1 / 11

General Education Requirements Workshop Presented by the Office of Academic Advisement

General Education Requirements Workshop Presented by the Office of Academic Advisement. G1 Block = Arts & Humanities . Art Communication + Theatre English Foreign Languages + Humanities Music Philosophy . Biology Chemistry Earth Science Physics + Lab Course. Computer Science Math

daire
Télécharger la présentation

General Education Requirements Workshop Presented by the Office of Academic Advisement

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. General Education Requirements Workshop Presented by the Office of Academic Advisement

  2. G1 Block = Arts & Humanities • Art • Communication + Theatre • English • Foreign Languages + Humanities • Music • Philosophy

  3. Biology Chemistry Earth Science Physics + Lab Course Computer Science Math Nursing G2 Block = Math & Science

  4. African-American Studies Anthropology Business Economics Geography Gerontology Government History International Studies Occupational Safety & Environmental Health Psychology Sociology Social Work Women’s Studies G3 Block = Social Sciences

  5. ‘Old’ General Education * Gen Ed Approved

  6. Revised General Education • Connections & Exploration • Perspectives Course (P) • Wellness Course • 3 200+ Level Courses • 4 Writing “W” Courses • Cultural Diversity & Community Course (D) • First-Year Inquiry Seminar (FYI) • Open Elective(s) * Gen Ed Approved

  7. Focus on: Perspectives Course (P) • What is it? • interdisciplinary and/or multicultural in content and require a high level of educational maturity, knowledge and thinking • Stipulations? • Cannot count toward major or required related courses • Must complete ENGL 110 and 24 credits of Liberal Arts Core beforehand • Examples? • ANTH 342 World Hunger, EDUC 433 Gender and Race Issues in Children’s Literature, MUSI 369 West African Music and Dance

  8. Focus on:First-Year Inquiry Course (FYI) • What is it? • Specifically designed for first semester freshmen and offered in a seminar format, typically linked to a foundations course (either ENGL 110 or COMM 100) as part of a living/learning community • Functions? • Introduce a process of critical inquiry applied to important social, cultural, scientific, technological, and/or aesthetic problems • Support students’ transition into the college experience academically, socially and personally • Examples? • The Amish and the Media, The Deindustrialization of the United States: Jobs Today, Gone Tomorrow, Dream of America

  9. Focus on:Cultural Diversity & Community Course (D) • What is it? • Is intercultural and/or cross-cultural, with culture being a worldview that reflects beliefs, customs, values, politics, and experiences as shaped by race and ethnicity, gender, geography, language, sexual orientation, education, economics, age, nationality, religious affiliation, occupation and/or physical ability among others • Functions? • Helps students identify, critically analyze and apply scholarship and experience related to cultural diversity • May also count as part of any additional requirement (major, minor or Gen Ed)

  10. Tips and Hints • P can be a D • D can be a W • P can’t be a W • FYI can’t be a W

  11. Important Resources • General Education Sheets • Undergraduate Catalogue • Academic Advisement Website • Call Academic Advisement x. 3257

More Related