American History I
This course is the study of the African experience in America starting with pre-colonial Africa through the abolition of the slave trade and ending with emancipation in 1865. Taking a linear approach, this course will expose African American involvement in the American Revolution, free Black life in the new republic, and how slavery transformed and hardened during antebellum. The course will focus heavily on the slave trade and institution of American slavery paying special attention to the plantation-complex. Taking an intersectionality approach, this course will examine how race, gender, class, and region created a heterogenous African American experience. The theme of Black resistance undergirds the entire course. The aim of the course is to carefully review the facts of the early Black experience, expose the many myths, recognize the horrors and effects of bigotry and intolerance that were present and forming, and apply this information to our understanding of black/white conditions today. Documentary films, feature films, analytical essays, discussion-based lectures, guest speakers, and a class trip will be the sources that lead to an understanding of this important subject. GENERAL STUDIES FOUNDATIONS HUMANITIES

HIS 324
African Americans and the Great Migration
This course centers on what is commonly called the “Great Migration,” a period in American history where 6 million African Americans migrated out of the rural south to southern cities, northern cities and out West. This course will first start in the south by unpacking the WWI era racial and regional politics that created this migration examining closely the push and pull migration factors, i.e. what social/cultural norms, economic/legal barriers pushed Black women and men out of the rural south and what social awareness, economic opportunities, and freedoms pulled them to the cities and out West. This course will explore the connections between this out-migration and the larger struggle for freedom, namely the Civil Rights Movement. This course will also use a gendered lens in which to understand the racial, regional and urban politics experienced by Black migrants paying special attention to how each shifts gender ideology and gendered roles. CONNECTIONS-HUMANITIES

HIS 352
Africans in the Making of the Atlantic World: Explorations in the History of the Black Diaspora from Sao Tome to Saint Domingue
A majority of the persons who migrated to the Americas before 1800 came from Africa. Very few of them came willingly, but without their economic and cultural contributions the world we know today would not have come into being. The goal of this course is to begin to understand the experiences and achievements of these Africans and their descendants in four regions of the Atlantic world – Africa itself, Brazil, the West Indies and the Chesapeake – between the mid- 15th century and the revolutionary struggle for Haitian independence at the beginning of the 19th century. General Studies Connections-Global-Humanities

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🏫About Albright College

Albright College is a prestigious private liberal arts college located in Reading, Pennsylvania. Established in 1856, it is dedicated to providing a transformative and personalized education that prepares students for success in a diverse and rapidly changing world. Albright offers a wide range of undergraduate programs across various disciplines, including arts and sciences, business, and education. With a commitment to small class sizes and close faculty-student interaction, Albright fosters a supportive and collaborative learning environment. The college encourages experiential learning, internships, and study abroad opportunities to enhance students' academic and personal growth. Albright College emphasizes critical thinking, creativity, and leadership development, empowering graduates to make meaningful contributions to their professions and communities. With a rich history, a vibrant campus, and a strong commitment to student success, Albright College continues to shape the next generation of leaders and lifelong learners.

🏠 Accommodation

You will need to book the accommodation after you have been accepted.

You can choose to live on campus or off campus in private accommodation.

How to book:

  • Make a booking online after you have been accepted (in this case please let us know your choice when you apply).
  • Register when you arrive - its not possible to reserve a room before arriving. You can arrive a few days before and book it
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💰 Fees

Application Fee:

$0 USD

Tuition fee:

27,560 USD per year

110,240 USD in total

Entry Requirements

You are not eligible to apply to this program because:

The minimum age is 18.

English fluency is required.
You need to be either:
- A native English speaker
- Studied in English at high school or a degree
- Have passed IELTS level 6.5 or TOEFL 95 or above.

Minimum education level: High School.

The program is competitive, you need to have a high grades of Average A, 70%, or a high GPA.

All students from all countries are eligible to apply to this program.

Is this not correct? You can edit your profile or contact us.
Or see the list of programs you are eligible for here .
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📬 Admissions Process

3 Steps to Apply to a University

Application step 1

Application step 2

Application step 3

Please choose the programs here , "You are advised to select 2-3 programs to increase your chances of getting accepted.

Required Documents:

  • Passport
  • Graduation certificate
  • Passport size photo
  • Official transcript
  • Personal statement
  • English certificate (You can take the English test online)
  • Guarantor letter

Preparing documents:

You can start your application now and send the application documents during your application. Some documents you can send later if you don’t have them right away. Some more info about preparing application documents is here

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Application process:

Applying Online is simple in just a few steps. More information is available here.

The first steps are to choose the programs, pay the application fee and upload the application documents.

Once submitted to Global Admissions, we will review your application within 2-3 days and proceed to the university or ask you for further clarification

After it has been processed to the university you will receive your unique application ID from each university.

The university may contact you directly for further questions.

We will then follow up each week with the university for updates. As soon as there is any update we will let you know. If you have made other plans, decide to withdraw / change address at any time please let us know.

After you have been accepted you will receive your admissions letter electronically and asked to pay the non-refundable deposit to the university.

Once you have paid the deposit the university will issue you the admissions letter and visa form to your home country.

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Here is some more information about the enrollment process after you have been accepted.

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