ABOUT THE ACADEMIC TRACK

The master’s of Arab Civilization is considered one of the leading tracks at Institute of Postgraduate Studies, and it is taught in Arabic. It is one of the first master’s programs in the College of Arts and Humanities to obtain international accreditation (2019-2020), and an affirmation of the importance of this department in promoting identity and civilization. Arabic and in support of his message, and the track had a significant impact on the development of his career. This master’s track has witnessed a remarkable development in the number of advanced students who are able to convey the message for which International Suleiman University was established. This is why it attracts students from different nationalities, in addition to embracing a number of international professors from more than 19 countries. The academic track mission is to prepare scientifically and ethically qualified human resources that enjoy advanced civilized knowledge and are equipped with scientific research mechanisms in the field of verifying documents and completing theoretical and practical studies and research that qualify them to join doctoral tracks, which meets the need of the state and the region for experts with high specialization and great competence.

Objectives

  • Preparing researchers in various fields of Arab civilization.
  • Providing universities and research centers with researchers to serve the community in particular.
  • Fortifying the Arab identity through studies aimed at defining the greatness and achievements of the nation throughout the different periods of history.
  • Correcting perceptions of the nation’s history and civilization through studies that document the nation’s contributions to the service of humanity in various fields of knowledge.
  • Building a civilized person who believes in the civilization of his nation and is qualified to defend it with evidence and evidence and through a mentality that believes in giving and receiving, criticism and analysis.

The First Stage

  • The student studies eight courses, distributed as follows:
    √ Six compulsory courses.
    √Two elective courses from among the courses offered by the faculty for master’s students.
  • The study is conducted through research seminars in each course, and the research seminar relies on multiple references and is in accordance with the scientific research methodology and standards.
  • The study of each of the eight courses takes four credit hours for a minimum of four weeks, and it may be more than that according to the capabilities of each student, after which the student’s competency and knowledge test is held in the course he finished, then he starts in another course in the same way, and so on.
  • Courses studied in the first year, the student has the right to extend the study for a period not exceeding a second year.
  • If a specialization track is chosen within the general program, elective courses will have to be studied from the courses designated for the chosen specialization.

The Second Stage

● The student is assigned a virtual course that the faculty chooses from among the courses that the student studied at the bachelor’s level. This is a practical training for the student, with ten credit hours. The student must divide this course into twelve to fourteen abbreviated lectures. The student presents each lecture in the form of a written summary of its topic in Word format, accompanied by a video recording of it in the student’s voice using the Power Point program. Its duration is not less than ten minutes and not more than twenty. Accurate.

The Thrid Stage

Requirements for registering a thesis topic for a master’s degree in Arts and Humanities.

  • The student must pass the prescribed academic courses with at least 70%.
  • The student obtains a TOEFL certificate with a score of at least 450, or its equivalent, or obtains a corresponding certificate in the French language, with the exception of those who obtained a first university degree in one of the two languages, or in one of the two languages.
  • The student submits a request to the university administration to register a master’s thesis with a suggested topic in one of the sub-specialized tracks.
  • If the initial approval of the subject title is achieved, the Faculty Council shall specify a supervisor to guide the student and follow him up in preparing the plan.
  • The research plan includes the importance of the subject and a critical presentation of the previous studies in it, and a specification of the research problem, then defining the methodology of the study and its main hypotheses or the questions that you want to answer, and the division of the study and its sources.
  • The student presents his proposed plan in a scientific seminar. The plan discusses a topic and methodology.
  • The student amends his plan based on the notes of the professors in the seminar if he is asked to amend it.
  • The plan is presented after the seminar to the Faculty Council to take its decision regarding the registration of the subject.
  • In the event of approval, the decision of the Faculty Council is presented to the University Council to approve the registration, and the date of registration is calculated from the date of approval by the University Council.

Jury discussion and degree awarding

  • The minimum period for preparing a master’s thesis is nine months, starting from the date of approval of the University Council to register the subject, and the maximum is two years, which can be extended for a third exceptional year upon the recommendation of the supervisor and the approval of the Faculty Council, provided that the total period of the student’s enrollment in the degree does not exceed four years.
  • The supervisor submits a semi-annual report that includes what has been accomplished, and what is required in the remaining period.
  • After the student completes the thesis and the supervisor reviews it, the supervisor submits to the university administration a report stating that it is valid for discussion, including an evaluation of the student’s performance during the thesis preparation period of 140 degrees, along with submitting a full copy of the thesis signed by him, and a letter with the names of the jury proposed by the professors of the specialty, for presentation to the Council the faculty.
  • It is required that before the student’s discussion, at least fifteen days have passed from the date of approval of the jury committee from the faculty.
  • The jury committee formed to discuss the thesis is six months, which may be renewed for a similar period based on a report from the supervisor and the approval of the Faculty Council.
  • The period of validity of the committee formed to discuss the thesis is six months. It may be renewed for a similar period based on a report from the supervisor and the approval of the Faculty Council.
  • Each member of the jury writes a detailed scientific report on the validity of the thesis for discussion, and evaluates the thesis out of 100 degrees, and the average of the three degrees is taken.
  • The student may not be discussed unless he obtains at least 70% of the supervisor’s evaluation of his performance and the jury members’ evaluation of the thesis in the individual reports.
  • Submit a post-dissertation group report signed by all members of the jury evaluating the thesis discussion out of 100.
  • The thesis is approved after common discussion by the jury with one of the grades shown in the following table:
DefinitionPointGrade
Excellent4.00A+
Excellent3.75A
Very Good3.50B+
Very Good3.00B
Good2.50C+
Average2.00C
Pass on probation1.50D+
Pass on probation1.00D
Fail0.00F
  • The following grades are not taken into account for the semester or cumulative GPA.
Thesis or project in progress:DP
Incomplete:I
In progress:IP
Registration has been suspended:L
The grade has not been decided:NGR
Did not take the final exam.:NP
Transferred course.:T
Withdraw from the course.:W
The course covers two semesters, the degree is given at the end of the spring or summer semester.:YR
There are no credit hours.:NC
One credit hour taken as a private student. The credit hours and the degree do not count towards the degree:ND
Re-submitted course, only the last grade is used in calculating the GPA.:R
Credit taken as a special student. Credit hours and grade counted towards a degree.:S

Credits
Before the 2016-2017 fall semester 1 credit point is equivalent to 1 semester lecture hour. In the 2016 – 2017 fall semester the University introduced the ECTS – European Credit Transfer System.

Academic Calendar
International Suleiman University calendar is based on the semester system. Each semester has a duration of 15 weeks including the week of the final exam. The summer semester is 10 weeks long, including the final exam.

Academic Track Structure
8 courses = 32 credit hours,
 practical training = 10 credit hours
 Master's thesis = 18 credit hours
Courses
Practical Training
Master's Thesis

Core Courses for General Track

Scientific Research Methodology

Course code: MAH101
Course name: Scientific Research Methodology
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with research methods in language; It deals with the different linguistic approaches, especially the normative and descriptive approaches, and the approaches to language study in general, and focuses on the research writing approach, starting from selecting the topic to preparing a list of sources and references.

Administrative Institutions in the Islamic State

Course code: MAAC101
Course name: Administrative Institutions in the Islamic State
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with the emergence and development of administrative institutions in the Islamic state, through the study of political institutions: (caliphate, ministry, emirate) and judicial institutions: (judiciary, grievances, hisba), and economic institutions: (resources and expenditures of the Islamic state, measures, measures and weights), and social institutions Health and military: (army and fleet, police and intelligence), administrative institutions: (offices), and education institutions. ​

History theories of Muslims and Westerners (comparative study)

Course code: MAAC102
Course Name: History theories of Muslims and Westerners (comparative study)
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with the emergence and development of theories of interpretation of history among Muslims and Westerners, and the reflection of those theories on writings. Senior historians on both sides through a methodology based on analysis, criticism, comparison, and application models. ​

Realization of Texts and Documents

Course code: MAAC103
Course name: Realization of Texts and Documents
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with the importance of manuscripts and documents in historical studies, methods of accessing them, how to deal with them, methods of investigation, investigation of the information contained in them, methods of criticism and what is required for their investigation and publication in terms of tools and knowledge of relevant terminology. ​

History of Islamic Thought and its Development Until the Modern Era

Course code: MAAC104
Course name: History of Islamic Thought and its Development Until the Modern Era
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with the concept of Islamic thought, its characteristics, sources of study, terminology, stages of its inception and development, leading to the features of modern Arab thought through applied models of the works of Muslim thinkers of their various sects. ​

History of Economic Thought

Course code: MAAC106
Course name: History of Economic Thought
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with the concept of Islamic economic thought, the sources of its study, its stages of development, the pillars on which it was based, the challenges it faced, and the institutions that emerged from it and contributed to the development of the state and society through a comparative study with Western economic theories.

Elective Courses for General Track

Arab Historians and Sources for the Study of History

Course code: MAAC151
Course name: Arab Historians and Sources for the Study of History
Credit hours: 4.00


Presenting a general idea of the emergence of the science of history among the Arabs and the major historical schools, the development of the renewal movement and the methods of historical writing among the great Muslim historians, as well as defining the sources of the study of history in general. ​

Arab Civilization

Course code: MAAC152
Course name: Arab Civilization
Credit hours: 4.00


The course studies the theories of defining civilization and contemporary methods in its study. Then it deals with the foundations of Islamic civilization, its characteristics, and the features of its system of government, deriving the factors for the rise and fall of civilizations. The course presents a number of manifestations of Islamic civilization in various aspects, and finally sheds light on the impact of Islamic civilization on European civilization. ​

History (selected topics)

Course code: MAAC153
Course Name: History (selected topics)
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with a set of topics related to issues in history in various historical eras and fields: political, social, economic, military, security and civilization, one of which is determined in agreement with the supervisor. ​

History of Arab Cities

Course code: MAAC154
Course name: History of Arab Cities
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with the sources of studying the history of the Islamic city. Its origins, characteristics and planning, and what is related to its administrative, economic, social and security systems, its urban features and trends in its study, past and present, and the response to the most prominent suspicions raised around it, through selected models of cities from the East and the West. ​

Islamic Difference

Course code: MAAC155
Course Name: Islamic Difference
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with the sources of the study of Islamic sects, the problems raised around them, the terminology related to them, the factors for the emergence and development of Islamic sects, the characteristics of each of them, and monitoring the essential differences between them according to the method of comparative studies. ​

History of Political Thought

Course code: MAAC156
Course Name: History of Political Thought
Credit hours: 4.00


The course deals with the term political thought among the Arabs, its origins, foundations, characteristics, sources of study, and stages of development, through a comparison between the opinions of Islamic political scholars, historians of royal rulings, and other philosophers who looked at political thought and the form of the state in it.

Welcome to Institute of Postgraduate Studies

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Degree: Master's Degree

Track code: MA104AH

Study method: Distance Learning

Credit hour: 60

How long it takes:
  Full time: 2 years 
Part time: 4 years 
Limit time: 6 years

Welcome to Institute of Postgraduate Studies