Bachelor of Liberal Arts – Spiritual Studies Concentration

Unique Offerings

The Spiritual Studies concentration focuses on the study of the human psyche, the study of religious traditions, and how to live a spiritual life. All classes approach the sacred with an attitude of "deep ecumenism" in which all religious and spiritual traditions are welcome as long as they acknowledge the element of mystery that resides in the heart of the divine. Both class work and field-based learning connect the interior life of the soul to the needs of the world through spirituality.

You can take courses in each of the following six core subject areas:

  • Psychology and Spirituality
  • Depth Psychology
  • Transpersonal Psychology
  • Religious Studies: Myth, Symbol, and the Sacred
  • Comparative Religion
  • Spiritual Practices

General Requirements

The degree requirements for graduation are satisfied when you complete:

A total of 180 quarter credits (at least 45 credits taken at Antioch University), including:

  • Up to 48 credits of prior learning
    • At least 60 upper division credits
  • Three required core courses:
    • Liberal Studies Seminar; Diversity, Power & Privilege; Inquiry & Research
  • An area of concentration (six required courses)
    • Four quarters of study at Antioch University Seattle (or more)
    • A portfolio of your work reflecting academic progress
    • A Senior synthesis project and Symposium presentation

Length of Program

Most students graduate from the B.A. completion program in two years or less. Completion of 180 quarter credits is required for graduation.

Tuition & Fees

  • Tuition: $560 per credit
  • Required fees: $145 per quarter
  • $6,865 tuition and required fees per quarter, full time (12 credits)
  • $27,460 typical annual tuition and fees
  • Credits documented for Life Experience: $140 per credit

Annual tuition and fees based on 2013-14 rates for four quarters. Antioch University Seattle students typically attend classes all year.

 

Career Opportunities

Many students go on to work for spiritual or religious-based organizations. Others have started their own practices focused in a particular sector, while others gravitated towards activism. In addition, many students continue to pursue their interest in a related field through graduate work.

Program Summary

The Spiritual Studies concentration focuses on the study of the human psyche, the study of religious traditions and how to live a spiritual life. It is a good choice if you wish to continue a path into the helping professions, ground your politics in a spiritual context, or seek to deepen your spiritual life. Both classwork and field-based learning connect the interior life of the soul to the needs of the world through spirituality. All classes approach the sacred with an attitude of "deep ecumenism" in which all religious and spiritual traditions are welcome as long as they acknowledge the element of mystery that resides in the heart of the divine.

Core Coursework

Psychology and Spirituality

Courses in this area explore the intersection between the field of psychology and emerging spiritual perspectives. Factors such as culture, worldview, and personal style shape the many ways in which this interaction is understood and experienced. Courses address such essential questions as: What is the relationship between spirituality and religion? What is the self/Self? How are body, soul, and spirit related? What are the differences between depth (soul-oriented) and transpersonal psychologies? How are psychological and spiritual development related? How can spiritual approaches contribute to psychotherapeutic healing and how can psychological understanding and work enhance spiritual growth? Sample classes that would meet this core requirement include:

  • Introduction to Psychology and Spirituality
  • Psycho-spiritual Development and Transformation

Depth Psychology

Depth psychology is a rich field of inquiry grounded in the study of literature, religion, art, and mythology. Courses in this area serve to define the historical, cultural, and conceptual traditions that shape its identity. Topics include ancient approaches to healing, encounters with the unconscious, the connection between the individual soul and the soul of the world, and soul-making through literature and mythology. Overviews of Jungian, Archetypal, and Spiritual Psychology are provided, as well as ideas regarding depth psychology’s future in the new millennium. Sample classes that would meet this core requirement include:

  • Introduction to Jungian Psychology
  • Depth Psychology: History of the Unconscious
  • Seminar in Archetypal Psychology
  • Inquiry into the Historical Jung

Transpersonal Psychology

These courses provide an introduction to the field of transpersonal psychology by tracing its spiritual, intellectual, and cultural origins into the present. Drawing on the work of Wilber, Grof, Tart, Walsh, Vaughen, and others, participants consider the major theories, areas of research, and approaches to transpersonal therapy. The implications of transpersonal psychology for personal and cultural transformation also are discussed. These courses have four major themes: transpersonal development and the evolution of consciousness, meditation and spiritual practices, altered states of consciousness, and spiritual emergencies. Students also are encouraged to engage in direct exploration of the transpersonal through some form of spiritual practice and creative expression. A sample class that meets this core requirement is Transpersonal Psychology.

Religious Studies: Myth, Symbol and the Sacred

Myth and symbol are the language through which the sacred speaks. Courses in this area provide the necessary background to understand how myth and symbol serve this function. As such, it is an inquiry into the epistemology of religion. The interdisciplinary study of belief systems, rituals, sacred images, and symbolic and mytho-poetic meanings illuminate the dynamics that inform and shape the contours of culture. Students work through the patterns of myth to discern similarities across cultures that link the collective unconscious of humankind, as well as the many unique and diverse ways in which human beings interpret their experience through religious mythologies. Sample classes that meet this core requirement include:

  • Religious Studies: Myth, Symbol, and the Sacred
  • The Legacy of Joseph Campbell

Comparative Religion

Classes in this area are designed to allow students to come to a deeper understanding of the similarities and differences between faith systems. Students also develop more insight into their own beliefs. An important learning goal is to increase each student’s capacity to engage in thoughtful dialogue across religious traditions. Students may fulfill this requirement by taking a course in world religions, or by taking at least two courses in specific religious traditions. Students are expected to compare and contrast an Eastern religion with a Western religion. Sample classes include:

  • World Religions
  • Buddhism
  • Islam
  • Taoism
  • Christianity
  • Judaism
  • Hinduism
  • Esoteric Christian Traditions
  • Indigenous Traditions
  • Ideas of Heaven: Introduction to Religious Studies

Spiritual Practices

Spiritual practices are the means by which students “link back” to the transpersonal forces that shape the contours of the contemporary world and their place in it. Courses in this area emphasize the need for discipline in a variety of practices that engage sensation, imagination, and intuition. The development of these “soul capacities” is essential for maintaining a healthy body, an open heart, and a disciplined mind. Possibilities include:

  • Dreams and the Earth
  • Aikido
  • Pilgrimage: Walking With Intention
  • Ritual Practice and Ceremonial Design
  • Open Heart, Clear Mind: An Introduction to the Practice of Meditation
  • Imagination and the Creative Arts

Sample Electives

  • Inquiry Into Love, Soul, and Spirit
  • The DaVinci Code: A Contemporary Grail Quest
  • Theories of Personality
  • Consciousness, Intuition, and Healing
  • Developmental Perspectives
  • The Spiritual Psychology of the Human Heart
  • Spirit in Action
  • Spirit in the Workplace
  • Philosophy of Religion
  • Alchemy and Science: Towards the Re-Imagination of Nature
  • An Inquiry Into the Myth of the Holy Grail
  • Art, Imagination, and the Creative Impulse

Sample Community/Field-based Learning Experiences

  • Internship with a youth rites-of-passage program
  • Set up a martial arts dojo
  • Produce a video with Tent City participants
  • Apprentice in a hospice care program or nursing home

Sample Synthesis Projects

  • Write an essay on the spiritual foundations of addiction
  • Present a series of icons and give a talk on icon, image, and transcendence
  • Present a workshop on spirituality and social change
  • Write a memoir of a recovery from illness and use it to illustrate the relationship between healing and the mind
  • Facilitate meditation sessions and write an essay on “Mindfulness East and West”
  • Analyze world events from an archetypal perspective
  • Exhibit a series of paintings based on dreams

Faculty

To read about adjunct faculty who teach in the B.A. in Liberal Studies program, click here.

 

Nada Elia

PhD
BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4422

Mary Lou Finley

PhD
BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4400

Anne Nancy C. Harvey

MSW

BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4401

Randolph Morris

PhD
BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4408

Jonathan Scherch

PhD
Dean, BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4710

Ormond Smythe

EdD, EdM
BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4101

Marcia Tate Arunga

MA
BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4499

Bryan Tomasovich

PhD
BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4418

Cynthia Updegrave

MS
BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4429

Michael Viola

PhD
BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4402

Sue Woehrlin

PhD
BA in Liberal Studies

206-268-4411

Aaron Dietz

BA Liberal Studies, 2007

Antioch has a good reputation, he says, for being able to educate self-learners and for keeping students involved in the learning process. He says he was able to create classes geared toward writing and publishing his own book, something he says would have been much harder to do at a state college.

Bob Hasegawa

B.A. Liberal Studies, 2003

Now Eleventh District Democratic Representative, he says his experience at Antioch surprised him by pushing him beyond his areas of concentration and stretching him in directions he'd never thought of going.

Carson Marshall

B.A. Liberal Studies, MA Whole Systems Design, 2001, 2003

He learned the program supports everyone's unique exploration. He said he realized he could create the way he wants to present himself to the world.

Cheryl Honey

BA Liberal Studies , 2004

It was serendipitous that she ended up going to Antioch. She says her advisers taught her she had special gifts to offer this world and she didn't have to ask for permission to make her unique contribution.

Chris Plyman

BA Liberal Studies, 2009

He happened to be walking along Sixth Avenue in Seattle's Belltown neighborhood when he came upon Antioch University. It looked like a place where he could do some exploring, so this retired Army warrant officer decided to give it a try.

Colleen Crotty

BA Liberal Studies, 2007

Antioch teaches you to look at things differently and to get involved in the community. She says she wouldn't trade her experience for anything.

Danielle Cameron

B.A. Liberal Studies, M.A. Psychology, Art Therapy with Mental Health Counseling, 2002

She says the more she learned about Antioch, the more she realized it was a school most likely to help her get where she wanted to go. She says it is the school for students who are independently motivated.

Debra Sund

BA Liberal Studies - Individualized Program: Holistic Early Childhood Education , 2008

She very much appreciates the freedom at Antioch and the smaller class size. She says it has a supportive and comfortable atmosphere for an adult learner

Dimitri Azadi

BA Liberal Studies - Individualized Program: Leadership and Diversity Studies, 2009

When many of his friends came to Antioch for their undergraduate studies, they told him it was a wonderful experience. He says he feels as though he is putting energy into his own well-being at Antioch.

Dollviola Eldred

B.A. Liberal Studies - Current student, M.A. Psychology - Mental Health Counseling, 2007

The only thing she needed to succeed was a good education and — thanks to Antioch — she has advanced in her career and predicts she will continue to climb.

Lance Wischler

BA Liberal Studies, 2007

He says the personal attention he experienced from his first phone call to the admissions department was a factor in coming to Antioch. The personal touch allowed him to feel like he mattered, and that he was not simply another number to be shuffled through the process.

Margie King Bloch

B.A. Liberal Studies, M.A. Whole Systems Design — Organization Systems Renewal, 1997

She chose Antioch because she wanted to learn more about the changing face of leadership, and she wanted to do it in an experiential educational setting

Maria Teresa Blankenship

BA Liberal Studies - Individualized Program: Psychology, Health Healing & Herbalism; MA Psychology, Mental Health Counseling, 2006

With a background in nursing and her interest in health healing, herbalism and psychology, she created a program for herself that she describes as an unforgettable journey.

Mary Sherhart

B.A. Liberal Studies, 1999

She says Antioch is an intense experience, a great place for self-motivated and well disciplined people with lots of meaty life experience under their belts.

Oliver Chadd

BA Liberal Studies, 2007

He was up for the unique method in which Antioch educates. He says he was always a quiet student and knew Antioch was set up in such a way he would be in situations where he could not just fade into the background.

Patricia Cavit

BA Liberal Studies, 2005

She says her independant study was an excellent experience.  She was able to investigate exactly the areas she was interested in and receive mentoring from the advisers who were supervising.

Rachel Beals

BA Liberal Studies, Spiritual Studies concentration, 2009

Antioch's Spiritual Studies concentration, she says, is a one-of-a-kind undergraduate program. Her priority? She wants to reduce the isolation and despair so many people face today.

Richard Long

BA Liberal Studies, 2007

He chose Antioch because of its commitment to adult education and its social ideology. He says if the concept that a student, through study, research and relationships, obtains the basic philosophies of the institution they attend, then he is a better student, friend and person.

Stephanie McDonald

BA Liberal Studies - Individualized Program: Depth Psychology; MA Psychology, Mental Health Counseling, 2007 & 2011

Antioch is a transformational place where you can find your voice, build confidence and thrive, according to Stephanie McDonald. After completing her BA, her desire to continue learning was on fire and she entered Antioch University Seattle's graduate program in mental health counseling.

Tina Grant

BA Liberal Studies, 2007

Antioch is a place where you can find what it is you want to do with the rest of your life. She says it is not that the teachers will tell you, but that they create a space for you to explore, experiment and find what it is that fills you with passion.

Young-wha Coulter

B.A. Liberal Studies, 2007

Getting credit for life experience was validating for Coulter, who had been a para-educator working with elementary special education children in the Highline School District.