We invite you to pursue your interest in sociology while preparing for further academic study and employment in the field through our MA in Sociology. At Acadia, you will have a high degree of direct contact and engagement with your supervisor, who will help guide you in your research and your studies.
Our small program also emphasizes collaboration between you and your fellow students when planning your research project - a process that develops your research, communication, and critical analysis skills while creating a close-knit community within the program. You will also have the opportunity to gain teaching experience through discussion groups and guided classroom experiences, and in some cases through teaching assistantships.
Be Inspired
Acadia's Master of Sociology faculty have a wide variety of research interests to support you in your studies. You will explore new theories and methods of inquiry in our highly collaborative graduate sociology program and apply these skills toward research that uncovers new understandings of the societies in which we live.
Your primary focus in this program will be on the planning and execution of your chosen research project culminating in the defense of your MA thesis, while course components will emphasize a deeper exposure to social theory, qualitative and quantitative theory, and a wider breadth of topics in sociology.
Research Interests
- Aging
- Critical development studies
- Disability
- Education
- Everyday Life
- Food and Health Inequity
- Gender and sexuality
- Health and healthcare
- Justice and law
- Knowledge and power
- Racialization and ethnicity
- Social justice
- Social and economic organizations
- Social change and revolution
- Social movements
- Social Welfare and Social Policy
- Social theory
- Sociology of families
- Work
Program Requirements
This is a twelve-month MA program that requires both course work and the completion of a thesis. During this time, students must complete four courses (including research methods, theory, and relevant special topics), participate in a professional development seminar, contribute to departmental events and activities, and pursue their thesis research.