Considering thatDownton Abbeyhas plans to infiltrate our closets, kitchens, and sitting rooms—courtesy of official Downton Abbeymerchandise—it seems only fitting that the Julian Fellowes–created period drama infiltrate classrooms as well. According to Philly.com, Camden County College in New Jersey has announced a five-session course about the show, “Downton Abbey: Life in a Country House,” that tackles such topics as “The Inheritance Problem: Marriage, Women and Property,” “Servants and Solicitors,” and “Technology Intrudes: Lights, Phones and Cars.”

Surprisingly, this is not the first Downton Abbey–centric course on the market. Earlier this month, the Detroit Free Press reported on Oakland University’s “The World of Downton Abbey: Revolution, Rebellion and Re-Creation.” Students enrolled in the class meet in the garage of Meadow Brook Hall, a country-style home built by automotive pioneer John F. Dodge’s ex-wife Matilda Dodge Wilson in 1928 (which is fitting for the 20s-set series) in Rochester Hills, Michigan, and snack on teas and scones. Professor Randall Engle explained that he pitched the course to the college’s honors program after “watching the show with my wife and just [getting] hooked on English history.”

While both classes sound fun—especially the one with the tea and scones—we would personally opt for an overseas exchange program to the U.K. that could do us one better: allow us to watch Downton Abbey’s next season on time, instead of waiting those torturous three months or so for PBS to import the series stateside.